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Former NYPD officer sentenced to 10 years in prison for assaulting a police officer on January 6


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An image of Thomas Webster during the January 6th riot used in court documents by the Department of Justice.

(CNN)Former New York Police Department officer Thomas Webster, who unsuccessfully tried to convince a Washington, DC, jury that he was merely acting in self-defense against a police officer who he assaulted on January 6, 2021, was sentenced to 10 years in prison Thursday.

This is the longest sentence of any January 6 defendant so far.
 
In videos played during his trial, the 56-year-old former Marine can be seen swinging a metal flagpole at DC officer Noah Rathbun before crossing police barriers at the US Capitol and tackling Rathbun, choking him with the officer's chinstrap.
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Listen, what was done on Jan 6th was wrong. Webster assaulting an officer was wrong. Webster being a 20-year former police officer means he knew intimately that what he was doing was wrong!

 

The jury finding him guilty was the right thing to do. Being sentenced to spend some time in jail is appropriate. But ten years? That is a ridiculous sentence for the crimes he committed!

 

You see, the events of Jan 6th, bad as they were, are not part of his crimes. An "assault in democracy" is not a part of his crimes. The bad things done by other people at the same time.........are not part of his crimes!

 

Those things should have had no bearing on the sentence he received......... though clearly they did!

 

Given what he did......... what the police body cam shows he did.......... he should have gotten 2 or 3 years, max!

 

APNEWS gives a pretty good description.........

 

 

https://apnews.com/article/capitol-siege-prisons-new-york-donald-trump-presidential-elections-62ca153f4ecf3b7e2f3605c5b799582f

 

* Webster shoves a bike rack "at" the officer (but it doesn't say it hit him! Just "at" him.)

 

* The officer slaps Webster on the face (open hand.)

 

* Webster swings the flagpole down and hits the bike rack. The pole breaks. He didn't hit the officer......... he hit the bike rack!

 

* The officer takes the broken pole away from him.

 

* Webster then tackles the officer and tries to remove his mask, which results in choking him.

 

.

 

If you look at the "six" things he was charged with, they basically took a single course of events, broke it down into tiny bits and pieces, and came up with "six" things to charge him with.

 

(It's like if you were both treaspassing and loitering........ standing around where you didn't belong......... so they charged you with both, when one would have been sufficient!)

 

Yes, Webster started out doing something threatening.......... (shoving the bike rack).......... but then the officer hit him!

 

The physical confrontation was started by the officer, not Webster!

 

(The officer who said inder oath that he didnt "punch" Webster.......... because he apparently distinguishes between a slap and a punch! (A distintion without a difference!)

 

--------------

 

Shoulda been 2 to 3 years max!

 

Edited by KanchanaburiGuy
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He said that when he was choking the guard, that he really wasn't choking the guard, just showing the guard his hands (by choking him).

 

So def a sentencing add-on for such a stupid story. To the people wailing away here about too-strict sentencing, what is the appropriate penalty for being a ridiculously implausible liar and idiot? 

 

Will throwing the book at liar/idiots lead to more plea deals and less trials? I have a relative who insisted on a jury trial after being caught dead to rights. They offered her parole, she wanted a trial. So jail for a year instead.

 

If they have you on camera, just use the brains that god gave you and plead out.

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20 minutes ago, Chomper Higgot said:

Hit a cop in the street and he can legally shoot you dead.

 

10 years is not too long for the crimes he committed which also included attempting to overthrow the certification of the election.

 

 

See, there you go. You're including things for which he was neither charged nor convicted, to make your conclusion.

 

The court, on the other hand, is ONLY supposed to consider what penalty is appropriate for the things for which he was convicted!

 

And, in my opinion, the crimes for which he was convicted........... only warrant 2 to 3 years jail time! (Especially since it was the officer who started the physical part of the confrontation, not Webster!)

 

 

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12 minutes ago, KanchanaburiGuy said:

See, there you go. You're including things for which he was neither charged nor convicted, to make your conclusion.

 

The court, on the other hand, is ONLY supposed to consider what penalty is appropriate for the things for which he was convicted!

 

And, in my opinion, the crimes for which he was convicted........... only warrant 2 to 3 years jail time! (Especially since it was the officer who started the physical part of the confrontation, not Webster!)

 

 

Opinions differ.

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1 hour ago, KanchanaburiGuy said:

(The officer who said inder oath that he didnt "punch" Webster.......... because he apparently distinguishes between a slap and a punch! (A distintion without a difference!)

Tell that to a bare knuckle fighter. Unlike a slap, in a punch the force is concentrated into a much smaller area and can have a lot more body weight behind it. A punch has much more destructive potential than a slap.

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14 minutes ago, ozimoron said:

In May, Webster was found guilty of all six charges he faced, five of which were felonies.

 

link: OP

Four of which were essentially the same act, with four different names!

