Tag: sentences

  • DOJ cites threats to democracy on Jan. 6 in push for steep Oath Keepers sentences

    DOJ cites threats to democracy on Jan. 6 in push for steep Oath Keepers sentences

    [ad_1]

    capitol riot investigation 29499

    “As this Court is well aware, the justice system’s reaction to January 6 bears the weighty responsibility of impacting whether January 6 becomes an outlier or a watershed moment,” Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeffrey Nestler wrote in the 183-page sentencing memo. “Left unchecked, this impulse threatens our democracy.”

    Prosecutors cited polling from earlier this year showing that one in five Americans believe political violence is sometimes justified and that one in 10 “believes it would be justified if it meant the return of President Trump.”

    Rhodes was charged with seditious conspiracy last year alongside nearly a dozen Oath Keepers for their roles in the Jan. 6 attack. Prosecutors alleged that Rhodes embraced Donald Trump’s false claims that the 2020 presidential election was stolen and used it to mobilize Oath Keepers across the country to resist the results of the election.

    “These defendants were prepared to fight. Not for their country, but against it,” prosecutors wrote in their sentencing memo. “In their own words, they were ‘willing to die’ in a ‘guerilla war’ to achieve their goal of halting the transfer of power after the 2020 Presidential Election. … These defendants played a central and damning role in opposing by force the government of the United States, breaking the solemn oath many of them swore as members of the United States Armed Forces.”

    In an eight-week trial last year, prosecutors presented evidence that the group planned to descend on Washington, D.C., on Jan. 6 in response to Trump’s call about two weeks earlier for supporters to “be there, will be wild.” They stockpiled weapons, which prosecutors contend were meant to be available if the mob’s clash with police turned even more violent than it did, at a Comfort Inn in Arlington, Va.

    Rhodes, an Army veteran, Yale Law School graduate and disbarred attorney, was one of a pair of Oath Keepers convicted by a jury last November on rare seditious conspiracy charges for planning an assault on the Capitol as Congress was tallying the electoral votes as part of the process transitioning power from Trump to President Joe Biden.

    The other person convicted on the marquee charge was Kelly Meggs, a leader of the Florida Oath Keepers. Three Oath Keepers members tried with Rhodes and Meggs were acquitted of seditious conspiracy, but convicted on other felony charges.

    Four other Oath Keepers were convicted of seditious conspiracy at a second trial in January. And three more pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy over the past year.

    In addition to the nine Oath Keepers who have been convicted of seditious conspiracy, five members of the far-right Proud Boys have also been convicted of or pleaded guilty to the charge. Four of them, including the group’s national leader Enrique Tarrio, were found guilty by a jury on Thursday. The sentencing recommendation for Rhodes is a window into the likely sentence that prosecutors will seek for Tarrio and his allies.

    The recommendation for the stiff prison term for Rhodes was sent Friday night to U.S. District Court Judge Amit Mehta, who has presided over three jury trials for Oath Keepers members. A fourth is slated to take place later this year.

    Mehta, an appointee of former President Barack Obama, has scheduled sentencing for Rhodes, Meggs and several other convicted Oath Keepers over a series of dates in late May and early June.

    Prosecutors also announced in their Friday night submission that they are seeking similarly lengthy sentences for others convicted in the Oath Keepers trials to date, including: 21 years for Meggs, 18 years for Jessica Watkins, 17 years for Roberto Minuta, 17 years for Ed Vallejo, 15 years for Kenneth Harrelson and 14 years for Thomas Caldwell. Each of them would equal or exceed the lengthiest sentences given to Jan. 6 defendants so far.

    Prosecutors arrived at those steep sentencing recommendations in part by labeling the actions of Rhodes and his co-conspirators “terrorism,” defined in the criminal code as “acts that were intended to influence the government through intimidation or coercion.” The Justice Department has sought this enhancement in relatively few Jan. 6 cases and with limited success.

    Judges declined to adopt it in several cases against high-profile Jan. 6 defendants — but none had been convicted of seditious conspiracy and none were alleged to have played as large a role in the Jan. 6 attack as Rhodes and his allies.

    Prosecutors also dinged Rhodes and several allies for participating in post-trial interviews in which they defended their actions on Jan. 6. Rhodes, in particular, they said “continues to invoke the words and deeds of the Founding Fathers in not-so-veiled calls for violent opposition to the government.”

