Trump nevertheless urged his supporters on January 6, 2021, to march to the Capitol while the joint session of Congress was assembled there to count electoral votes and formalize Biden's victory, culminating with hundreds storming the building and interrupting the electoral vote count.[11]
By the end of 2021, 725 people had been charged with federal crimes.[12][13] That number rose to 1,000 by the second anniversary of the attack,[12] to 1,200 by the third anniversary (three-quarters of whom had by then been found guilty)[14][15] and to 1,500 before the fourth anniversary.[16] The Justice Department documented assaults on over 140 police officers and property damage exceeding $2.8 million to the Capitol building and grounds. Approximately 170 defendants had been accused of using deadly or dangerous weapons against law enforcement officers, including fire extinguishers and bear spray.[17]
Throughout the Biden administration, Trump characterized the January 6 defendants as "political prisoners" and "hostages."[17] He promoted a revisionist history of the event by downplaying the severity of the violence and spreading conspiracy theories.[18][19] House Republicans also spread a fringe conspiracy that the FBI orchestrated the attack.[20] On January 29, 2022, when over 760 people had been charged,[12] Trump said at a Texas rally that he would be inclined to pardon the rioters if he were reelected in 2024,[21] which he repeated at a Tennessee rally in June 2022.[22] In November, four days before the midterm elections, he said: "Let them all go now!"[23] On May 10, 2023, he said he would be "inclined to pardon many of them" while hedging by saying "a couple of them, probably, they got out of control".[24] On September 15, 2023, he said in an interview that aired two days later: "I'm going to look at them, and I certainly might [pardon them] if I think it's appropriate."[25]
On December 8, 2024, as president-elect, Trump said he would pardon the rioters on his "first day" in office except for any he might deem to be "radical, crazy."[28] Then-vice president electJD Vance stated that pardons should be given to those who "protested peacefully", and not those who did so violently.[29] Vance initially advocated for a blanket pardon in private but thought Trump wouldn't want to do so for political reasons, and was reportedly "100% behind" Trump's decision to grant clemency to all rioters.[30] A week following the pardon, Vance told Face The Nation that he and Trump perceived a “massive denial of due process of liberty" and that the pardon was the "right decision".[31]
Presidential clemency
On January 20, 2025, President Donald Trump issued a proclamation titled "Granting Pardons and Commutation of Sentences for Certain Offenses Relating to the Events at or Near the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021". The proclamation categorized prior criminal proceedings as a "grave national injustice" against the American people, and positioned the pardons as beginning a "process of national reconciliation".[1] Two inside sources stated that Trump made the decision to give blanket pardons at the "last minute" just days before the inauguration,[32] with one advisor saying Trump said "Fuck it: Release 'em all".[30]
Citing Article II, Section 2 of the Constitution of the United States, the proclamation established two distinct categories of clemency for individuals involved in the events at the United States Capitol during January 6, 2021. The first category of clemency consisted of sentence commutations to time served for fourteen named individuals. These commutations applied to prominent figures in the January 6 events, including Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes with members Kelly Meggs and Roberto Minuta, Proud Boys leaders Ethan Nordean, Jeremy Bertino, and Joseph Biggs, and Proud Boy member Dominic Pezzola, who was the first rioter to breach the Capitol building, all of whom had their sentences reduced to time served "as of January 20, 2025".[1][33] The second category consisted of "full, complete, and unconditional" pardons granted to every other defendant convicted in relation to the events of January 6.[1]
The Attorney General was directed to immediately issue pardon certificates to all eligible individuals and ensure the release of any incarcerated persons affected by the pardons. Additionally, the United States Department of Justice was ordered to dismiss "with prejudice" all pending indictments related to January 6 conduct, and the Federal Bureau of Prisons received explicit orders to implement all Justice Department instructions regarding both the releases and the dismissal of pending cases.[1]
Alan Hostetter, retired police chief, sentenced in December 2023 to 11 years in prison for conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding. He drove to Washington with hatchets, knives, stun batons, pepper spray, and other gear for himself and others and used a bullhorn to encourage rioters to break the police line.[34][35]
Rioters sentenced for attacking police officers
