Trump Issues Blanket Pardons and Commutations for ~1,500 January 6 Defendantstimeline_event

dojpolitical-violenceobstruction-of-justicejanuary-6pardonscommutationsoath-keepersproud-boys
2025-01-20 · 1 min read · Edit on Pyrite

type: timeline_event

On his first day in office, President Trump issued blanket pardons and commutations for approximately 1,500 January 6 defendants — the largest mass clemency action related to political violence in modern American history.

Scope of clemency:

  • ~1,500 pardons and commutations total
  • 14 Oath Keepers and Proud Boys leaders had sentences commuted (including those convicted of seditious conspiracy)
  • 300+ pending cases subsequently dismissed by DOJ
  • 20+ DOJ employees who worked on January 6 prosecutions were fired
  • The DOJ's January 6 prosecution database was scrubbed
  • Key commutations included:

  • Stewart Rhodes (Oath Keepers founder, sentenced to 18 years for seditious conspiracy)
  • Enrique Tarrio (Proud Boys leader, sentenced to 22 years for seditious conspiracy)
  • Other Oath Keepers and Proud Boys members convicted of seditious conspiracy, assault on officers, and obstruction
  • Significance: The mass clemency reversed four years of the largest federal prosecution in American history. Over 1,200 defendants had been charged; hundreds had been convicted at trial or pled guilty; dozens of federal judges had imposed sentences. The blanket pardons — including for those convicted of seditious conspiracy and violent assault — sent a clear signal that political violence on behalf of the president would be rewarded rather than punished.

    This action set the stage for the DOJ weaponization that followed: the same department that dropped cases against insurrectionists would proceed to prosecute Comey, James, Powell, Bolton, and Lemon for opposing Trump.