WASHINGTON — A former police officer from Virginia who stormed the U.S. Capitol was sentenced to more than seven years in federal prison on Thursday, tying with another Jan. 6 defendant for the longest sentence to date.

Thomas Robertson, who had been a police officer in Rocky Mount, Virginia, was convicted by a jury on all six counts back in April. His former colleague and co-defendant Jacob Fracker, who took a plea deal, testified that Robertson wanted to “overturn” the election and that he wouldn’t have traveled to D.C. if it wasn’t for Robertson. Prosecutors told jurors that Robertson “put himself right in the middle of it” on Jan. 6 and carried a stick that he held as he blocked officers’ paths at the Capitol.

“You were not some bystander who just got swept up in the crowd,” U.S. District Court Judge Christopher Cooper told Robertson as the defendant stood before him, wearing an orange prison jumpsuit.

Thomas Robertson.
Thomas Robertson.U.S. District Court, For The District of Columbia

Cooper noted that it still appears that Robertson believes in former President Donald Trump’s conspiracy theories about the 2020 presidential election and said he believed that Robertson would “answer a call” to violence in the future.

“Thomas Robertson, despite swearing an oath of office when he became a police officer, joined the violent mob at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, and did so while armed,” U.S. Attorney Matthew M. Graves of the District of Columbia said in a statement following the sentencing, referring to the stick Robertson carried. “Today’s sentence holds him accountable for his role in the violence that day.”

Roberston and Fracker were fired from the Rocky Mount Police Department after they were arrested in the Jan. 6 probe.

Aug. 11, 202200:25

Prosecutors had sought what would have been a record-setting sentence for Robertson, but Cooper ultimately decided to go slightly lower, at the bottom end of the sentencing guidelines. In giving Robertson a sentence that matched that of Guy Reffitt, another Jan. 6 defendant who went to trial, Cooper noted that their cases were similar in many ways.

Cooper said that he did not believe that Robertson actually took responsibility for his actions on Jan. 6.

A federal prosecutor said during sentencing Thursday that Robertson “used his law enforcement and military training” to block Metropolitan Police Department officers from doing their jobs on Jan. 6. Robertson, they argued, showed “utter disregard for the rule of law” by trafficking in firearms after his arrest.

In court filings ahead of his sentencing, the Justice Department said that Robertson lied about his military background and several other aspects of the case.

In one text Robertson sent after his arrest, highlighted by prosecutors, he said he could “kill every agent that they send for probably 2 weeks. Maybe longer.”

Cooper showed particular concern about Robertson’s actions after his arrest, including firearms trafficking and advocacy for violence.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

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