The far-right Oath Keepers extremist group founder serving 18 years for the Capitol riot visited Capitol Hill after President ...
Stewart Rhodes was serving an 18-year prison sentence for seditious conspiracy when he was freed by President Trump.
Rhodes had been convicted in one of the most serious cases prosecuted by the DOJ stemming from the January 6, 2021, Capitol ...
Rhodes’ appearance came the day after he was released from prison as a result of Trump’s order of clemency benefitting the ...
Rhodes, the far-right Oath Keepers extremist group founder, was found guilty of orchestrating a weekslong plot that ...
Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, the far-right extremist group leader convicted of seditious conspiracy in the Jan. 6, ...
Rhodes who was convicted of seditious conspiracy in one of the most serious cases brought by the Justice Department met with ...
On his first full day of freedom, Stewart Rhodes—who was convicted of orchestrating the Jan. 6, 2021, attack—returned to ...
Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes, whose conviction for seditious conspiracy in the January 6 attack was commuted by former President Donald Trump, made a controversial appearance at Capitol Hill.
The move, in effect, validated the far-right leader’s defiant claim that his criminal prosecution was a kind of political persecution. By Alan Feuer Reporting from Washington When Stewart Rhodes ...
An attorney who represented the Oath Keepers was sentenced to a year in prison over her role in the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol attack, at a proceeding Friday that marked one of the final riot ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — Former Proud Boys extremist group leader Enrique Tarrio and Oath Keepers founder Stewart Rhodes have been released from prison after their lengthy sentences for seditious ...