During a recent interview, J6 political prisoner Dominic Pezzolla expressed his frustration with Republican lawmakers whom he feels are contributing to America’s downfall. Pezzolla referred to these lawmakers as a “disgrace and embarrassment.”
“We were right across the street from the Capitol. Do you think one of those Republicans would even walk across the street to observe the atrocities that were happening in that courtroom?” Pezzola admonished in his first interview since a jury of Antifa-sympathizers convicted leaders of the Proud Boys for seditious conspiracy. “Not one of them gives a s**t about any of us — they don’t.
“They go in there and talk a big game, they are going to, ‘Fight for you,’ ‘They’re going to fight for us.’ Hey, Kevin McCarthy, where the hell is the f**** footage from January 6 that you’ve been promising everyone? Where is it?”
Speaker Kevin McCarthy promised to release all the Capitol footage from Jan 6 at the beginning of the current session when Republicans were the majority. However, five months have passed since then, and there has been no progress.
“He still hasn’t let it out. They are just all talk. They don’t care about us,” Pezzola said. if we don’t get up and get off our as**s and grow a set, it’s going to be too late for our way of life. If it doesn’t affect you right now, someday, your children are going to school in between learning about proper pronouns and transgender studies, they are going to be learning about the ancient conservatives that are now extinct that used to roam the planes of the fly-over country that had to be eradicated by the left because they were a threat to socialism and communism.
“How dare [McCarthy] call himself a Republican. You say you work for us? Everyone knows that January 6 was a complete set-up. There are feds, there are informants and there’s Antifa — I mean, there is everything you can imagine in there.”
According to constitutional experts, the Republican-controlled House has the legislative authority to ensure that the defendants involved in the J6 incident receive fair treatment and could potentially release them.
“Article I Section 8 Clause 17 of the US Constitution is known as the “enclave clause,” attorney David Clements notes. “It establishes Congress’s exclusive power to regulate all matters within the District of Columbia. This would necessarily include all matters related to police power, the option of establishing a city council and position of mayor to run the district’s affairs, and the administration of prisons and the treatment of prisoners.
“In other words, your elected representatives, now led by a Republican majority, should be lobbying 24/7 for the immediate release of those imprisoned in the DC gulag now. Withholding federal funding, or exercising the ‘power of the purse’ should be leveraged.”
The Department of Justice is ongoing with its J6 investigation and is detaining an increasing number of individuals who participated in protests against the allegedly fraudulent 2020 presidential election every week. These J6 protesters are being held without bail, experiencing inhumane treatment while in custody, and are being prevented from accessing discovery and other Constitutional rights. This appears to be a violation of the Sixth Amendment.
Former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio, Ethan Nordean, Joseph Biggs, and Zachary Rehl were found guilty of seditious conspiracy, conspiracy to obstruct an official, and various other federal charges related to the January 6, 2021 breach of the U.S. Capitol on May 4.
Even though Tarrio did not participate in the riot, prosecutors alleged that he led the assault and directed senior members of the Proud Boys known as the “Ministry of Self-Defense” during the riot on Capitol Hill. Pezzola, who joined the Proud Boys just 30 days before January 6, was acquitted of a charge of seditious conspiracy but was found guilty of other charges, including robbery of government property and assaulting, resisting or obstructing an officer.
The defendants are each potentially facing a 20-year sentence in federal prison. Although sentencing is currently scheduled for late August, the defendants’ attorneys have been informed that it may be postponed until October.
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