‘Would defy rationality’: Trump-appointed judge rejects administration’s claim that Jan. 6 rioter’s pardon extends to firearm convictions 

Left: Daniel Edwin Wilson is seen in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 (U.S. Attorney’s Office). Right: FILE - In this Dec. 11, 2007, file photo commissioner Dabney Friedrich, speaks during the U.S. Sentencing Commission meeting where commission members voted unanimously to allow some 19,500 federal prison inmates, most of them black, to seek reductions in their crack cocaine sentences in Washington. President Donald Trump on May 8, 2017, announced 10 judicial candidate nominations. If confirmed, Friedrich of Washington, D.C., will serve as a District Judge on the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. (AP Photo/Stephen J. Boitano)

Left: Daniel Edwin Wilson is seen in the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021 (U.S. Attorney’s Office). Right: Dabney Friedrich, speaks during the U.S. Sentencing Commission meeting in December 2007 (AP Photo/Stephen J. Boitano).

A federal judge in Washington, D.C., rejected the Trump administration’s assertion that the president’s blanket pardons for those convicted in the Jan. 6 attack also applied to crimes outside of what happened at the Capitol that day.

U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich, an appointee of Donald Trump, on Thursday refused to accept that the president’s pardon of Capitol rioter Daniel Edwin Wilson extended to unrelated federal gun charges that Wilson pleaded guilty to in 2022, reasoning that the crime was outside the scope of the “clear and unambiguous” terms of the pardon.

Friedrich’s 19-page order marks the first time a federal judge has unequivocally refuted the Justice Department’s newly adopted position that the pardons covered the Jan. 6, attack as well as “offenses that were charged as a result of search warrants conducted as part of the January 6, 2021 investigation, for which the government did not have pre-existing evidence related to similar offenses.”

The judge wrote that the pardon “only applies” to offenses “related to events that occurred at or near the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021,” meaning it is “tethered to a specific place and time.”

“Contrary to the pardon’s plain language and structure, the parties’ reading of the pardon conflates offenses discovered during the January 6 investigations with offenses that occurred at or near the Capitol on January 6,” Friedrich wrote. “Because Wilson’s Kentucky firearm offenses bear no relationship to the events that occurred at the Capitol on January 6, 2021, they are not covered by the plain language of the Presidential Pardon.”

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