“这早就该来了”:1月6日国会山骚乱参与者和选举否认者庆祝特朗普设立的18亿美元赔偿基金


2026-05-20T20:00:37.968Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/20/politics/trump-fund-january-6-election-deniers-want-money

试图推翻2020年大选结果的美国总统唐纳德·特朗普的支持者们,有望从这笔18亿美元的赔偿基金中获利。该基金旨在为特朗普政府认定的、遭受政府“政治操弄和司法打压”的受害者提供补偿。

在接受CNN采访时,2021年1月6日国会山骚乱的定罪参与者、虚假选举人团成员以及知名选举否认者均表示,他们希望能从这笔巨额基金中获益,认为这早就该来了。

“我连在摩托车经销商处接电话的工作都找不到,”已定罪的1月6日骚乱参与者多米尼克·博克斯说道,他在候审期间被关押了1.5年,后来获得了特朗普的赦免。“我现在没法养活自己,丢了工作。我盼着能拿到经济补偿,我需要这笔钱。这对我来说真是雪中送炭。”

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MyPillow首席执行官迈克·林德尔告诉CNN,他认为自己的公司在2020大选后因他眼中的政府操弄损失了4亿美元。他曾是毫无根据的选民欺诈言论最响亮的鼓吹者之一,因此遭到企业抵制、诽谤诉讼,甚至遭到联邦调查局的调查。

“可以说我们是全世界受本国政府伤害最严重的公司,”林德尔说道。

One America News(一家支持特朗普的电视台,曾宣扬2020年大选存在投票舞弊的虚假说法)的一名律师也向CNN证实,该公司“正在认真考虑依据该基金主张权利”。此前,大多数大型有线电视供应商已停止转播OAN,该公司还就2020年相关的多起诽谤诉讼达成了和解。

包括副总统JD·万斯和代理司法部长托德·布兰奇在内的特朗普政府高级官员,一直回避针对1月6日相关罪行(包括袭击警察的人员)是否应该获得该基金赔偿的问题。

“任何人都可以申请,”布兰奇在周二的预算听证会上对议员们表示,他指出即使是冲击国会大厦的人也可以提交索赔申请,由他任命的五人委员会进行审核。

该基金的覆盖范围远比2020年大选相关人士更广。潜在受助者可能包括在特别检察官罗伯特·米勒调查2016年大选俄罗斯干预事件中受到调查的人员、2019年特朗普-乌克兰弹劾案中涉案的特朗普政府官员,以及其他相关人员。

已知的首位潜在索赔人、特朗普顾问迈克尔·卡普托曾被米勒调查,部分原因是他与俄罗斯官员的联系。他从未被起诉,目前正在寻求270万美元的赔偿,他表示这些调查给他和他的家庭造成了经济和其他方面的损失。

美国前联邦调查局局长詹姆斯·科米在CNN节目中开玩笑说,他也可能提出索赔。特朗普政府曾试图以涉嫌向国会撒谎的罪名起诉科米但未成功,如今又提出新的指控,称一张海滩贝壳拼成“86 47”的照片构成了对特朗普的威胁。

“这笔基金是为了补偿那些被司法部以他们所说的个人、政治或意识形态理由作为目标的人,”科米在接受CNN的杰克·塔珀采访时说道。“所以我猜我也在排队之列。我希望我能排在那些野蛮袭击警察、洗劫国会大厦的人前面。”

潜在“受害者”中规模最大的群体是近1600名因国会山1月6日骚乱受到指控的人员。

他们早已获得特朗普的赦免,包括大规模特赦和减刑,数百名罪犯因此获释,未决的起诉也被撤销。但这笔新设立的特朗普基金实现了1月6日事件参与者群体长期以来的核心诉求:赔偿。

“这早就该来了,”博克斯说道。“辛苦工作的普通美国人被当作替罪羊肆意打压、彻底毁掉,这太不合理了。”