David Nicholas Dempsey, sentenced in August 2024 to 20 years in prison for stomping on police officers' heads, using flagpoles and other objects to attack officers, and spraying bear spray into the gas mask of an officer. His prior criminal record included burglary, theft, and assault.[34][36]
Peter Schwartz, sentenced in May 2023 to 14 years for assaulting police officers with a chair and pepper spray. He boasted in a text message that he had "thrown the first chair at cops" and "started a riot". He also had a record of prior violent offenses.[37][38][34]
Daniel Joseph "DJ" Rodriguez, sentenced in 2023 to 12.5 years in prison for conspiracy and obstruction of an official proceeding, obstruction of justice, and assaulting a law enforcement officer with a deadly or dangerous weapon. Rodriguez had shot Officer Michael Fanone, who had been dragged into the mob by another assailant and was lying face-down on the ground, twice with a stun gun held to his neck. Fanone had a heart attack and received other injuries during the attack.[39][37][34] Video footage also showed Rodriguez deploying a fire extinguisher and attacking other officers with a wooden pole.[39]
Christopher Joseph Quaglin, member of the Proud Boys, sentenced in May 2024 by a Trump-appointed judge to 12 years in prison for choking and tackling officer Michael Fanone to the ground, attacking other officers with metal bike racks, stolen police shields, and pepper spray.[34][40]
Thomas Webster, retired police officer, sentenced in 2022 to 10 years in prison for attacking an officer with a flagpole and tackling him.[37][41]
Christopher J. Worrell, a Proud Boy member, sentenced in 2024 to 10 years in prison for attacking police officers with pepper spray.[34]
Thomas Harlen Smith, sentenced in October 2023 to 9 years in prison for, among other violent actions, kicking an officer in the back and knocking him to the ground and hitting two officers in the head with the metal pole he threw at them.[34][42]
Albaquerque Cosper Head, sentenced in October 2022 to seven years for dragging officer Fanone face-down down the West Terrace steps and attacking police in the entrance to the Lower West Terrace tunnel.[37][43]
Kyle J. Young, pleaded guilty to a single charge and was sentenced in September 2022 to seven years for handing the stun gun to Rodriguez and grabbing Fanone's hand when he tried to protect himself.[37][44]
Patrick McCaughey III, sentenced in April 2023 to 7.5 years for using a stolen police riot shield to crush officer Daniel Hodges in a doorframe at the entrance to the Lower West Terrace tunnel.[45][46]
Steven Cappuccio, sentenced in November 2023 to seven years for ripping off officer Hodges's gas mask and striking him across the face with his own baton.[47][48]
Andrew Taake, sentenced in June 2024 to 6.5 years for attacking officers with bear spray and a metal whip. At the time of the Capitol attack, he was out on bond for soliciting a minor in 2016.[49] The bond was revoked in September 2021, and Houston authorities are looking to rearrest Taake.[50]
Rioters who had awaited trial for attacking police officers
Daniel Ball had been awaiting trial when he was pardoned. He was accused of throwing a device that "flashed and exploded", a wooden leg of a chair or table, and other objects at officers in the Lower West Terrace tunnel, and for damaging a shutter. Investigators searching his Florida residence as part of the case had found a firearm and ammunition, items he was not allowed to possess because of two prior felony convictions. He was served with the arrest warrant on a federal gun charge while still in custody and is awaiting extradition to Florida.[51][52]
Edward Jacob Lang. Was in custody awaiting trial for three assault charges, including attacking officers with a baseball bat.[37][53][54]
Andrew Kyle Grigsby. Was in custody awaiting trial on five felony charges, including attacking officers with bear spray.[55][56]
David Paul Daniel. Had pleaded guilty for assaulting police officers and was in custody awaiting trial. After he was charged in November 2023, FBI and Mint Hill, N.C., police officers discovered images of Daniel sexually abusing two children under 12 during a search of his home. He is in custody in North Carolina on charges of production and possession of child pornography and pleaded not guilty.[55][57]
Rioters arrested for entering a restricted area and property damage
Thomas Middendorf. Was awaiting trial for striking a window with a flagpole. In May 2024, he was sentenced to 19 years in prison in Illinois for committing "an act of sexual penetration" of a 7-year old child.[55]
Rioters arrested for entering a restricted area
Matthew Huttle, was sentenced in November 2023 to six months in prison and a year of supervised release for entering the Capitol and multiple offices. Huttle had a prior criminal record which included a sentence of 2.5 years in prison for assaulting and injuring his 3-year old son.[55] On January 26, 2025, Huttle was shot and killed while in possession of a firearm and allegedly resisting arrest during a traffic stop.[55][58]
