Two federal judges this week brought up the disinformation about 2020 from right-wing figures, and even Trump himself, as they considered keeping alleged Capitol rioters in jail before trial.
And prosecutors from the Justice Department are arguing more explicitly that violent threats stemming from Trump-backed conspiracy theories are still alive, and that Trump supporters could be called to act again.
The comments from prosecutors and judges demonstrate how Trump’s post-presidency lying about 2020 is complicating matters for some of his most ardent supporters — including people who heeded his call to come to Washington on January 6 and are now in jail cells awaiting trial.
Trump still ‘constantly’ lying about 2020
“The Court is not convinced that dissatisfaction and concern about the legitimacy of the election results has dissipated for all Americans. Former President Donald J. Trump continues to make forceful public comments about the ‘stolen election,’ chastising individuals who did not reject the supposedly illegitimate results that put the current administration in place,” Sullivan wrote.
The issue came up Thursday at a hearing for another defendant in the same case.
“The unfounded allegations are out there, and they’re being made constantly by the former President,” Sullivan said, prompting a defense attorney to condemn Trump’s comments as “absolutely reprehensible” and express hope that “somebody” will “try to stop” the lying.
The defendants that Sullivan was worried could commit future violence — Jack Whitton of Georgia and Michael Lopatic of Pennsylvania — have remained in jail since their arrests.
Right-wing media still ‘stoke’ anger
The “big lie” lives on not just in Trump’s press releases but also in many of the media outlets that cheered him on during his presidency, which are deeply influential among his followers.
“It’s not as if the effort by some political leaders and media figures to stoke this sort of anger has abated in any way,” Judge Amy Berman Jackson said at a court hearing on Thursday, where she weighed releasing from jail an alleged Capitol rioter who claimed he was called upon by God to enter the Senate chamber and said he would take up arms in a revolution if needed.
She added, “Isn’t it fair to say that the same political issues and the same political concerns are being pumped out into the airways on a daily basis?”
“Do you understand that if you’re opposed to the current leadership of this country and you choose unlawful means to bring about change, you’re going to be in violation of your conditions of release?” Jackson asked Black in court.
“Yes, your Honor, I understand,” he said, then took an oath, with his eyes closed and one handcuffed hand up, to abide by her ruling.
Future dangerousness
The question of future dangerousness by Capitol rioters keeps coming up in part because of an appellate ruling that prompted judges to ask whether a pro-Trump mob could attack again.
That federal appeals court, whose decisions govern the trial courts handling the Capitol riot defendants, noted that January 6 was a unique event — with the threat of the crowd not likely to be repeated. The court said “specific circumstances” made January 6 possible, because the Electoral College vote was happening while Trump supporters rallied against the perceived of fraud.
That has opened the door for prosecutors to argue more about the current political environment. In court filings about detaining Capitol rioters, the Justice Department now addresses head-on the possibility of persistent danger inspired by Trump.
Prosecutors explained to a judge in a court filing Thursday that its Capitol riot cases pursue right-wing militia members and people who have said they want to “continue in similar violent endeavors until the current administration is overthrown.”
The prosecutors also noted in a separate criminal case on Friday that defendant Nathaniel DeGrave had posted online in late January a picture of Trump, calling him his “idol.” DeGrave is accused of driving cross-country to the Capitol with two others who had assembled a weapons cache and a walkie-talkie communications plan, then tussling with a Capitol Police officer. He has pleaded not guilty.
“The defendant is of course entitled to his political preferences. But given his prior acts of traveling across the country with weapons to ‘stop the steal’ and interfering with the peaceful transition of power on behalf of his idol,” prosecutors wrote, “and his idol’s continued inflammatory rhetoric about a stolen election, the defendant continues to pose a concrete and articulable threat to the community.”