2026-05-20T22:02:15.066Z / 路透社
2026年1月6日国会山袭击事件五周年纪念活动上,美国华盛顿特区,骄傲男孩前主席恩里克·塔里奥手持扩音器,从椭圆广场游行至美国国会大厦,以纪念在2021年1月6日国会山袭击事件中及之后遇难者。REUTERS/Leah… 购买授权,打开新标签页查看更多内容
- 摘要
- 国会山骚乱被告与特朗普盟友寻求从新基金获得赔偿
- 民主党与部分共和党人质疑基金合法性及禁止IRS审计条款
- 包括詹姆斯·科米在内的部分民主党人考虑申请赔偿
华盛顿5月20日路透电 —(本文第三段包含粗口)
自唐纳德·特朗普政府宣布设立规模达17.76亿美元的基金,用于向被认定为政治“迫害”受害者的美国人提供赔偿以来,国会山骚乱被告与其他特朗普盟友一直在争相盘算如何分得一杯羹。
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因2021年1月6日国会山骚乱案以煽动阴谋罪被判处22年监禁的骄傲男孩头目恩里克·塔里奥表示,他计划申请该基金,预计可获得200万至500万美元赔偿。
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“我并不贪婪,”塔里奥说,“但这件事把我的人生彻底搞砸了。”
特朗普去年赦免了超过1500名国会山骚乱被告。其中一些人已开始计算他们因起诉、监禁和生意受损所遭受的损失,希望就他们眼中拜登政府时期司法部的滥权行为获得赔偿。
代表400多名国会山骚乱被告的律师彼得·蒂金表示,这笔基金可能不够用。
“人们在被关押期间损失了数百万美元的生意,”他说,“我认为司法部还没准备好应对我们这波申请。”
特朗普也暗示这笔基金规模太小。“你们说的不过是小钱而已,”他在安德鲁斯联合基地对记者表示,“它毁掉了许许多多普通人的人生。”
民主党与部分共和党人质疑该基金的合法性,以及和解协议中“永久禁止”国税局对特朗普及其亲属、企业过往税务申报进行审计的条款。
两名在1月6日保卫美国国会大厦免受特朗普支持者冲击的警察周三提起诉讼,要求叫停该赔偿基金,他们将其描述为针对参与暴力活动的特朗普追随者的“纳税人资助的黑金账户”。
美国代理司法部长托德·布兰奇周二对议员表示,即使是在1月6日袭击警察的人,也不会被禁止领取这笔资金。
塔里奥则认为,那些袭击警察的人也应该拿到自己的份额。
“司法部为了政治私利过度起诉,”他说,“所以每个人都应该拿到钱。”
在一封周三的公开信中,民主党众议员杰米·拉斯金和理查德·E·尼尔致信负责谈判该和解协议的财政部长斯科特·贝森特、布兰奇以及IRS首席执行官弗兰克·比西亚诺,询问个人赔偿是否设有上限,以及哪些信息将被公开。
“在美国历史上,从未有哪位总统如此肆无忌惮、如此大规模地追求腐败,”他们写道。
特拉华州民主党参议员克里斯·库恩斯周三表示,他将试图通过拨款法案修正案阻止该基金成立,但他承认该问题可能需要单独解决。
国会山骚乱案律师蒂金表示,一旦司法部建立申请流程,且总检察长任命负责监管该基金的五人委员会,他就将提交数百份索赔申请。他称自己在3月的一封邮件中向特朗普——他的高中同学——提出了这个想法,但不知道这是否对基金的设立产生了影响。
一些国会山骚乱被告称赞司法部采纳了他们长期使用的术语——包括“法律战”、“政治迫害”和“受害者”,并将该基金视为对多年来不公待遇的补偿。
“如今自由主义者也想喊着纠正错误,可惜太晚了,”因在国会大厦内游行、示威或抗议而认罪的珍妮·卡索-海因尔在X平台上写道,“正义终将到来。”
至少有一名特朗普盟友已正式提出申请:前政府官员迈克尔·卡普托向布兰奇申请270万美元的“赔偿”,以弥补拜登政府和特别检察官罗伯特·穆勒调查给他带来的损失。
部分民主党人也提出了申请的想法,认为特朗普时期的司法部针对他们提起了站不住脚的政治诉讼。布兰奇周二对议员表示,该基金可以向两党成员提供赔偿。
前联邦调查局局长詹姆斯·科米在特朗普第二任期内已两次遭到起诉,他在CNN上表示,自己考虑过申请。
“这笔基金是用来补偿那些被司法部以所谓个人、政治或意识形态理由作为目标的人的,”科米说,“所以我猜我也会排队申请。”
不过对一些特朗普支持者来说,这笔基金可能还不够丰厚。
因袭击警察被判有罪的骄傲男孩附属成员巴里·拉米表示,他不确定是否要申请,因为领取这笔钱可能会影响他针对监狱管理局的索赔。
“我追求正义不是为了钱,”他说,“我想证明他们的行为是非法的。”
但如果能拿到200万美元,他说,他可能会重新考虑。
丹·罗森茨威格-齐夫报道 迈克尔·勒尔蒙特与阿利斯泰尔·贝尔编辑
我们的报道准则:汤森路透信托原则。
‘I’m not greedy’: January 6 rioters and Trump allies eye $1.8 billion ‘weaponization’ fund
2026-05-20T22:02:15.066Z / Reuters
Former national chairman of the Proud Boys, Enrique Tarrio, holds a megaphone following a march from The Ellipse to the U.S. Capitol in memory of those who died on, or in the aftermath, of the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol, on the fifth anniversary of the attack in Washington, D.C., U.S., January 6, 2026. REUTERS/Leah… Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tabRead more
- Summary
- Capitol riot defendants and Trump allies seek compensation from new fund
- Democrats and some Republicans question fund’s legality and IRS audit ban
- Some Democrats, including James Comey, consider applying for compensation
WASHINGTON, May 20 (Reuters) – (This story contains strong language in paragraph 3)
Since President Donald Trump’s administration announced the creation of a $1.776 billion fund for Americans deemed to be victims of political “weaponization,” January 6 Capitol riot defendants and other Trump allies have scrambled to figure out how to get their share.