Trump's grant of clemency was described by counterterrorism researchers as encouraging future political violence,[61] and Trump later suggested the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers may have a place in the political conversation.[62]
Employees in the Justice Department and legal scholars called the pardons an unprecedented and dangerous use of the pardon and created a mockery of federal law enforcement, their work, and the US justice system. An anonymous senior official in the Justice Department called the pardons a green light signal to political violence and that nothing done during the January 6 attack were wrong. They continued calling the pardons a campaign of personal retribution.[63]
US District Judge Royce Lamberth, who was appointed by Ronald Reagan, stated during a case on 25 January 2024 that during his time on the bench, he could never recall "such meritless justifications of criminal activity".[64][65] Randall Eliason, a former federal prosecutor and professor at George Washington University Law School called the pardons as an abuse of power by Trump, and it signaled that if they commit crimes on Trump's behalf there would be no accountability. Bruce Ackerman, a law and political science professor at Yale Law School echoed the sentiment calling the action, "..a president pardoning his allies for their participation in a violent coup d'etat".[63]
Reactions
A PBS/Marist poll conducted a month before the pardons found that 89% of Democrats, 62% of independents, and 30% of Republicans disapproved of pardons.[66]Reuters/Ipsos polling conducted shortly before and during Trump's pardons found that 58% of people found that Trump should not pardon all those involved in the riot.[67]NPR reported that some Trump voters expressed disapproval of the sweeping pardons, but that "Trump's staunchest supporters, though, refuse to believe that fellow backers of the president were violent that day" and cited conspiracy theories they read on social media.[66]
Trump
After Trump issued the pardons, he answered affirmatively when a reporter asked if he agreed "that it's never acceptable to assault a police officer". When asked to reconcile that opinion with his having pardoned someone who "drove a stun gun into the neck of a D.C. police officer" (this attack was against Officer Michael Fanone), Trump replied, "Well, I don't know. Was it a pardon? We're looking at commutes. We're looking at pardons." When the reporter confirmed that this individual had been pardoned, Trump added, "OK, we'll take a look at everything." He continued speaking for another minute, adding: "These people have already served a long period of time, and I made a decision to give a pardon."[68][69]
Pardoned people
Norm Pattis, defense lawyer for Proud Boys organizer Joe Biggs, called the pardons "wonderful" and expressed gratitude that Biggs would have his prison sentence cut short by 13 to 14 years.[70]
Jacob Chansley's immediate reaction to being pardoned was to post to X that he would buy guns.[71] Stewart Rhodes told reporters that his actions on January 6 were justified and called for the prosecution of the Capitol police who testified against him at his trial and the Justice Department lawyers who were involved in his case.[72] Enrique Tarrio and Stewart Rhodes asserted that they wanted Trump to seek revenge on their behalf.[73] On January 22, Stewart Rhodes appeared on Capitol Hill and delivered a speech defending his actions.[74]
Pamela Hemphill objected to the pardons, saying that "We were wrong that day. We broke the law. There should be no pardons" and that accepting it would "contribute to their gaslighting and false narrative" in an attempt to "rewrite history", and that the Justice Department was not weaponized against Trump supporters.[75][76]
Jason Riddle also rejected his pardon, telling ABC News: "I am guilty of the crimes I have committed and accept the consequences. It is thanks to those consequences I now have a happy and fruitful existence." He also expressed resentment toward Trump, stating: "I don't need to obsess over a narcissistic bully to feel better about myself. Trump can shove his pardon up his ass."[77]
Family of pardoned people
Several family members and friends of convicted defendants celebrated the news outside of the D.C. Jail.[78]
Jackson Reffitt reported his father, Guy Reffitt, days before the attack on the Capitol. He said that, after the attack on the Capitol, his father warned him not to report him because "traitors get shot." Jackson went on to testify against him in court, and Guy was sentenced to over seven years in prison. On January 22, 2025, Jackson told MSNBC he had received death threats and feared what his father, having been pardoned, might do to him.[79]
Police
Daniel Hodges, a Metropolitan Police Department officer who had been repeatedly assaulted and crushed by rioters during the attack, responded to the pardons on his Twitter account: "Thanks America.".[80][70] Former Metropolitan police officer Michael Fanone, who was beaten and tased until unconscious during the riot, was asked during a CNN interview what he would say to Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes. Fanone replied, "Go fuck yourself. You're a liar".[81]
