美国司法部请求撤销前骄傲男孩组织和誓言守护者组织成员的1月6日国会骚乱定罪,包括煽动阴谋罪


2026-04-14T17:36:00-0400 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

作者:雅各布·罗森,
雅各布·罗森 司法部记者
杰克·罗森是负责报道美国司法部的记者。他此前曾是竞选数字记者,报道特朗普总统2024年竞选活动,还曾担任《与玛格丽特·布伦南面对全国》节目的助理制片人。

阅读完整简历

雅各布·罗森、乔·沃尔什
乔·沃尔什 政治高级编辑
乔·沃尔什是哥伦比亚广播公司新闻数字政治板块的高级编辑。他此前曾为《福布斯》报道突发新闻,并在波士顿从事本地新闻报道。

阅读完整简历

乔·沃尔什
更新时间:2026年4月14日 / 美国东部时间下午6:25 / 哥伦比亚广播公司新闻

美国司法部周二请求联邦法院撤销12名右翼骄傲男孩组织和誓言守护者组织前成员的1月6日国会骚乱定罪,其中多数人此前被判煽动阴谋罪——此举旨在清除目前仍有效的部分最后一批国会山骚乱指控。

特朗普总统去年重返公职后数小时内,对几乎所有与1月6日国会骚乱相关的定罪人员发出了赦免。但有14人——包括司法部周二提及的12人——的刑期被减刑为已服刑时长,这使得他们得以出狱,但定罪仍然有效。

这12人包括誓言守护者组织创始人斯图尔特·罗兹,他是1月6日国会骚乱案件中知名度较高的被告之一。在罗兹定罪时,检察官表示,罗兹和其组织的其他成员在特朗普输掉2020年大选后“开始策划以武力反对合法的总统权力交接”。司法部称,在骚乱当天,罗兹“协调了相关行动”,一群誓言守护者成员向国会大厦进军。

罗兹因煽动阴谋罪和其他罪名被判处18年监禁。

同时被列入名单的还有4名因参与1月6日国会大厦袭击被定罪的骄傲男孩组织成员,其中包括该极右翼组织的领导人之一伊桑·诺登,他与约瑟夫·比格斯和扎卡里·雷尔一同被判定犯有煽动阴谋罪,随后被判处18年监禁。

司法部试图撤销定罪的第四名骄傲男孩组织成员多米尼克·佩佐拉,因监控录像显示他用防暴盾砸碎国会大厦窗户,成为此次未遂叛乱中辨识度较高的面孔之一。他因袭击或抗拒执法人员、抢劫政府财产、妨碍公务及其他罪名被定罪。

司法部当时表示,诺登和佩佐拉“参与了国会大厦所有关键性的突破行动”,带领一群骄傲男孩组织成员进入国会大厦区域,导致路障被拆除、国会大厦被闯入、警察遭到袭击以及财产遭到破坏。

在这12名骚乱者上诉定罪的三起独立案件中,司法部周二请求联邦上诉合议庭撤销下级法院的判决且不得上诉,这意味着相关案件无法再次提起诉讼。

华盛顿特区联邦检察官办公室的联邦检察官在由美国检察官珍妮娜·皮尔罗签署的一份文件中写道:“在行政部门看来,继续起诉此案或其他处境相似的被告的案件,不符合司法利益。”检察官们表示,被告的律师并未反对此项动议。

皮尔罗的办公室拒绝就这些文件置评,美国司法部也未立即回应置评请求。

周二晚间的首批动议中未包括托马斯·考德威尔和杰里米·贝蒂诺。当局称考德威尔曾协助誓言守护者组织,而前骄傲男孩组织领导人贝蒂诺于2022年对针对自己的煽动阴谋指控认罪。考德威尔虽未被判定犯有煽动阴谋罪,但因其他罪名被定罪,并于2025年3月被特朗普总统单独赦免。

去年,特朗普的盟友律师彼得·蒂金请求司法部高级官员考虑为其余未获得特朗普全面赦免的1月6日国会骚乱被告提供全面赦免。蒂金去年告诉哥伦比亚广播公司新闻,他一直在代表罗兹、比格斯、诺登、雷尔和佩佐拉处理相关事务。

周二提交的文件标志着司法部试图清除1月6日调查的部分最后残余痕迹,此次调查是该部门历史上规模最大的一次调查。

此次骚乱共有超过1500人被捕,其中大多数人已被定罪或对包括擅闯、袭击警察在内的指控认罪。超过700名被告已完成刑期或未被判处监禁。超过170人被指控使用致命或危险武器袭击警察,例如灭火器或熊喷雾。

特朗普长期以来一直谴责这些起诉,称被告是“人质”,并称他们大多是无辜的,在狱中遭到“残酷对待”。在某些情况下,他试图改写1月6日的事件经过,称这是一场“爱的日子”,其依据是他关于选举欺诈的未经证实的主张,并将部分袭击警察的行为称为“非常轻微的事件”。

DOJ moves to dismiss Jan. 6 convictions against former Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, including seditious conspiracy charges

2026-04-14T17:36:00-0400 / CBS News

By Jacob Rosen,

Jacob Rosen Justice Department Reporter

Jake Rosen is a reporter covering the Department of Justice. He was previously a campaign digital reporter covering President Trump’s 2024 campaign and also served as an associate producer for “Face the Nation with Margaret Brennan.”