    About 1,000 people have been charged criminally in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021 riot at the Capitol, but prosecutors said Rhodes and other members of the fiercely anti-government Oath Keepers deserve lengthy prison sentences because they were instigators of the unrest and violence that broke out that day.

    While the vast majority of those charged entered the Capitol building, Rhodes and Tarrio were convicted on the serious seditious conspiracy charge despite never setting foot in the building that day. Rhodes was in Washington and marched with Oath Keepers members, but remained in a parking lot as rioters entered the building and clashed with police. Tarrio had been arrested by police a couple of days before and was in Baltimore when the violence unfolded on Jan. 6 after being ordered to leave Washington.

    While the 25-year recommendation for Rhodes is the lengthiest yet in Jan. 6 cases, it is only slightly longer than the 24-year, six-month sentence prosecutors sought for a man sentenced Friday for repeatedly assaulting police officers during the riot.

    A jury convicted Peter Schwartz, 49, last December on assault and civil disorder charges for throwing a chair at police and spraying them with pepper spray, all while armed with a wooden tire knocker. According to prosecutors, unlike many Jan. 6 defendants, Schwartz had “a substantial violent criminal history.”

    Mehta, the same judge handling the Oath Keeper’s cases, sentenced Schwartz to 14 years in prison. While that was more than a decade short of what prosecutors asked for, it was the longest sentence yet for a Jan. 6 offender. The next longest was also handed out by Mehta: 10 years for Thomas Webster, a retired New York City police officer who assaulted a D.C. cop on the front lines of the Capitol riot. Prosecutors had sought a 17-and-a-half year term in that case.

    [ad_2]
    #DOJ #cites #threats #democracy #Jan #push #steep #Oath #Keepers #sentences
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • UP number 1 in death sentences as of end of 2021: Centre to RS

    UP number 1 in death sentences as of end of 2021: Centre to RS

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: As many as 472 prisoners lodged in different jails across the country were sentenced to death and waiting for the next course of action as on December 31, 2021, Rajya Sabha was informed on Wednesday.

    Union Minister of State for Home Ajay Kumar Mishra also said that the death sentence of 290 other prisoners has been commuted to life imprisonment.

    The highest number of convicts (total 67), who were awarded death penalty, were lodged in Uttar Pradesh, followed by 46 in Bihar, 44 in Maharashtra, 39 in Madhya Pradesh, 37 in West Bengal, 31 in Jharkhand and 27 in Karnataka, he said replying to a written question.

    The minister said among the 290 prisoners whose death sentences have been commuted to life imprisonment, 46 were in jails in Madhya Pradesh, 35 in Maharashtra, 32 in Uttar Pradesh, 30 in Bihar, 19 each in Karnataka and West Bengal and 18 in Gujarat.

    (Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by Siasat staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

    [ad_2]
    #number #death #sentences #Centre

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Atiq Ahmad, 2 others given life sentences in 2006 Umesh Pal kidnapping case

    Atiq Ahmad, 2 others given life sentences in 2006 Umesh Pal kidnapping case

    [ad_1]

    Prayagraj: An MP-MLA court here on Tuesday held gangster-politician Atiq Ahmad and two others guilty in the 2006 Umesh Pal kidnapping case, and sentenced them to life imprisonment.

    Ahmad’s brother Khalid Azim alias Ashraf and six others have been acquitted in the case.

    Special MP-MLA court judge Dinesh Chandra Shukla held Ahmad, Saulat Hanif, a lawyer, and Dinesh Pasi guilty in the case, government counsel Gulab Chandra Agrahari said.

    The three were pronounced guilty under Indian Penal Code section 364-A (kidnapping or abduction in order to murder), Agrahari said.

    The maximum sentence under the section is death sentence.

    Chief Minister Yogi Adityanath had last month charged the Samajwadi Party with garlanding mafias like Atiq Ahmad and had said in the state assembly that “mafia (Atiq Ahmad) ko mitti me mila denge (will destroy the mafia).”

    After the killing of then BSP MLA Raju Pal on January 25, 2005, Umesh Pal, then a zila panchayat member, had told police he was a witness to the murder.

    Umesh Pal had alleged that when he refused to retract and buckle under pressure from Ahmad, he was kidnapped at gunpoint on February 28, 2006.

