So far, 25% of the over 720 Capitol riot defendants have pleaded guilty to federal charges, most of whom were not accused of violence or destruction inside the Capitol building, and 76 defendants have been sentenced, according to CNN’s latest tally.
Monday, Emily Hernandez, a college junior who was photographed holding a broken shard of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s office sign victoriously over her head on January 6, pleaded guilty to illegally entering the Capitol. According to the plea agreement read aloud in court, Hernandez went to the Capitol building with her uncle and a friend.
Hernandez admitted to taking home the broken sign, in addition to a red “Keep Off Fence” sign, a fire extinguisher pin and tag and a “Please Do Not Touch” sign from the base of a statue inside the Capitol. She returned all the stolen signs to investigators in late January.
She faces a maximum of one year in prison.
In light of the collision, District Judge James Boasberg in Washington, DC, prohibited Hernandez from drinking alcohol and driving and ordered that she submit to alcohol and drug testing and treatment. Hernandez is not currently facing any criminal charges related to the deadly crash.
Paul Colbath also pleaded guilty on Monday to unlawfully protesting in the building. According to prosecutors, Colbath had texted his wife that the riot was “wild” and that tear gas was being deployed. Colbath, when inside the building, assisted another rioter who was sprayed with a chemical spray, leading him into a side office where he saw broken windows and graffiti in the room. His sentencing is set for early April.
A couple who was in the Capitol during the riot also pleaded guilty Monday to protesting unlawfully in the building. The government initially began its investigation into Gabriel Burress and Madison Pettit from an online tip and later matched social media images to pictures captured by surveillance cameras in the building. The pair was arrested in August.
One rioter sentenced
Esther Schwemmer, 56, who went to the Capitol with her friend — who was sentenced in December for her participation in the riot — was sentenced to two years’ probation Monday.
The Department of Justice had asked for 30 days home confinement, citing how the defendant, Schwemmer, encouraged her friend, Jennifer Parks, to go into the Capitol and up a flight of stairs to the rotunda.
Schwemmer told Judge Dabney Friedrich she was “deeply ashamed of my actions that day. Nothing about it was Christ-like. …I hope with time (I) can forgive myself.”
“None of us are defined by the worst mistake we make,” the judge said before handing down the sentence. “I certainly hope you can forgive yourself.”
Schwemmer “was part of the large violent crowd,” Friedrich said, which “led to loss of life,” adding that “(h)er actions were in no way an act of patriotism.”
Friedrich said she believed Schwemmer’s remorse was genuine and gave her the same sentence that her friend had received from Judge Carl Nichols: 24 months’ probation and 60 hours of community service.