Trump Supporter Jailed For 5 Years Over Capitol Assault
WASHINGTON, DC - JANUARY 06: Pro-Trump supporters storm the U.S. Capitol following a rally with President Donald Trump on January 6, 2021 in Washington, DC. Trump supporters gathered in the nation's capital today to protest the ratification of President-elect Joe Biden's Electoral College victory over President Trump in the 2020 election. (Photo by Samuel Corum/Getty Images)

A supporter of Donald Trump was on Friday sentenced to five years in prison for assaulting police officers during the attack on the US Capitol, a sentence which has become the harshest punishment yet handed down in the investigation into the January 6 violence.

Africa Today News, New York gathered that Robert Scott Palmer, 54,  was one of those seen in videos and photos wearing an American flag jacket decorated with pro-Trump patches and a hat reading ‘Florida for Trump’ as he threw boards, a fire extinguisher and other objects at police outside the Capitol.

He had tried to force his way into the Capitol but was ultimately pushed back by pepper spray deployed by security officials.

After that, he continued to throw things at officers, until he was hit by a rubber bullet.

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Federal judge Tanya Chutkan rejected Palmer’s arguments for leniency of a troubled childhood and a handwritten apology that said that he and others had been duped into attacking the Congress by the former president, whom he called ‘tyrannical’ and ‘desperate to hold on to power.’

‘I realize that we meaning Trump supporters had been lied to,’ he wrote.

Prosecutors pointed out that even after his October 4 guilty plea, Palmer continued to defend his actions, labelling police the aggressors on a fundraising website page he set up.

‘Palmer purposefully joined a large group of rioters with the specific intent of interfering with the nation’s electoral process,’ the prosecutors told the court in a sentencing memo.

‘Palmer’s violence was in pursuit of his political goal of subverting a democratic election and the peaceful transition of power.’

The previous stiffest sentence in the Capitol attack was 41 months, given to two men who were charged with obstructing an official proceeding but were not accused of assaulting law enforcement.

No fewer than 700 people have been charged in the attack, most of them for minor offenses like illegally entering the Capitol.

But several dozen face assault and deadly weapons charges as well as conspiracy, which could lead to heavy sentences.

AFRICA TODAY NEWS, NEW YORK

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