博克斯于2024年被判定所有罪名成立,包括重罪,但他并未被指控在国会山实施暴力行为。特朗普在2025年实施大规模特赦后,司法部在宣判前撤销了对博克斯的案件。

博克斯是一名大学毕业生,现居佐治亚州。他表示自己在1月6日之前是一名汽车销售员,但骚乱后很难找到工作。

“新冠疫情期间汽车市场火爆,”博克斯说道。“但因为我无法从事面向公众的工作,我没能赚到那些钱。我认识的人原本一年能赚4万美元,那段时间能拿到15万到20万美元。”

一位最知名的1月6日事件参与者表示,他不打算申请该基金。

雅各布·钱斯利,更广为人知的身份是“QAnon萨满”,本周告诉CNN,他希望通过自己对特朗普提起的40万亿美元诉讼获得赔偿,该诉讼指控存在各种政府阴谋。一名法官去年驳回了这起诉讼,但钱斯利自行代理,重新提起了这起胜算渺茫的诉讼。

钱斯利去年告诉CNN,他因为特朗普对性犯罪者杰弗里·爱泼斯坦相关丑闻的处理方式而与特朗普决裂。

代表骄傲男孩和誓言守护者成员的两名律师(这些成员因涉嫌密谋改变2020年大选结果而被起诉并定罪)告诉CNN,他们会考虑当事人是否有资格申请该基金。

其中一名律师告诉CNN,他的当事人是一名誓言守护者成员,曾以迷彩服和准军事装束“编队”进入国会大厦,在1月6日事件的调查和审判后“完全变了一个人”,难以找到工作、重建生活。

2020年支持特朗普的“虚假选举人团”成员也有望从该基金中获益,尤其是他们中的大多数都卷入了法律纠纷。

这84名共和党人分别在佐治亚州、密歇根州等七个关键州签署了选举人团证书,虚假宣称特朗普赢得了本州的选举。这是特朗普竞选团队策划的更大规模阴谋的一部分,旨在在2021年1月6日国会认证选举结果时推翻乔·拜登的胜选结果。

密歇根州、佐治亚州、威斯康星州、亚利桑那州和内华达州的民主党检察官最终对本州部分或全部虚假选举人团成员提起了诉讼。其中大多数案件最终被驳回,或因上诉而停滞。

“看到公告时我情绪激动,如释重负,”密歇根州共和党选举人团成员梅肖恩·马多克告诉CNN。“我的银行账户被注销了,我面临着真正的牢狱之灾风险。这给我的三个孩子带来了创伤,一想到要和我的孙子孙女分离,我们就备受打击。”

去年,一名法官以证据不足无法证明存在犯罪意图为由,撤销了对马多克和其他密歇根州虚假选举人团成员的指控。

但针对该共和党选举人团的民事诉讼仍在进行中,法律费用不断累积。为虚假选举人克利福德·弗罗斯特辩护的律师凯文·基耶夫斯基表示,16名被告中的一些人已经花费了高达30万美元,他们理应获得赔偿。

“这个委员会的设立是个好主意,”基耶夫斯基说道。“克利福德在个人、职业和财务上都付出了代价。他的房产中介生意至今都没能恢复,人际关系也毁了。刑事指控被撤销并不代表能偿还法律费用,也无法弥补所造成的损害。”

另一名密歇根州选举人、84岁的约翰·哈格德在去年9月指控被撤销当天因心脏手术住院。基耶夫斯基表示,他躺在病床上通过Zoom参加了庭审,身上连着各种仪器。几小时后,哈格德去世了。

“这夺走了他的平静、他的钱,在某种程度上也夺走了他的生命,”基耶夫斯基说道。

其他知名的2020年大选否认者也有资格获得赔偿。

处境艰难的MyPillow首席执行官林德尔表示,该基金是特朗普“关照那些遭到攻击的人”的方式。

特朗普在2020年大选失利后,林德尔是宣扬投票机器操纵选举虚假言论最响亮的声音之一。这导致了多起诽谤诉讼,其中一起诉讼中林德尔被勒令向多米尼克投票系统公司的一名前高管支付230万美元的赔偿金。多米尼克和另一家公司Smartmatic提起的诉讼仍在进行中。

