A conservative activist has been sentenced to three months of home detention and a $5,000 fine.
Brandon Straka, 45, of Nebraska, was sentenced on Monday for his participation in the Jan. 6 breach of the U.S. Capitol building.
U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich accused Straka of abusing his online platform to encourage people to attack on Jan. 6 and defend the events that unfolded on that day.
โElection challenges are fought in the courts, not by storming the Capitol,โ Friedrich said, calling Strakaโs use of social media โdeeply disturbing.โ
Straka, a Democrat-turned-Republican, pleaded guilty in October to a disorderly conduct charge, a misdemeanor with a maximum penalty of six months imprisonment.
Straka founded the โWalkAwayโ movement, which encourages disenchanted Democrats and liberals to move right. The former hair stylist in 2018 posted a video titled โWhy I left the Democrat Party,โ which went viral.
He told the judge he and his social media followers donโt condone violence. Straka said his relationship with his fans and followers isnโt just about politics, โitโs about love.โ
โItโs not who they are, and itโs not who I am, which is why they love our movement,โ he said.
Straka didnโt enter the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 and wasnโt accused of doing so. According to court documents, he was accused of encouraging protesters to take a police officerโs shield.
Straka in a statement said he joined in chants after he โobserved others yelling to take a U.S. Capitol Police Officerโs shield,โ and told the judge he was โdeeply sorry and ashamed,โ the Huffington Post reported.
โEven if he didnโt personally engage in violence or property destruction during the riot, Straka encouraged and celebrated the violence of that day,โ Assistant U.S. Attorney Brittany Reed wrote in a court filing.
WUSA-9 reported that the judge was skeptical about the defendantโs statements.
โHe wants me to believe he was there completely oblivious to what was going on around him, that he was just a peaceful protester, and itโs very hard to believe that based on his conduct and his statements,โ Friedrich was quoted as saying by the news outlet.
Strakaโs attorney, Bilal Essayli, accused prosecutors of attacking Strakaโs First Amendment rights and โattempting to make a public example of a prominent Trump-supporting influencer.โ
However, Friedrich said Straka wasnโt being punished for his political views or personal beliefs.
โNone of the criminal conduct to which Mr. Straka has admitted is covered by the First Amendment,โ the judge said.
The Epoch Times has reached out to Straka and Essayli for comment.
The Department of Justice said on the one-year anniversary of the Capitol breach that more than 725 people had been arrested so far.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Byย Isabel van Brugen