Supreme Court Action Leads to Early Release of Jan. 6 Prisoner Who Carried Confederate Flag

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Jan. 6 prisoner has won early release from prison thanks to a Supreme Court decision to review the use of a felony obstruction charge against Jan. 6 detainees.

A Delaware man serving a three-year sentence for marching through the halls of Congress on Jan. 6, 2021, has won early release thanks to a Supreme Court decision to review the Biden administrationโ€™s novel use of an evidence-tampering law to prosecute hundreds of Jan. 6 defendants for felony obstruction of Congress.

Kevin Seefried, who was one of the first people to enter the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, was convicted in June 2022 following a bench trial before Judge Trevor McFadden of the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia on four misdemeanors and a single felony obstruction charge.

Judge McFadden sentenced him on Feb. 9, 2023, to 36 months in prison and one year of supervised release.

Mr. Seefried, whoโ€™s been incarcerated since May 31, 2023, appealed his conviction and sentence several times.

Following a complex legal journey tied to the fate of a separate Jan. 6 case that is now before the U.S. Supreme Court, Judge McFadden issued an order on March 26, granting Mr. Seefriedโ€™s motion for release pending resolution of an appealโ€”but not immediately.

โ€œThe Bureau of Prisons is ordered to release Seefried one year after the day on which he surrendered to custody,โ€ the judge wrote in the memorandum and order, meaning that Mr. Seefried will remain behind bars until May 31.

The judge also ordered both parties to file a joint status report no later than 14 days after the Supreme Court releases its opinion in a case known as Fischer v. United States, which experts say could weaken prosecutorsโ€™ hand in hundreds of Jan. 6 prosecutions.

Supreme Court Paves Way For Early Release

In December 2023, the Supreme Court decided it would take up an appeal by Jan. 6 defendant Joseph W. Fisher of the Biden administrationโ€™s novel use of an Enron-era evidence-tampering law to prosecute hundreds of defendants for obstruction of Congress during the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol breach.

Byย Tom Ozimek

Read Original Article on TheEpochTimes.com

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