林德尔在2020年后对选举阴谋论的追求还导致大型零售商将他的枕头产品下架,也引发了执法部门的调查——2022年,联邦调查局查获了林德尔的手机。

科罗拉多州前书记员蒂娜·彼得斯也可能从新设立的司法部基金中获益,她的遭遇甚至得到了白宫的提及。

70岁的彼得斯因与林德尔的一些同伙合谋在2021年闯入所在县的投票系统,以证明2020年大选存在操纵行为而被判州监狱监禁。但她将于下月早些时候获释,科罗拉多州州长、民主党人贾里德·波利斯上周有争议地对其减刑,此举迅速招致两党谴责。

副总统JD·万斯周二在新闻发布会上表示,他认为彼得斯是一名“无辜的祖母”,所获刑罚“完全不成比例”,因此“她获得一些赔偿是合理的”。

彼得斯的一名律师约翰·凯斯告诉CNN,司法部的基金是“好消息”,但目前仍不清楚索赔流程将如何进行。

她的团队多年来一直辩称,她是被过于热心的检察官和有偏见的法官迫害的。凯斯指出,她在另一起藐视法庭案中的一项刑事定罪已于2024年被上诉法院推翻。

州上诉法院最近维持了彼得斯在选举系统入侵案中的重罪定罪,但驳回了她的刑期,并下令重新审理,理由是审判法官不当将彼得斯受保护的选举阴谋言论作为量刑依据之一。

对于那些反对赦免彼得斯并向其提供赔偿的人,凯斯问道:“如果一名法官说你要因为批评政府的言论而被判九年监禁,你会觉得这公平吗?”

那些在2020年相关法律和解中支付了数百万美元的支持特朗普的新闻机构,现在也有可能向司法部寻求 reimbursement。

OAN的律师克里斯·巴布尔告诉CNN,该公司“正在认真考虑依据该基金主张权利,并将很快就是否提交索赔申请做出决定”。

OAN与多米尼克和Smartmatic达成了未公开金额的和解协议。这些案件源于OAN宣扬关于投票机器将数百万张特朗普的选票翻转为拜登选票的恶劣谎言。

福克斯新闻和纽smax的发言人未回应CNN关于他们是否会利用司法部基金的置评请求。

福克斯新闻为解决2020年相关的多米尼克诽谤诉讼支付了7.87亿美元。纽smax为解决多米尼克和Smartmatic提起的诉讼支付了约1.07亿美元。

‘This is long overdue’: Jan. 6 rioters and election deniers celebrate Trump’s $1.8 billion compensation fund

2026-05-20T20:00:37.968Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/20/politics/trump-fund-january-6-election-deniers-want-money

Supporters of President Donald Trump who tried to overturn the 2020 election are among those eager to potentially cash in from the $1.8 billion compensation fund for people the Trump administration believes were victims of government “weaponization and lawfare.”

In interviews with CNN, convicted US Capitol rioters from January 6, 2021, fake electors and prominent election deniers said they’re hoping to tap the massive fund, which they think is long overdue.

“I can’t even find a job answering the phone at a motorcycle dealership,” said convicted January 6 rioter Dominic Box, who spent 1.5 years in jail awaiting trial and was later pardoned by Trump. “I can’t find a way to support myself right now. I lost my career. I look forward to financial compensation. I need it. This will be a welcome relief.”

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MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell told CNN he believes his company lost $400 million due to what he views as government weaponization in the aftermath of the 2020 election. He was perhaps the loudest promoter of baseless voter-fraud claims – drawing boycotts from businesses, defamation lawsuits and even FBI scrutiny.

“I would say we were the number-one company in the world hurt by our own government,” said Lindell.

A lawyer for One America News, the pro-Trump channel that promoted false 2020 vote-rigging claims, also confirmed to CNN that the company is “seriously considering pursuing rights under this fund.” OAN was later dropped by most large cable providers and also settled multiple 2020-related defamation lawsuits.