    An FIR in the case was registered on July 5, 2007, against Ahmed, his brother and others.

    The police had submitted a chargesheet in the matter against 11 people. One of them later died.

    Ahmad and Ashraf are also accused of being involved in a conspiracy, while they were both in prison, to kill Umesh Pal. Umesh Pal was gunned down outside his Prayagraj residence on February 24 last.

    Earlier, Ahmad, Ashraf and others were brought to court from Naini jail in separate police vans and produced in the court amid tight security.

    Both of them were on Monday brought to the Naini Central Jail here after long road journeys from two separate prisons.

    Umesh Pal’s wife Jaya Pal ealier said she won’t be going to the court but will “pray” that Ahmad gets capital punishment.

    “I am not going to the court. I will be in my house and pray for capital punishment for Ahmad. If they get life imprisonment, they will continue to do the same things that they did with my husband,” Jaya Pal told reporters.

    On a complaint from Umesh Pal’s wife, a case was lodged at the Dhoomanganj police station in Prayagraj against Ahmad, his brother, his wife Shaista Parveen, two sons, aides Guddu Muslim and Ghulam, and nine others.

    Ahmad, a former Samajwadi Party MP from Phulpur, was shifted to the Sabarmati Central Jail in Gujarat in June 2019 following a Supreme Court order after he was accused of orchestrating the kidnapping and assault of real estate businessman Mohit Jaiswal while in prison in Uttar Pradesh.

    He is named in more than 100 criminal cases, including the Umesh Pal murder case, police said.

    [ad_2]
    #Atiq #Ahmad #life #sentences #Umesh #Pal #kidnapping #case

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Court sentences one-year imprisonment to a police officer in Kashmir

    [ad_1]

    Srinagar, Mar 25: Special Anti-Corruption Court Srinagar has sentenced a police officer to one-year imprisonment.

    The convicted police officer had been arrested by the Vigilance Organization Kashmir on charges of bribe in 2008 when he was posted at police station Charar-e-Sharif, here in Central Kashmir’s Budgam district.

    Special Judge Anti-Corruption Srinagar, Chain Lal Bavoria as per the news agency Kashmir News Trust awarded one-year simple imprisonment to Police Sub Inspector Mushtaq Ahmad Shah. The court also imposed a fine of Rs. 10,000 and in case of default in payment of the fine, the accused shall undergo further imprisonment for one month.

    The accused was sent to Central Jail Srinagar.

    Notable, the accused police sub-inspector Mushtaq Ahmad Shah was trapped while he was posted at Police Station Charar-e-Sharif Budgam on in September 2008 following a complaint lodged by one Abdul Rashid Chopan of Fresdub village at Vigilance (Now ACB) Police Station in Budgam.

    It was averred that the complainant had purchased 3 quintals of rice from Government Ration Depot Nagam, Charar-e-Sharif and was transporting the same in a Sumo towards his home.

    On his way he was intercepted by convicted police officer Mushtaq Ahmad Shah who took him along with rice to Nowhar, Charar-e-Sharief where he demanded and accepted a bribe of Rs. 500 from the complainant but returned only 2 quintals of rice to him.

    The convicted officer handed over the remaining one quintal of rice to a shopkeeper and demanded a further bribe of Rs. 1000 from the complainant. The complainant persuaded the police officer who agreed to accept Rs. 500 only to settle the issue. The bribe was agreed to be paid on 19 September 2008.

    Before greasing the palm of the officer, the complainant approached the Vigilance Organization. Accordingly, a team of officers was constituted who laid a successful trap and arrested the accused officer red-handed while demanding and accepting the bribe. The tainted money was recovered from his possession.

    In this case, Anti- Corruption Bureau was represented by Special Prosecuting Officer Ghulam Jeelani. [KNT]

    [ad_2]
    #Court #sentences #oneyear #imprisonment #police #officer #Kashmir

    ( With inputs from : roshankashmir.net )

  • Judge sentences Jan. 6 defendant who breached Pelosi’s office to 36 months in prison

    Judge sentences Jan. 6 defendant who breached Pelosi’s office to 36 months in prison

    [ad_1]

    Jackson’s sentence was the close of one of the earliest sagas to emerge after the Jan. 6 attack. Williams was one of the first felony defendants charged, and she was suspected at the time of stealing Nancy Pelosi’s laptop, in part because she told friends that she did.

