Ex-Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio gets harshest prison sentence in Jan. 6 case

Former Proud Boys leader Henry “Enrique” Tarrio was sentenced Tuesday to 22 years behind bars for taking a lead role Jan. 6 Capitol riot — the stiffest punishment doled out in the series of cases.

Tarrio, 39, the former national chairman of the far-right extremist group, was convicted in May by a Washington, DC jury of seditious conspiracy for working with others to try to block the transfer of power in order to keep Republican President Donald Trump in office after he lost the 2020 election.

Judge Timothy Kelly handed down the hefty prison term — which was less than the 33 years that prosecutors were seeking.

While Tarrio, of Miami, wasn’t in DC the day of the insurrection — after he was arrested two days prior and ordered to stay out of the city — prosecutors said he still organized and directed the attack.

Meanwhile, Tarrios’ lawyers at trial tried to dispel arguments that there was a coordinated effort, painting the neo-fascist organization as a decentralized drinking club whose members launched an impromptu insurgency in fury over the election result.

On Friday, co-defendant and another Proud Boys leader Ethan Nordean, 32, was hit with 18 years in prison on a seditious conspiracy conviction — still less than the 27 years that prosecutors had been seeking.

Enrique Tarrio was sentenced to 22 years in prison after he was convicted of seditious conspiracy for the Jan. 6 Capitol Riot.
Amy Harris/Shutterstock

Enrique Tarrio
Prosecutors argued that Tarrio coordinated the attack by the far-right group’s members.
REUTERS

“If we don’t have a peaceful transfer of power in this country, we don’t have anything,” Kelly said at that sentencing.

Nordean’s sentenced was tied with Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes’ prison term for the the longest doled out in the Capitol Riot cases.

Earlier in the day Friday, Dominic Pezzola, 45, was sentenced to a more lenient 10 years behind bars with Kelly, noting that Pezzola was acquitted on the seditious conspiracy charge but still convicted of serious crimes including assaulting police and obstructing an official proceeding.


US Capitol riot.
Tarrio’s lawyers argued for leniency, claiming there was no conspiracy but rather the group members made the impromptu attack in a fight of anger over the election results.
REUTERS

“You personally played a significant role in the events that day,” Kelly said at the time. “It was a national disgrace, what happened.”

Over 1,100 people were charged for the involvement in the Capitol assault — with at least 630 pleading guilty and another 110 getting convicted at trial.

Five people were killed in the melee, including one police officer and over 140 cops were injured. The Capitol incurred millions of dollars worth of damage.


Donald Trump speaking at the Capitol.
Trump earlier this month was charged with trying to overthrow the election result.
AP

Trump, 77, was hit with federal charges for allegedly trying to stay in power after losing the election. The embattled former president faces four other criminal cases — including a Manhattan “hush money” case, a Florida documents case and a Georgia election interference case.

Trump has maintained his innocence on all of the charges.

Tarrio’s lawyers didn’t immediately return a request for comment Tuesday.

With Post wires

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