Top Trump administration officials, including Vice President JD Vance and acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, have dodged questions over whether people convicted of January 6-related crimes, including people who assaulted police, should be awarded any of the funds.

“Anybody can apply,” Blanche told lawmakers during a budget hearing Tuesday, noting that even people who stormed the Capitol can submit claims that will be reviewed by a five-member commission that he’ll appoint.

The fund is open to a much broader swath of Trump allies, far beyond the 2020 election. Potential recipients could include people who were scrutinized during special counsel Robert Mueller’s investigation into Russian meddling in the 2016 election, Trump administration officials who were entangled in Trump-Ukraine impeachment in 2019, and others.

The first known potential claimant, Trump adviser Michael Caputo, was investigated by Mueller in part because of his connections to Russian officials. He was never charged and is seeking $2.7 million in restitution because, he said, the probes cost him and his family, financially and beyond.

Former FBI Director James Comey joked on CNN that he may also have a claim to file, given that the Trump administration tried and failed in prosecuting him for allegedly lying to Congress and now filed new charges alleging that a picture of seashells on the beach spelling out “86 47” constituted a threat against Trump.

“It’s to compensate people who’ve been targeted by the Justice Department for, they say personal, political, or ideological reasons,” Comey told CNN’s Jake Tapper. “So, I’m guessing I’ll be in line. I hope I’ll be ahead of those who savagely beat police officers and sacked the Capitol.”

The largest group of potential “victims” are the nearly 1,600 people charged in connection with the January 6 insurrection at the US Capitol.

They all already received clemency from Trump, in the form of mass pardons and commutations, which freed hundreds of convicts from prison and ended pending prosecutions. But the new Trump fund delivers on a key goal that many in the January 6 community have clamored for: Restitution.

“This is long overdue,” Box said. “It’s not okay for hardworking, average Americans to be chewed up and destroyed as a collective boogeyman.”

Box was convicted in 2024 on all charges, including felonies, but he wasn’t accused of violence at the Capitol. After Trump granted mass pardons in 2025, the Justice Department dismissed Box’s case, before sentencing.

Box, a college graduate who lives in Georgia, said he worked as a car salesman before January 6 but struggled to find work after the insurrection.

“The car market exploded during Covid,” Box said. “Because of my inability to work in a forward-facing role, I wasn’t able to acquire any of that income. I knew guys who typically made $40,000 a year, and then got $150,000 to $200,000.”

One of the most recognizable faces from January 6 says he isn’t planning on tapping the fund.

Jacob Chansley, better known as the “QAnon Shaman,” told CNN this week he hopes to be compensated through a $40 trillion lawsuit he brought against Trump, alleging all kinds of government conspiracies. A judge dismissed the case last year. But Chansley, who is representing himself, re-filed the longshot case.

Chansley told CNN last year that he had broken with Trump over the president’s handling of the scandal surrounding sex offender Jeffrey Epstein.

Two attorneys who represented members of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers who were charged and convicted of conspiring to change the 2020 election results told CNN they would look into whether their clients might apply for the funds.

One attorney told CNN their client, a member of the Oath Keepers who infamously moved into the Capitol in a “stack formation” while dressed in camo and paramilitary garb, was “never the same” after the January 6 investigations and cases, struggling to find work and rebuild their life.

The pro-Trump “fake electors” from 2020 also stand to benefit from the fund, especially because most of them became entangled in legal cases.

These were 84 Republicans who signed certificates in seven key states like Georgia and Michigan, falsely proclaiming Trump won their state. This was part of a larger plot, overseen by the Trump campaign, to overturn Joe Biden’s victory while Congress certified the results on January 6, 2021.

Democratic prosecutors in Michigan, Georgia, Wisconsin, Arizona and Nevada ended up charging some or all of the fake electors from their states. Most of those cases were ultimately dismissed or were stalled by appeals.

