WASHINGTON — A former Capitol Police officer who warned a Jan. 6 defendant about a post that said he was inside the Capitol building was found guilty on one count of felony obstruction of justice by a jury on Friday.

Michael Riley was indicted in October 2021 on two counts of obstruction of justice and resigned from the Capitol Police force shortly thereafter. At his trial this month, federal prosecutors argued that Riley “betrayed” his oath by sending Jan. 6 defendant Jacob Hiles a Facebook message, warning that the FBI and law enforcement were planning to charge everyone who entered the building.

“[I’]m a capitol police officer who agrees with your political stance,” Riley wrote in a message he later deleted after Hiles’ arrest. “Take down the part about being in the building they are correctly investigating and everyone who was in the building is going to be charged. Just looking out!”

The jury was not able to reach a verdict on the first count, which related to the message he sent to the rioter. But they did find him guilty of a second count for deleting his messages with Hiles after he found out Hiles had been talking to the FBI.

One juror, speaking anonymously after the verdict, told reporters that there was a single holdout on the jury who would not convict Riley on both counts. It was 11-1 for a guilty verdict on the first count, the juror said, and they could not break the tie.

The jury had been deliberating since Tuesday afternoon, by far the lengthiest deliberations of any Jan. 6-related jury trial. U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson, in Washington, D.C., declared a mistrial on the first obstruction count, and it isn’t clear whether federal prosecutors will seek to try Riley again on that count given that two convictions wouldn’t make much difference at sentencing.

Taking the stand in his own defense Monday, Riley told jurors he was “embarrassed” by the messages he sent to Hiles, but insisted that he did not intend to obstruct a grand jury proceeding.

“I was embarrassed because I had reached out to him in the first place and allowed myself to get in a position like this,” Riley told jurors in court on Monday. “I never intended for any of this to happen.”

Jacob Hiles, indicated by the red circle, at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Jacob Hiles, circled in red, at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.Dept. of Justice

Defense attorney Christopher Macchiaroli argued during his closing on Tuesday that jurors may feel that Riley should have done something differently and reported Hiles, but said the case “is not about failure to report” but whether Riley intentionally obstructed a grand jury proceeding.

“I said this was a complex case. It is,” Macchiaroli argued. “It is not easy, you will have doubts in this case. They will be reasonable. Follow them.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Mary Dohrmann argued that Riley’s intentions were clear, that he knew the FBI was involved in the “massive investigation” into Jan. 6 and he knew that the FBI uses federal grand juries.

“The only thing you need to do … is apply your common sense,” Dohrmann argued.

“He was thinking, how do I get this rioter, my Facebook friend, from being caught up in this grand jury investigation,” Dohrmann argued.

Riley, a former K-9 officer with the Capitol Police, was one of the first officers to respond to the Republican National Committee building near the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 after someone left a pipe bomb there, along with a bomb at the Democratic National Committee down the street.

Later that night, Riley and his dog helped sweep the Capitol building so that Congress could return into their joint session and certify President Joe Biden’s victory over former President Donald Trump.

Source: | This article originally belongs to Nbcnews.com

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Fiery tanker crash kills driver, burns Maryland homes

FREDERICK, Md. — A tanker truck overturned on a Maryland highway Saturday…

In Fox-Dominion Trial, All Eyes Are on the Judge, Too

“Judge Davis has lived with, and labored mightily on bringing to a…

White House rolls out plan to vaccinate kids ages 5 to 11 against Covid

WASHINGTON — The Biden administration on Wednesday is announcing its plan for…

Venture Capital’s New Bet: Black Entrepreneurs

Austin Clements was ready to give up. He’d quit his job in…