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Jan. 6 rioter who kicked open Capitol door still believes election was stolen, but regrets police interactions
Jerod Hughes, one of the first rioters into the Capitol during the Jan. 6 attack, turned himself in to authorities and pleaded guilty to obstruction of an official proceeding, but still feels what he and others did that day was patriotic.
Hughes believes that the 2020 election was stolen. He drove 2,000 miles to Washington, D.C. Hughes was not accused of violence, but kicked out a door during the 2021 riot, enabling others to enter the Capitol.
“No matter how I look at it, I share some of the responsibility for everything that happened that day, letting people in, being a part of that mob,” he said.
Hughes’ obstruction charge was later struck down by the Supreme Court in another related case. But if Hughes appeals, he would face other charges that the prosecution had dropped in his case. So after 20 months in custody, including prison, Hughes has decided to wrap up his last days of home detention.
Looking back on Jan. 6
Hughes is one of more than 1,000 defendants who’ve been convicted so far in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021 attack on the Capitol. About 350 trials are still pending and the FBI is still searching for suspects.
Evidence from the trials in the years since the insurrection shows organized militias came with a plan to stop the electoral vote count in Congress that would declare Joe Biden the winner.
On January 6, President Donald Trump enflamed a multitude of people with false claims of a stolen election.
Hughes, a 39-year-old construction worker from Montana, supported President Trump.
“The way this country’s headed, my paycheck — you know, my wife’s disabled, and it’s been hell for us to try to, you know, try to make it with the tens of thousands of dollars of medical bills,” he said. “And a lot of us see Donald Trump, the outsider, coming in and trying to — and trying to help us out, trying to help the little guy out against the big government.”
While Hughes helped kick out a door, others did much worse.
Metropolitan Police Officer Daniel Hodges, who spoke with 60 Minutes in his “personal capacity and not on behalf of my employer or the city,” was pinned, punched and beaten during the Jan. 6 attack. Hodges said he feels pardoning Capitol rioters would be the wrong move.
“If these defendants are pardoned, then so much of what they believe or believed on that day will be justified in their heads,” Hodges said. “That they, if they do it again, that they’ll be protected. And it would be just incredibly destructive for the fabric of the country.”
Defending democracy or being duped?
Hughes said he felt his actions on Jan. 6 were patriotic. He’d followed Fox News reports, read information online and listened to Trump saying the election had been stolen.
Fox eventually paid $787 million to settle a suit that claimed the network repeatedly and knowingly promoted lies about the outcome of the 2020 presidential election.
Trump himself is a Jan. 6 defendant in a separate prosecution led by Special Counsel Jack Smith. by a grand jury for allegedly conspiring to overturn the election with lies he knew were false — the same myths that stoked rage in Hughes.
A group of prominent conservatives, including retired federal Judge Thomas Griffith, spent a year investigating claims the 2020 election was stolen. Griffith was appointed by former President George W. Bush to the Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit. He retired in 2020 after spending years working with most of the 29 judges who’ve heard Jan. 6 cases.
In the report he co-authored, “Lost, Not Stolen,” Griffith and other prominent conservatives said they found no evidence that fraud had changed the election’s outcome anywhere in the country.
“And all of the evidence — not the speculation, not the conspiracy theories — all the evidence points in one direction,” Griffith said. “And that is that President Biden won, and President Trump lost.”
Jan. 6 protesters, Griffith said, were duped. But Hughes still believes the 2020 election was stolen.
“If I come to find out that I was dead wrong on this, that the election was actually legit and Joe Biden got the most votes in presidential history, I would be extremely embarrassed. I would hold my hand up and say, ‘I was wrong, and I was an idiot.’ I don’t believe that though,” Hughes said. “And whether I was right or wrong, I believe what we did was patriotic, because we truly believed that the election was stolen, for a number of reasons. We really believed that.”
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IRS sending payments of up to $1,400 to 1 million people. Here’s who qualifies.
The IRS said Friday it is sending a total of $2.4 billion in “special payments” to 1 million people, part of an effort to ensure that Americans who didn’t receive all of their federal stimulus checks during the pandemic will get the money in their bank accounts.
The payments will vary by person, with a maximum amount of $1,400 per recipient, the agency said in a statement.
“To minimize headaches and get this money to eligible taxpayers, we’re making these payments automatic, meaning these people will not be required to go through the extensive process of filing an amended return to receive it,” IRS Commissioner Danny Werfel said in a statement.
Who will get a payment from the IRS?
The tax agency said it’s disbursing the funds after reviewing internal data that showed many people had filed tax returns but yet didn’t claim what is known as the “recovery rebate credit” in 2021.
That credit was designed for people who didn’t get all or some of the stimulus checks when they were issued during the pandemic. Lawmakers authorized three stimulus payments, with two sent in 2020 and a third in 2021.
Most taxpayers who were eligible for the stimulus payments have already received them directly, or later through the recovery rebate credit.
Do you need to apply for the IRS payment?
No. The IRS said it’s sending the payments automatically to about 1 million people who filed tax returns and who qualified for the recovery rebate credit yet didn’t claim it. The agency will send a letter to recipients to let them know they will receive the payment.
When will the IRS send the payments?
The tax agency said the checks will be sent in December, with most of the payments arriving by late January 2025.
The money will either be automatically direct deposited to the recipient’s bank account or will arrive in the mail via a paper check.
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