What comes next after the Supreme Court sharply narrowed the Justice Department’s use of a key felony charge against Jan. 6 riot defendants?
What comes next now that the Supreme Court on Friday sharply narrowed the Justice Department’s use of a key felony charge against riot defendants for obstructing an official proceeding of Congress?
Tear gas is fired at supporters of President Trump who stormed the United States Capitol building. against roughly 250 people pending trial or convicted as part of the pro-Donald Trump mob that attacked the U.S. Capitol onto interfere in this case with Congress’s joint session to confirm Joe Biden’s 2020 presidential victory. The court ruled that the law applied only to tampering or destruction of evidence such as records or documents.
Trump also faces the charge as part of the federal criminal case brought against him by special counsel Jack Smith for allegedly seeking to subvert the results of the election, including by submitting fake slates from several key swing states.held its final public meeting, where members referred four criminal charges against former president Donald Trump and others to the Justice Department.
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Supreme Court says prosecutors improperly charged some Jan. 6 defendantsThe statute is also the basis for one of the four obstruction counts brought against former President Donald Trump in the criminal case currently pending against him in federal court in Washington.
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Supreme Court makes it harder to charge Jan. 6 defendants with obstructionA Supreme Court ruling paves the way for some charges to be dropped against defendants in the Jan. 6 Capitol riot – including, potentially, Donald Trump.
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Supreme Court Says DOJ Overstepped With Jan. 6 Obstruction ChargesThe Supreme Court ruled that the Justice Department must narrow its obstruction charges against Jan. 6 rioters.
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Supreme Court rules in favor of Jan. 6 defendant in dispute over obstruction chargeThe 6-3 opinion came from Chief Justice John Roberts.
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Supreme Court rules in favor of Jan. 6 defendant in dispute over obstruction chargeThe 6-3 opinion came from Chief Justice John Roberts.
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Supreme Court limits scope of obstruction law used in Jan. 6 prosecutionsAbout 350 Jan. 6 defendants have faced obstruction charges now thrown into doubt by the court.
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