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‘Proud Boy’ lawyer asks Trump to deliver on promises of pardons for Jan. 6 Capitol rioters


Time and again during his campaign, former and future president Donald Trump made the Jan.6 rioters who stormed the U.S. Capitol a centerpiece of his rallies, calling them heroes or hostages and promising pardons.

“The moment we win,” Trump told a Wisconsin crowd in September, “we will rapidly review the cases of every political prisoner unjustly victimized by the Harris regime, and I will sign their pardons on Day 1.”

Trump is now being asked to deliver.

Norm Pattis, the Connecticut lawyer defending Joseph Biggs, a member of the militant Proud Boys organization that the government says organized the violent break-in at the Capitol, has written a long letter to Trump that appeals to his grievances with the criminal justice system and argues that clemency might contribute to political unification.

“Mr. President, you are no stranger to prosecutions warped by partisan vendetta,” Pattis wrote. “Mr. Biggs also has been victimized by a cynical misuse of the law.”

Norm Pattis, attorney for Alex Jones, listens to a question from the jury during their deliberations in the Alex Jones Sandy Hook defamation damages trial in Superior Court in Waterbury, Conn., on Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2022. (H John Voorhees III/Hearst Connecticut Media via AP)

H John Voorhees III/AP

Norm Pattis, attorney for Alex Jones, during their deliberations in the Alex Jones Sandy Hook defamation damages trial in Superior Court in Waterbury, Conn., on Tuesday, Oct. 11, 2022. (H John Voorhees III/Hearst Connecticut Media via AP)

The letter congratulates Trump on “your re-election to the Presidency” before turning to an exhaustive history of presidential clemency through U.S. history. Pardoning Biggs and other insurrectionists would serve “the broader public interest,” Pattis wrote, in the same way “liberal” grants of presidential pardons to confederates helped reunite the country after the civil war.

“These are divisive times. The divisions were acute in 2020, when millions believed the election was stolen and turned out to make sure electoral integrity was preserved. Suspicions and bitterness about the election lingers to this day. A pardon of Mr. Biggs will help close that wound and inspires confidence in the future” Pattis wrote.

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