Judge Bans Rhodes From DC

Oath Keepers founder visited Capitol Hill after his sentence was commuted by Trump
By Bob Cronin,  Newser Staff
Posted Jan 22, 2025 7:45 PM CST
Updated Jan 24, 2025 11:45 AM CST
Stewart Rhodes Makes Visit to Capitol Hill, Stunning Staff
Stewart Rhodes, convicted on charges relating to the Jan. 6 riot at the US Capitol, talks to reporters after meeting with lawmakers on Capitol Hill in Washington on Wednesday, Jan. 22, 2024.   (AP Photo Nathan Ellgren)
UPDATE Jan 24, 2025 11:45 AM CST

Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes has been freed from prison but he's no longer free to visit the Capitol. Judge Amit Mehta has banned Rhodes and seven other militia members whose sentences were commuted by President Trump from entering Washington, DC, without permission. The order changing their conditions of supervised release, issued two days after Rhodes visited Capitol Hill, also specifically bans Rhodes and the other Oath Keepers from visiting the Capitol and the surrounding area without court permission, Politico reports. In 2023, Mehta sentenced Rhodes to 18 years for his role in the Capitol attack, telling him he presents "an ongoing threat and a peril to this country, to the Republic and the very fabric of our democracy."

Jan 22, 2025 7:45 PM CST

On his first full day of freedom, Stewart Rhodes—who was convicted of orchestrating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack—returned to Capitol Hill. He was released from prison on Tuesday after President Trump commuted his sentence. When Rhodes was spotted at a Dunkin' Donuts in the Longworth House Office Building, a spot open to the public, the Oath Keepers founder said he did not go into the Capitol building on Wednesday, the Hill reports. Rhodes said he wasn't exactly invited by a member of Congress but was lobbying for the release of Jeremy Brown, a fellow Oath Keeper still in prison. "We're advocating members of Congress, advocating that he be given a pardon also," he told reporters.

Rhodes said he still wants a full pardon for himself, too, from Trump. "I think all of us should be pardoned," he said. The shocking news of Rhodes' arrival swept through the congressional staff, per the Hill. A woman went up to Rhodes to tell him he shouldn't be there. "You are welcome [to] First Amendment free speech, but it is disrespectful," she said, adding, "please tell your story elsewhere." He told reporters that "certain people, in her mind, don't deserve free speech and should be wiped off the face of the planet when it comes to their free speech." Lawmakers were equally stunned, per the AP. "Does he still constitute a threat to public safety? Does he constitute a threat to American constitutional democracy?" asked Democratic Rep. Jamie Raskin.

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On the same day, judges in Washington's federal court were dismissing pending cases against Jan. 6 defendants. Several of them included criticism of the prosecutions ending in their orders. US District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly said that video, trial transcripts, and jury verdicts will remain as evidence of the attack. "Those records are immutable and represent the truth, no matter how the events of January 6 are described by those charged or their allies," she wrote. Judge Tanya Chutkan said Trump's pardons can't change the "tragic truth" of the attack, and the dismissal she was issuing of a case before her cannot "diminish the heroism of law enforcement officers" who defended the Capitol on that day. "It cannot whitewash the blood, feces and terror that the mob left in its wake," Chutkan wrote, per the AP. "And it cannot repair the jagged breach in America's sacred tradition of peacefully transitioning power." (More Stewart Rhodes stories.)

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