Read Full Bio

Jacob Rosen, Joe Walsh

Joe Walsh Senior Editor, Politics

Joe Walsh is a senior editor for digital politics at CBS News. Joe previously covered breaking news for Forbes and local news in Boston.

Read Full Bio

Joe Walsh

Updated on: April 14, 2026 / 6:25 PM EDT / CBS News

The Justice Department on Tuesday asked a federal court to vacate Jan. 6 convictions against a dozen former members of the right-wing Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, most of whom were convicted of seditious conspiracy — aiming to wipe away some of the final Capitol riot charges that are still standing.

Hours after returning to office last year, President Trump issued pardons for almost everybody convicted in connection with the Jan. 6 riot. But 14 people — including the 12 referenced by the Justice Department on Tuesday — instead had their sentences commuted to time served, allowing them to leave prison while leaving their convictions in place.

The 12 include Stewart Rhodes, founder of the Oath Keepers and one of the higher-profile Jan. 6 defendants. At the time of his conviction, prosecutors said Rhodes and other members of his group “began plotting to oppose by force the lawful transfer of presidential power” after Mr. Trump lost the 2020 election. On the day of the riot, Rhodes “coordinated activities” as a group of Oath Keepers marched on the Capitol, the Justice Department said.

Rhodes was sentenced to 18 years in prison for seditious conspiracy and other charges.

Also included are four Proud Boys who were convicted for their role in the Jan. 6 attack. Those include Ethan Nordean, one of the far-right group’s leaders, who was sentenced to 18 years in prison after being convicted of seditious conspiracy alongside Joseph Biggs and Zachary Rehl.

A fourth Proud Boy whose conviction the Justice Department is trying to vacate, Dominic Pezzola, became one of the more recognizable faces of the attempted insurrection after video showed him smashing a Capitol window with a riot shield. He was convicted of assaulting or resisting officers, robbery involving government property, obstruction and other charges.

The Justice Department said at the time that Nordean and Pezzola “participated in every consequential breach at the Capitol,” leading a group of Proud Boys onto the Capitol grounds, resulting in the dismantling of barricades, breaching of the Capitol building, assaults on police and destruction of property.

In three separate cases where the 12 rioters had appealed their convictions, the Justice Department on Tuesday asked for federal appeals panels to vacate lower court judgments with prejudice, meaning the cases could not be brought again.

“In the Executive Branch’s view, it is not in the interests of justice to continue to prosecute this case or the cases of other, similarly situated defendants,” federal prosecutors in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the District of Columbia wrote in one filing signed by U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro. Prosecutors wrote that the defendants’ attorneys didn’t oppose the motions.

Pirro’s office declined to comment on the filings, and the Justice Department did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Not included in the initial batch of motions on Tuesday evening was Thomas Caldwell, who authorities said assisted the Oath Keepers, and Jeremy Bertino, a former Proud Boy leader who pleaded guilty to seditious conspiracy charges against him in 2022. Caldwell, who was acquitted of seditious conspiracy but convicted on other counts, was separately pardoned by Mr. Trump in March 2025.

Last year, Trump-allied lawyer Peter Ticktin asked top Justice Department officials to consider granting full pardons to the remaining Jan. 6 riot defendants who were not given full clemency by Mr. Trump. Ticktin told CBS News last year he had been working on behalf of Rhodes, as well as Biggs, Nordean, Rehl and Pezzola.

Tuesday’s filings mark an attempt by the Justice Department to dismantle some of the final remnants of the Jan. 6 probe, which was the largest investigation in the department’s history.

Upwards of 1,500 people were arrested in connection with the riot, most of whom had been convicted or pleaded guilty to charges ranging from trespassing to assaulting police officers. More than 700 defendants completed their sentences or did not receive sentences of incarceration. Over 170 people were accused of using a deadly or dangerous weapon against police officers, such as a fire extinguisher or bear spray.

Mr. Trump has long decried the prosecutions, calling the defendants “hostages” who he claims were mostly innocent and treated “viciously” in prison. In some cases, he has sought to rewrite the events of Jan. 6, calling it a “day of love” prompted by his unproven claims of voter fraud, and referring to some of the assaults on police as “very minor incidents.”

评论

发表回复

您的邮箱地址不会被公开。 必填项已用 * 标注