    A jury convicted Williams in December of civil disorder and resisting police but deadlocked on a charge that Williams obstructed Congress and abetted the theft of Pelosi’s laptop. Williams is on tape entering Pelosi’s conference room while other rioters took the laptop, and she encouraged them to steal it, but Williams’ lawyers contended that it was unclear if the other rioters heard her comment.

    Jackson spent much of her sentencing colloquy dismantling the defense’s claim that Williams was too young or too small to be responsible for the grave offenses the government charged. The defense team leaned on Williams’ youthful demeanor and the fact that she seemed briefly confused about which building was being stormed — calling it the White House as she approached. But Jackson said any momentary confusion Williams expressed was clarified by her repeated acknowledgment of why she was there.

    It was not, Jackson emphasized, “because her dizzy little head was confused about which building in Washington was which.”

    Fuentes, she noted, was born the same year as Williams. People can sign up for the military at 18, she added, noting that Williams was old enough on Jan. 6 to have completed a tour of duty. John Lewis was 21 when he became a freedom fighter, Jackson added.

    “She was old enough to be one of the police officers she resisted,” Jackson said.

    Jackson also took on the defense’s repeated assertions about Williams’ diminutive stature, noting that figures like Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, Liz Cheney and Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson had all achieved prominence despite their size.

    “Riley June Williams was old enough and tall enough to be held accountable for her actions,” Jackson said.

    [ad_2]
    #Judge #sentences #Jan #defendant #breached #Pelosis #office #months #prison
    ( With inputs from : www.politico.com )

  • Iran sentences two people to death over Shiraz shrine attack

    Iran sentences two people to death over Shiraz shrine attack

    [ad_1]

    Tehran: The Iranian court has sentenced two people to death in connection with an attack on a shrine in the southern city of Shiraz in October 2022, which claimed the lives of at least 15 people injuring 40 others.

    The two men had been found guilty of charges including “spreading corruption on earth” and acting against national security, said the head of the judiciary in Fars province Kazem Mousavi, according to Mizan News.

    Mohammad Ramiz Rashidi and Sayed Naeem Hashim Qatali, who received the death sentence, were “directly involved in arming, supplying, and directing the main perpetrator of the terrorist attack” on the shrine of Shah-e-Cherag on October 26, 2022.

    Three other defendants in the case were sentenced to 5, 15, and 25 years in prison for being members of ISIS.

    Earlier, the main perpetrator of the attack Hamid Badakhshan, died of the injuries sustained during the arrest.

    The armed attack on the Shah-e-Cherag shrine came as the Islamic Republic was rocked by unrest that erupted after the September 16 killing of Mahsa Amini in the custody of the country’s morality police.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News



    [ad_2]
    #Iran #sentences #people #death #Shiraz #shrine #attack

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Special NIA court sentences ISIS terrorist to seven years in jail in Rajasthan

    Special NIA court sentences ISIS terrorist to seven years in jail in Rajasthan

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: A special NIA court in Rajasthan has sentenced an ISIS-linked terrorist to seven years of rigorous imprisonment for conspiring to carry out terrorist acts in the country, an official said on Tuesday.

    The special judge of the NIA court Jaipur convicted Mohammed Sirajuddin alias “Siraj” in a case registered in 2016 under various sections of Indian Penal Code and the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act, a spokesperson of the federal agency said.

    The case pertains to the promotion of the ISIS ideology and Siraj influencing others over social media platforms such as Facebook, WhatsApp and Telegram to become members of the proscribed terror group and to indulge in terrorist activities, the spokesperson said.

    Sirajuddin, who hails from Gulbarga area in Karnataka, was found inciting the youth to carry out acts of violence and terror.

    “He was living in Jaipur and was using online chats and messages advocating and spreading the ideology of the ISIS, also known as Islamic State, in various parts of the world,” the spokesperson said.

    The official said he also arranged and assisted in organising online discussions and meetings among active ISIS operatives to plan and execute acts of violence and terrorism in the country.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Special #NIA #court #sentences #ISIS #terrorist #years #jail #Rajasthan

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Iran sentences prominent sociologist to 8 years in prison

    Iran sentences prominent sociologist to 8 years in prison

    [ad_1]

    Prominent Iranian sociologist and former political prisoner Saeed Madani Ghaffrokhi, who has been arrested since May 2022 in Tehran, has been sentenced to eight years in prison, local media reported.