“Reading the announcement was an emotional relief,” Meshawn Maddock, one of the Republican electors from Michigan, told CNN. “I was debanked. I faced the real possibility of prison time. The trauma to my three kids and the thought of being separated from my grandchildren – it took a lot out of us.”

A judge dropped the charges against Maddock and the other Michigan fake electors last year, due to insufficient evidence of intent to break the law.

But a civil case against the GOP slate is ongoing, and legal fees are piling up. Kevin Kijewski, an attorney for fake elector Clifford Frost, said some of the 16 defendants have spent up to $300,000, and they deserve compensation.

“This commission is a good idea,” Kijewski said. “Cliff paid a price personally, professionally and financially. His realtor business still hasn’t recovered since all this happened. Personal relationships were destroyed. The dismissal of criminal charges doesn’t pay back the legal fees and undo the damage.”

Another Michigan elector, John Haggard, 84, was in the hospital for heart surgery on the day the charges were dropped in September. He attended the court hearing over Zoom, from his hospital bed, connected to machines, Kijewski said. Haggard died hours later.

“This cost him his peace of mind, his money, and to some extent, his life,” Kijewski said.

Other prominent 2020 election deniers could qualify for payments.

Lindell, the beleaguered MyPillow CEO, said the fund was Trump’s way of “looking out for these people that were attacked.”

After Trump lost the 2020 election, Lindell was one of the loudest voices promoting false claims about voting machines rigging the results. This led to several defamation lawsuits, including one where Lindell was ordered to pay $2.3 million in damages to an ex-Dominion Voting Systems executive. Lawsuits filed by Dominion and another company, Smartmatic, are ongoing.

Lindell’s pursuit of election conspiracy theories after 2020 also led major retailers to pull his pillows from their shelves, it also prompted scrutiny from law enforcement – in 2022, Lindell’s phone was seized by the FBI.

Former Colorado clerk Tina Peters could also benefit from the new DOJ fund, and her plight even received a shout-out from the Whtie House.

Peters, 70, is in state prison for her role in a criminal conspiracy with some of Lindell’s associates to breach her county’s voting systems in 2021, in hopes of proving that the 2020 election was rigged. But she’ll be released early next month, after receiving a controversial commutation last week from Colorado Gov. Jared Polis, a Democrat, which swiftly drew bipartisan condemnation.

Vice President JD Vance said Tuesday at a press conference that he thinks Peters is an “innocent grandmother” who got a “completely disproportionate” sentence, and therefore, it’s “reasonable for her to get some compensation.”

One of Peters’ lawyers, John Case, told CNN the DOJ fund was “great news” but it’s still unclear how claims will be processed.

Her team has argued for years that she was victimized by overzealous prosecutors and biased judges. Case noted that one of her criminal convictions, in a separate contempt case, was already overturned by an appeals court in 2024.

A state appeals court recently upheld Peters’ felony convictions in the election-breach case. But the panel threw out her sentence and ordered a re-hearing, finding that the trial judge improperly based part of Peters’ punishment on her protected speech promoting 2020 election conspiracies.

To those who oppose clemency and possible compensation for Peters, Case asked, “If a judge said you were going to prison for nine years, because of words you used to criticize the government, would you think that’s fair?”

It’s possible that pro-Trump news outlets that paid millions of dollars in 2020-related legal settlements could now seek reimbursement from the DOJ.

Chris Babcock, a lawyer for OAN, told CNN the company “is seriously considering pursuing rights under this fund and will make a decision shortly about whether to file a claim.”

OAN settled lawsuits with Dominion and Smartmatic for unclosed amounts. The cases stemmed from OAN promoting egregious lies about voting machines flipping millions of ballots from Trump to Biden in 2020.

Spokespeople for Fox News and Newsmax did not answer CNN’s questions about whether they would utilize the DOJ fund.

Fox News paid $787 million to settle a 2020-related defamation lawsuit from Dominion. Newsmax paid about $107 million to settle lawsuits from Dominion and Smartmatic.

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