The D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals has rejected a defense claim used by a January 6 defendant, setting up a likely Supreme Court appeal that could have major implications on a common charge the Biden Department of Justice has used on more than 2,000 protesters. The Biden DOJ has vowed to lock up more than 2,000 protesters — most of whom are charged with common trespassing misdemeanors — by January 2026. The department has continued to make arrests — generally causing defendants to lose their livelihoods over common trespassing misdemeanors — nearly four years after the minor disturbance while refusing to charge left-wing protesters with the same offenses.
The court decided whether Couy Griffin could argue that he was unaware of “knowingly” breaching a Secret-Service-protected permitter, according to a report from Newsmax. Griffin further argued that the government did not conclusively prove that Griffin was aware of the restrictions at the time of the mass trespassing event.
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In a 2-1 ruling, Judges Cornelia Pillard and Judith Rogers determined that the trespassing law was established to increase security around Secret Service protectees. At the time of the mass trespassing event, Vice President Mike