That’s because Fairlamb was the first to plead guilty to such an assault and, despite initially celebrating the attack, has since expressed remorse that both prosecutors and Lamberth himself described as “genuine.”
Feds get 41 months for one high-profile January 6 rioter and seek 51 months for another
Two new Politico articles provide updates on the latest sentencing news from the prosecution of persons involved in the January 6 Capitol riot. Here are links and excerpts:
“N.J. man hit with toughest sentence yet in Jan. 6 attack“:
A federal judge on Wednesday imposed the most serious sentence yet in connection with the Jan. 6 Capitol riot, ordering a New Jersey man to serve almost three-and-a-half years in prison for punching a police officer in the face during the melee.
Scott Fairlamb, 44, a former MMA fighter and gym owner, is the first defendant charged with assaulting an officer during the attack to face sentencing. The judge, Royce Lamberth, said he expected Fairlamb’s 41-month sentence would end up lower than others also facing charges for assaulting police that day.
Some of many prior related posts:
- “Many Capitol rioters unlikely to serve jail time” because some facing only misdemeanor convictions
- Noting the importance of charging policies and practices (and consistency?) as federal rioting charges get resolved from coast-to-coast
- Federal judges expressing some concern about lenient plea deals for some Capitol riot defendants
- Notable accounting of federal prosecutions and sentences responding to riots both before and during January 6
- Recent Jan 6 rioter sentencings showcase different judges with different sentencing perspectives
- Coverage and commentary as 100th guilty plea entered for federal charges in January 6 riots
- Is longest prison term for Jan 6 rioter, and a possible new benchmark, coming this week?