THE CASES OF JANUARY 6TH
Thomas Webster
case No.21-cr-208-APM
Thomas Webster case No.21-cr-208-APM
Juries aren't swayed by defenses in Capitol riot trials
By MICHAEL KUNZELMAN
A retired New York police officer told a jury that he was acting in self-defense when he tackled a police officer and grabbed his gas mask during the Jan. 6 riot. Jurors deliberated for less than three hours before convicting the 20-year NYPD veteran, Thomas Webster, of all six counts in his indictment.
A man grabbing a gas mask on a police officers face who is on the ground.
Thomas Webster was captured on camera grabbing an officers gas mask.
A man holding a riot officer on the ground.
Thomas Webster was captured on camera tackling an officer to the ground.
Webster was the first Jan. 6 defendant to be tried on an assault charge and the first to present a jury with a self-defense argument. His conviction proved to be a bellwether for the dozens of trials that followed.
Finding a viable trial defense hasn't been easy for rioters who stormed the Capitol. Of the nearly 100 riot defendants who have elected to a trial by jury, none has been fully acquitted.
Top: Body camera footage shows Webster swinging a metal flag pole at the officer before charging at him and tackling him to the ground.
Bottom: Rioters pushed on metal bike rack barricades set up by police as Webster, circled in green, attacked the officer.
Many have said they were swept up in the moment. Some have tried to shift the blame for their actions to former President Donald Trump and his lies about a stolen election. Others have claimed they were trying to protect themselves from overzealous police officers.
A police officer in riot gear in front of a crowds of people
Images from the officer's body camera of Webster during the attack.
A crowd of people behind a barrier
Images from the officer's body camera of Webster during the attack.
Webster testified that he was trying to protect himself from a “rogue cop” who punched him in the face. A juror who spoke to reporters after the May 2022 verdict said the videos refuted Webster’s self-defense claims.
“I guess we were all surprised that he would even make that defense argument,” the juror said. “There was no dissension among us at all. We unanimously agreed that there was no self-defense argument here at all.”
Before U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta sentenced him to 10 years in prison, Webster apologized to the officer. He said he wished he had never come to Washington, where he says he “became swept up in politics and former President Trump’s rhetoric.”
“I wish the events of that horrible day had never happened. People would still be alive, people would not have gotten hurt, and families would not have been thrown apart. Perhaps our country would not be as divided as it is today,”
Thomas Webster
THOMAS WEBSTER
Aged 58, of the village of Florida, New York, was sentenced on 9/1/2022 to 10 years at FCI-Texarkana in Texarkana, Texas. Release Date: 12/15/2030.
MICHAEL JOSEPH FOY
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SHANE JENKINS
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