Julian Khater, convicted of assaulting Capitol Police Officer Brian Sicknick, was among those released from prison as part of ...
They were among the more than 1,500 people who seemingly were pardoned under a sweeping order signed by the president.
"As far as I am concerned, the U.S. just installed its first dictator," Craig Sicknick said. His brother died after the Jan.
Donald Trump’s decision to pardon some 1,500 January 6 offenders was a spontaneous move that overrode his administration’s ...
The president's sweeping pardon of 1,500 individuals does not exclude the perpetrators of some of the day's most intense violence ...
President Donald Trump seems hellbent on changing the narrative around Jan. 6. Enter conspiracy theorist Kash Patel as FBI ...
Trump said the pardon of about 1,500 people 'ends a grave national injustice that has been perpetrated upon the American people over the last four years and begins a process of national reconciliation ...
The other roughly 500 cases were still pending until Trump’s clemency. Those pardoned include Julian Khater, who pepper-sprayed Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick in the face (Sicknick died a ...
Full pardons, though, were granted to former Proud Boys national chair Enrique Tarrio, who got the longest sentence in connection with the attack; David Dempsey, who used flagpoles and pepper spray to ...
Among those pardoned was Julian Khater, who had been serving a six-year sentence for assaulting Sicknick with chemical spray during the riot. Trump also pardoned George Tanios, who was convicted ...
Sicknick’s death was attributed to natural causes but Julian Khater and George Tanios, the two men accused of assaulting the officer with a chemical irritant, both received prison time for their ...