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Enrique Tarrio, the Proud Boys leader sentenced to 22 years for seditious conspiracy over the January 6, 2021 riot, said he planned to apply to the fund, assuming he could get between $2 and $5 million.
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“I’m not greedy,” Tarrio said. “But my life was all fucked up because of this.”
Trump pardoned more than 1,500 January 6 defendants last year. Some have now begun to calculate the cost of their prosecution, jail time and businesses lost in the hope of compensation for what they regard as abuses by the Justice Department under former President Joe Biden.
Peter Ticktin, an attorney representing more than 400 January 6 defendants, said the fund may not be enough.
“People lost multi-million dollar businesses while they were locked up,” he said. “I don’t think the DOJ is ready for us yet.”
Trump also suggested the fund may be too small. “You’re talking about peanuts,” he told reporters at Joint Base Andrews. “It destroyed the lives of many, many people.”
Democrats and some Republicans have questioned the legality of the fund, as well as a part of the settlement “forever barring” the IRS from auditing past tax claims by Trump, his relatives and his businesses.
Two police officers who defended the U.S. Capitol from Trump supporters on January 6, filed a lawsuit on Wednesday seeking to halt the compensation fund, which they described as a “taxpayer-funded slush fund” for Trump followers who engaged in violence.
U.S. acting Attorney General Todd Blanche told lawmakers on Tuesday that even people who assaulted police on January 6 would not be barred from receiving money.
Tarrio, for his part, thinks those who assaulted police should get their share.
“The Justice Department overprosecuted for political gain,” he said. “So everyone deserves to get money.”
In a
Wednesday letter, opens new tab
, Democratic Representatives Jamie Raskin and Richard E. Neal asked Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent, Blanche and IRS CEO Frank Bisignano, who negotiated the settlement, whether individual awards would be capped and what reports would be made public.
“Never in American history has a President pursued corruption this brazenly or on such a colossal scale,” they wrote.
Democratic Senator Chris Coons of Delaware said on Wednesday he would try to block the fund through spending-bill amendments, though he acknowledged the issue might have to be resolved separately.
Ticktin, the January 6 lawyer, said he plans to file hundreds of claims once the Justice Department creates the application process and the attorney general appoints the five-member commission overseeing the fund. He said he suggested the idea to Trump, his high school classmate, in a March email, but doesn’t know if that had any impact on the creation of the fund.
Some January 6 defendants praised the Justice Department for adopting terms they have long used — including “lawfare,” “weaponization” and “victims” — and cast the fund as payback for years of injustice.
“Now liberals wanna cry about righting the wrong, too bad,” wrote Jennie Carso-Heinl, who pleaded guilty to parading, demonstrating or picketing in a Capitol building, on X. “Justice is coming.”
At least one Trump ally has already made a formal request: Michael Caputo, a former administration official, asked Blanche for $2.7 million in “restitution” over investigations by the Biden administration and special counsel Robert Mueller.
Some Democrats have floated applying too, arguing that Trump’s Justice Department has pursued flimsy political cases against them. Blanche told lawmakers Tuesday the fund could pay members of both parties.
Former FBI Director James Comey, twice indicted since Trump began his second term, said on CNN that he has considered applying.
“It’s to compensate people who’ve been targeted by the Justice Department for, they say, personal, political or ideological reasons,” Comey said. “So I’m guessing I’ll be in line.”
For some Trump supporters, though, the fund may not go far enough.
Barry Ramey, a Proud Boys affiliate convicted of attacking police officers, said he is unsure whether to apply because taking money could jeopardize his claim against the Bureau of Prisons.
“My commitment to justice is not about the money,” he said. “I want to show they acted illegally.”
But if he could secure $2 million, he said, he might reconsider.
Reporting by Dan Rosenzweig-Ziff, Editing by Michael Learmonth and Alistair Bell
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.
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