 

When he went to the Capitol, he was carrying a Marine Corp flag; a flag on a pole. He was carrying a flag, not a "weapon!"

 

After the officer slapped him, he swung the pole down and hit the bike rack/barrier. 

 

When he was charged, a couple of the charges revolved around him "bringing a weapon" to places he was not supposed to.

 

Except he DIDN'T bring a weapon......... he brought a flag!

 

A pen can be a "weapon."

A shoe can be a "weapon."

Keys can be a "weapon."

A shirt can be a "weapon."

A belt can be a "weapon."

A water bottle can be a "weapon."

A purse can be a "weapon."

A magazine or book can be a "weapon."

 

I'd bet everyone in that crowd had at least two or more of these things in their possession!

 

The flagpole was not a "weapon." It was not a "weapon" until it was used  as a weapon. Before that moment.......... meaning the whole time he carried it!......... it was NOT a "weapon." It was a flag!

 

There was ZERO justification for charging him with a couple of different felonies for "carrying a weapon"........... when he had shown no intention of using it as a weapon........... until AFTER he was slapped [assaulted] by the officer!

 

If he was guilty of "carrying a weapon" before it was used as a weapon............ than anyone who had a pen or keys in their pocket........... shoes on their feet or a shirt on their back........ would be equally guilty of those very same felonies! ("Carrying" as opposed to "using!")

 

Sometimes juries make stupid decisions. In this case, I think the jury got caught up in the moment........ in the event......... and seriously considered felony charges that they never should have even seen!

 

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9 minutes ago, placeholder said:

Tell that to a bare knuckle fighter. Unlike a slap, in a punch the force is concentrated into a much smaller area and can have a lot more body weight behind it. A punch has much more destructive potential than a slap.

Except the question the officer was asked under oath was really a question of whether he hit  Webster FIRST. (Important because Webster was making a "self-defense" claim!)

 

The officer hid behind the word "punch"............. saying he didn't "punch" him.........when, in fact, whether it was a punch or a slap is irrelevant. It is irrelevant because both are forms of hitting!

 

The first "assault" was the officer hitting Webster............not Webster "assaulting" the officer!

 

Webster swinging the flagpole was, therefore, not an initiating act, but an escalating act!

 

(And remember, when he swung the flagpole, he hit the bike rack, not the officer. Bike racks are only about waist high! So......... it might be guessed that Webster never intended to actually HIT the officer with the pole, but rather to intimidate him, only; to startle him.

 

I mean, missing the person altogether and hitting something only waist high?......... That kind of suggests that something else was going on, to me.)

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11 minutes ago, KanchanaburiGuy said:

Except the question the officer was asked under oath was really a question of whether he hit  Webster FIRST. (Important because Webster was making a "self-defense" claim!)

 

The officer hid behind the word "punch"............. saying he didn't "punch" him.........when, in fact, whether it was a punch or a slap is irrelevant. It is irrelevant because both are forms of hitting!

 

The first "assault" was the officer hitting Webster............not Webster "assaulting" the officer!

 

Webster swinging the flagpole was, therefore, not an initiating act, but an escalating act!

 

(And remember, when he swung the flagpole, he hit the bike rack, not the officer. Bike racks are only about waist high! So......... it might be guessed that Webster never intended to actually HIT the officer with the pole, but rather to intimidate him, only; to startle him.

 

I mean, missing the person altogether and hitting something only waist high?......... That kind of suggests that something else was going on, to me.)

Webster took the flagpole to the Capitol building with intent. As far as I know, it would be pretty difficult to bring a complaint of self defense as an excuse for hitting a police officer but I may be wrong.

 

"We unanimously agreed that there was no self-defense argument here at all."

 

I suspect part of the rationale for this sentence will be the lack of remorse shown as evidenced by the various defenses he provided.

 

https://www.npr.org/2022/05/02/1095940064/nypd-thomas-webster-assault-january-6-assault-officer

Edited by ozimoron
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14 minutes ago, KanchanaburiGuy said:

Except the question the officer was asked under oath was really a question of whether he hit  Webster FIRST. (Important because Webster was making a "self-defense" claim!)

 

The officer hid behind the word "punch"............. saying he didn't "punch" him.........when, in fact, whether it was a punch or a slap is irrelevant. It is irrelevant because both are forms of hitting!

 

The first "assault" was the officer hitting Webster............not Webster "assaulting" the officer!

 

Webster swinging the flagpole was, therefore, not an initiating act, but an escalating act!

 

(And remember, when he swung the flagpole, he hit the bike rack, not the officer. Bike racks are only about waist high! So......... it might be guessed that Webster never intended to actually HIT the officer with the pole, but rather to intimidate him, only; to startle him.

 

I mean, missing the person altogether and hitting something only waist high?......... That kind of suggests that something else was going on, to me.)

Looks like he was aiming at the officers head to me followed by a vicious attack on the officer

 

 

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