WASHINGTON — A federal judge in D.C. on Tuesday will hand down verdicts in the trial of three Jan. 6 defendants that could have a major impact on the trajectory of Capitol attack prosecutions going forward.

The three men — Patrick McCaughey, Tristan Stevens, and David Mehaffie — have appeared for a bench, or non-jury trial, before U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden, a Donald Trump appointee who is the only federal judge in D.C. who has acquitted a Jan. 6 defendant. Following a trial that spanned two weeks, McFadden said he would announce the verdicts at 3 p.m. on Tuesday afternoon.

Each defendant is facing a number of criminal charges, including felony counts of assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers and aiding and abetting; obstruction of an official proceeding; and civil disorder.

Sept. 13, 202203:30

Federal prosecutors have secured guilty verdicts on every charge brought against every defendant in jury trials, so far. A mixed verdict in the bench trial of McCaughey, Stevens, and Mehaffie could encourage even more defendants to try their luck at a bench trial at a time when the Justice Department, FBI, and D.C. federal court system are struggling to keep pace with a massive investigation that has packed the court docket, with hundreds more arrests still yet to come.

While McFadden has acquitted two defendants on misdemeanor charges (one defendant of all charges, another defendant of one of his charges), neither he nor any judge or jury has acquitted a Capitol defendant on a felony charge.

The case centers around the location of some of the most brutal violence of Jan. 6, at the top of the platform that had been set up for President Joe Biden’s inauguration. The “tunnel” at the top of the temporary scaffolding — referred to by one judge as “the entranceway for Lady Gaga” because of her performance at the inauguration — saw some of the most violent clashes between rioters and police, as hundreds of Trump supporters tried to force their way inside the Capitol. Police officers sustained multiple serious injuries at the location as rioters dragged cops out of the tunnel, including former Metropolitan Police Department Officer Michael Fanone, who had a stun gun driven into his neck.

Online sleuths dubbed McCaughey #ThePinman, Stevens #ShaggyProfessor, and Mehaffie #TunnelCommander. Mehaffie was identified by online sleuths with the help of a facial recognition hit on his Classmates.com profile. He earned the nickname because footage shows Mehaffie serving as a kind of crossing guard for rioters, standing above and watching the battle while directing other rioters in and out of the tunnel. He is also seen grabbing a stick as officers try to force him off the ledge.

Footage played at trial also shows Mehaffie encouraging members of the mob to climb over a retaining wall on the restricted grounds of the U.S. Capitol before he reached the tunnel where some of the worst violence of Jan. 6 took place.

“If we can’t fight over this wall, we can’t win this battle! Come on!” Mehaffie yells as he encourages others over the retaining wall.

A scene from a tunnel in the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
A scene from a tunnel in the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, featuring Mehaffie, standing and pointing at the entrance to the tunnel (in front of the Trump flag).NBC News

Mehaffie testified during his trial and portrayed his mention of a “battle” as an ideological battle rather than a physical one.

“If you believe our country’s in trouble, we certainly are in in a battle as to whether you stand up, we get called names and get lumped into groups. So that is exactly the battle I’m talking about,” Mehaffie testified. “If you can’t enter into the battle of ideas, you’ve, you’ve lost all your freedoms.”

Mehaffie conceded, under cross-examination by Assistant U.S. Attorney Kimberly Paschall, that the mob “knew” that police “wanted us to leave.” Under questioning from his own lawyer, he also said he wished he hadn’t held a stolen police shield up for the cheering crowd, saying it was “exactly the opposite” of what he claimed he wanted to convey.

Patrick McCaughey III at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Patrick McCaughey III at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia

MPD Officer Daniel Hodges, who was crushed in a door during the Jan. 6 attack, testified for the prosecution about how he was pinned by a police shield being held by defendant McCaughey.

“It, combined with everything else that was going on, made it difficult to breathe,” Hodges testified. “Being crushed by the shield and the people behind it … leaving me defenseless, injured.”

“There is no good way to fight back against it,” Hodges said. “You have to endure the pressure that it creates.”

U.S. Capitol Police Sgt. Aquilino Gonell also testified, the second time he’s done so in a Capitol attack trial.

Video shows Stevens grabbing a baton, but his defense attorney suggested that Stevens was only trying to defend himself, according to The Washington Post.

“If my memory serves correct, we the officers were the ones on duty that day, not him,” Gonell responded, according to The Washington Post.

Video also shows Stevens asking officers if they knew “what happens to” traitors, as WUSA9 reported.

“They get tied to a post and shot,” Stevens Are you ready for that?” 

Tristan Stevens, indicated by the red square, at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Tristan Stevens, indicated by the red square, at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.Dept. of Justice

In the sprawling Capitol investigation, the FBI has arrested more than 850 people, and more than 350 defendants have pleaded guilty. Sentences have ranged from probation to a decade in federal prison for a former New York City Police Department cop who assaulted a D.C. police officer on Jan. 6 and then lied on the stand.

Eight Capitol attack defendants who took their cases to a jury — Guy ReffittThomas RobertsonDustin ThompsonThomas WebsterTimothy Hale-CusanelliAnthony Robert WilliamsMatthew Bledsoe, and Erik Herrera — were convicted on every count.

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

Tea drinkers enjoy possible health benefits, study suggests

A cup of tea just got a bit more relaxing. Tea can…

Imagine Dragons frontman Dan Reynolds on becoming an unlikely LGBTQ ally

The straight, cisgender frontman of a rock band may not be the first…

Biden Administration Makes Emergency Appeal on Student Loan Forgiveness

Politics Lower court injunction halting debt relief has left millions of borrowers…

‘Rust’ armorer has ‘no idea’ where live rounds came from, attorney says

The armorer on the movie set where actor Alec Baldwin fatally shot…