Former Capitol Police Sergeant Aquilino Gonell described the pardons as a "miserable" injustice that removed accountability from rioters who did "irreparable damage to our nation".[82][83] Former Capitol Police officer Harry Dunn called the pardons a "continuation of the stain that January 6th left on our nation", and said he was not surprised that Trump fulfilled his promise to people he had incited to attack the Capitol and its defenders.[84]
The Fraternal Order of Police—the nation's largest police union, which endorsed Trump in each of the last three elections—joined the International Association of Chiefs of Police in condemning the mass pardon.[85] In a joint statement[86] on January 22, 2025, the organizations said that the pardon of "individuals convicted of killing or assaulting law enforcement officers...sends a dangerous message that the consequences for attacking law enforcement are not severe".[87]
On January 27, Senator Patty Murray introduced a symbolic resolution to condemn Trump for pardoning the rioters. It was co-sponsored by all Senate Democrats and no Senate Republicans.[89]
However, House Speaker Mike Johnson favored the pardon, implying that the attack on the Capitol had been peaceful: "I think what was made clear all along is that peaceful protests and people who engage in that should never be punished."[92]
Representative Lauren Boebert spoke favorably of the pardoned people: "I want to see them for their release, and you know, I'll be the first member of Congress to offer them a guided tour of the Capitol."[93]
^Reeves, Jay; Mascaro, Lisa; Woodward, Calvin (January 11, 2021). "Capitol assault a more sinister attack than first appeared". Associated Press. Archived from the original on January 13, 2021. Retrieved January 12, 2021. Under battle flags bearing Donald Trump's name, the Capitol's attackers pinned a bloodied police officer in a doorway, his twisted face and screams captured on video. They mortally wounded another officer with a blunt weapon and body-slammed a third over a railing into the crowd. 'Hang Mike Pence!' the rioters chanted as they pressed inside, beating police with pipes. They demanded House Speaker Nancy Pelosi's whereabouts, too. They hunted any and all lawmakers: 'Where are they?' Outside, makeshift gallows stood, complete with sturdy wooden steps and the noose. Guns and pipe bombs had been stashed in the vicinity.... The mob got stirring encouragement from Trump and more explicit marching orders from the president's men. 'Fight like hell,' Trump exhorted his partisans at the staging rally. 'Let's have trial by combat,' implored his lawyer, Rudy Giuliani, whose attempt to throw out election results in trial by courtroom failed. It's time to 'start taking down names and kicking ass', said Republican Representative Mo Brooks of Alabama. Criminals pardoned by Trump, among them Roger Stone and Michael Flynn, came forward at rallies on the eve of the attack to tell the crowds they were fighting a battle between good and evil
^Feuer, Alan; Haberman, Maggie (April 13, 2024). "Inside Donald Trump's Embrace of the Jan. 6 Rioters". The New York Times. Archived from the original on April 13, 2024. Retrieved April 14, 2024. Recently, however, his celebrations of the Capitol riot and those who took part in it have become more public as he has promoted a revisionist history of the attack and placed it at the heart of his 2024 presidential campaign ... Mr. Trump hasn't always embraced Jan. 6 — at least not openly ... Mr. Trump's embrace of Jan. 6 not only has meant describing the attack in which more than 100 police officers were injured as a "love fest." It also has led him to tell a journalist that he wanted to march to the Capitol that day but that his team had prevented him from doing so.
^Debusmann Jr, Bernd (December 12, 2024). "FBI informants were at Capitol riot but no agents, watchdog finds". BBC News. Retrieved January 23, 2025. Some on the right, including House Republicans, have for years promoted a fringe conspiracy theory that the FBI helped to orchestrate the riot.
^Gustav, Kilander (January 22, 2025). "Trump wildly suggests Proud Boys, Oath Keepers might have a place in the 'political conversation'". The Independent. Retrieved January 22, 2025. President Donald Trump has suggested that far-right militias such as the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers may have a role to play in public life. Trump was asked during a press conference in the Roosevelt Room on Tuesday if there's room for the leaders of such groups in the political conversation. "We'll have to see," said Trump, according to Politico.
^"Trump's Opening Act of Contempt". The New York Times. January 20, 2025. Retrieved January 23, 2025. But in pronouncing sentence against a rioter last January, he said he had never seen such a level of "meritless justifications of criminal activity" in the political mainstream.