Donald Trump pardoned or commuted the sentences of the more than 1,500 people convicted in connection with the January 6, ...
A Springfield man found guilty of breaching the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, was among the 1,500 or so people President ...
In pardoning more than 1,500 supporters charged in the Jan. 6 attack, Trump went further than he had suggested just a month ...
Misdemeanor case against Matthew Titus Allen of Castle, Oklahoma, was dismissed Wednesday in federal court in Washington, D.C ...
President Donald Trump's pardons of those convicted in the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol and the rhetoric of retribution from some of those released this week is raising deep concern among ...
President Trump pardoned men who violently attacked police officers on Jan. 6 along with nearly 1,600 other people who had been charged in connection with the riot. But his grant of clemency did not ...
Daniel Charles Ball, who prosecutors alleged threw an explosive device at officers in a tunnel at the Capitol, was arrested after receiving his pardon and remained in custody in Washington.
Trump’s effort to erase the violent assault has opened up new fronts and skirmishes in Washington’s four-year reckoning with the attack.
D.C. judges blasted Trump's Jan. 6 pardons, denouncing rioters as "poor losers" and warning against whitewashing the violence and chaos of that day.
State Sen. Jon Bramnick breaks with Trump, says pardoning Capitol rioters goes against GOP's support for law enforcement.