WASHINGTON — A man charged in the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol backed out of a planned plea deal with the government Thursday, just one day after a federal judge acquitted another defendant.

Shawn Witzemann, who faces four misdemeanor charges, was scheduled to plead guilty next, but he changed his mind after U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden, an appointee of former President Donald Trump, found former federal contractor Matthew Martin not guilty during a bench trial.

McFadden said prosecutors did not prove that Martin knowingly entered a restricted building, and that Martin may have believed that police officers had let him into the building.

Shawn Witzemann.
Shawn Witzemann.FBI

Guy L. Womack, an attorney for Witzemann, told NBC News that the verdict in Martin’s case was the “proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back” and led to Witzemann’s decision to back out of the planned plea deal and take his chances at trial.

“He didn’t want to plead guilty to begin with, but he was afraid to trust the judicial system in D.C.,” Womack said, due to the court’s proximity to the U.S. Capitol and the impact that the Jan. 6 attack had on D.C. residents. But “seeing that the judge did the right thing” in the Martin case impacted his thinking, Womack said.

Witzemann was arrested in New Mexico last April. His case, however, isn’t before McFadden. Instead, he’ll go before Judge Thomas F. Hogan, a Reagan appointee who has spoken out strongly about the seriousness of the Jan. 6 attack.

Hogan has called Jan. 6 “an insurrection” and “probably the worst thing that’s happened to our democratic way of life in our history except for the War of 1812.” He also said the mob was trying to “overthrow the government,” that there was no plausible claim that what happened at the Capitol was protected by the First Amendment, and has shown frustration with those trying to downplay the events of that day.

More than 775 people have been charged in connection with the attack on the Capitol, and more than 225 have pleaded guilty. As an overwhelmed Justice Department attempts to churn through hundreds of Jan. 6 cases already charged and hundreds more in the works, Martin’s acquittal could lead to more Jan. 6 defendants trying their luck in court.

Several defendants have attempted to get their trials transferred out of the nation’s capital, arguing that a jury pulled from a population that overwhelmingly voted for President Joe Biden and was so closely impacted by the Jan. 6 attack could not give them a fair trial.

Womack said Witzemann, who participates in a podcast called “The Armenian Council for Truth in Journalism” and has livestreamed other events, was reporting on Jan. 6 when he was at the Capitol.

“He was acting as a journalist,” Womack said.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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