For the first time in a Jan. 6 case, D.C. District Judge Amit Mehta accepted the government''s recommendation to apply an enhancement for terrorism in Rhodes'' sentencing. Mehta agreed with prosecutors that Rhodes "inspired the use of violence" in his followers to disrupt the certification and that his conduct met the legal definition of terrorism intended to influence the actions of government. Mehta cited the stockpile of weapons the Oath Keepers had amassed just outside of Washington, D.C. on Jan. 6, as well as Rhodes'' orders for members to delete incriminating messages after the Capitol assault. "You, sir, present an ongoing threat and peril to this country," Mehta told Rhodes just before handing down his sentence. Before his sentence was handed down, Rhodes opted to address Mehta in defiant remarks maintaining his innocence and describing himself as a "political prisoner." "Like President Trump, my only crime is opposing those who are destroying our country," Rhodes said. In his own remarks just before handing down his sentence, Mehta pushed back directly on Rhodes'' claims of being a political prisoner, saying instead he poses an "ongoing threat to this country." "For decades it is clear that you wanted the democracy in this country to devolve into violence," Mehta said. "You''re not a political prisoner. You''re here because 12 jurors in D.C. who acquitted you of multiple counts found you guilty of sedition." "It could have been a far uglier day ... and people should not forget that," he said of Jan. 6.
https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/level-terrorism-enhancement-oath-keepers-leader-stewart-rhodes/story?id=99598181
颠覆国体当然是反革命罪。