    “My client was sentenced to eight years in prison for forming a hostile group and one year for propaganda against the regime,” lawyer Mahmoud Behzad Rad told AFP.

    Madani was arrested in May 2022 accused of “formation and management of anti-government groups”, “holding gatherings and conspiring to commit crimes against the country’s security” and “propaganda against the Islamic Republic of Iran”.

    62-year-old Madani, a professor of sociology at Allameh Tabatabai University in Tehran, has published several books on social issues in Iran, including prostitution, violence against women, child abuse, poverty, and drug addiction.

    The 62-year-old Madani, a sociology professor at Allameh Tabatabai University in Tehran, has published several books on social issues in Iran, including prostitution, violence against women, child abuse, poverty and drug addiction.

    Madani has been arrested several times in the past, most notably in 2012 when he was sentenced to six years in prison.

    [ad_2]
    #Iran #sentences #prominent #sociologist #years #prison

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • UP: Court sentences 4 to life imprisonment for assault with intent to kill case

    UP: Court sentences 4 to life imprisonment for assault with intent to kill case

    [ad_1]

    Gonda: A court here on Thursday sentenced four people to life imprisonment in a 20-year-old case of assault with intent to kill.

    Special Judge (SC-ST Act) Nasir Ahmed-III awarded the sentence to Ram Karan, Umashankar Singh, Ashok Singh and Pawan.

    On July 18, 2003, Tirath was working on a leased land in Shivpura village in Motiganj area of Gonda district, when they opened fire on him with the intention of killing him, Special Public Prosecutor Krishna Pratap Singh said.

    Tirath was seriously injured in this incident and a woman, named Kalavati, a resident of his village, was also injured.

    Singh said that the judge after hearing both parties, convicted all the four and sentenced them to life imprisonment.

    Subscribe us on The Siasat Daily - Google News

    [ad_2]
    #Court #sentences #life #imprisonment #assault #intent #kill #case

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • Delhi court sentences 4 AQIS operatives to seven years, 5 months in jail

    Delhi court sentences 4 AQIS operatives to seven years, 5 months in jail

    [ad_1]

    New Delhi: A Delhi court on Tuesday handed seven years and five months’ jail terms to four Al-Qaida in the Indian Subcontinent (AQIS) operatives, who were convicted on February 10 of conspiracy for the commission of a terrorist act.

    Special Judge Sanjay Khanagwal of Patiala House Court sentenced Mohd Asif, Mohd Abdul Rehman, Zafar Masood and Abdul Sami. The court had convicted the four under the relevant Sections of the Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act.

    According to the convicts’ counsel, the four have already spent about seven years in jail, which will be taken into consideration as part of the punishment.

    However, on the basis of the offences proved by the prosecution, life imprisonment is the maximum punishment.

    On February 10, two suspects, Syed Mohd Zishan Ali and Sabeel Ahmed were acquitted.

    On December 14, 2015, the police arrested Asif, a resident of Sambhal in Uttar Pradesh, who was found to be the India head of AQIS.

    “On the basis of his revelations, Zafar Masood was also arrested from Sambhal on December 15, 2015 and Mohd Abdul Rehman was nabbed from Cuttack, Odisha on December 16, 2015,” a senior police officer of Delhi Police’s Special Cell had said.

    According to the police, Rehman had visited Pakistan illegally and met top militants there including Zaki-ur-Rehman Lakhvi and Sajid Mir, both wanted for the 26/11 Mumbai terror attacks.

    “Abdul Sami, a resident of Jamshedpur (Jharkhand) was apprehended from Mewat on January 17, 2016. He was a Pakistan-trained militant,” the police had said.

    During investigation, the names of the two who were acquitted also surfaced as part of a conspiracy for providing financial and logistics assistance to the cadres of AQIS in the UAE.

    “Ali was deported from UAE in 2017 and was arrested in this case whereas Sabeel Ahmad was deported in 2020. Sabeel was initially arrested in a terror case in Bengaluru (Karnataka) by NIA from IGI Airport in Delhi and later on, he was arrested in this case,” the official had said.

    [ad_2]
    #Delhi #court #sentences #AQIS #operatives #years #months #jail

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )