
"Ryan Nichols, 35, became the latest such Capitol attacker on 10 May, when authorities in Harleton, Texas, say he threateningly displayed a handgun to a person with whom he was arguing in a church parking lot. Nichols in November 2023 had pleaded guilty in connection with the insurrection at the Capitol from Trump supporters after his first presidency ended in defeat to Joe Biden after the 2020 election. Among other things, he acknowledged attacking officers with pepper spray and making a video during the riot in which he said, It's going to be violent and if you are asking, Is Ryan Nichols going to bring violence? Yes, Ryan Nichols is going to bring violence.'"
"A federal judge later sentenced Nichols to five years and three months in prison. But Nichols was freed early when he was unconditionally pardoned along with 1,500 other participants on the first day of Trump's second presidency in January 2025. Then, on 11 May, the sheriff's office of Texas' Harrison county which includes Harleton said its deputies encountered Nichols one day earlier while responding to a complaint about a person reaching for a firearm during a dispute outside the church."
"Investigators learned Nichols had confronted someone in the church's parking lot and continued doing so even after that person tried to leave, a sheriff's office statement said. The alleged victim reported turning away from the confrontation and trying to usher his family towards their car while asking Nichols to go away. The victim alleged that he eventually turned around to face Nichols, who then raised his shirt up, showed a gun and wrapped his hand around the weapon's grip. The victim advised that he was in fear for his life due to this action, and deputies arrested Nichols on a count of deadly conduct."
Ryan Nichols, a Capitol insurrection participant who pleaded guilty and received a five-year-and-three-month prison sentence, was released early after an unconditional presidential pardon in January 2025. On 10 May, authorities in Harleton, Texas, reported that Nichols threatened someone during an argument in a church parking lot by displaying a handgun. Investigators said Nichols confronted a person, continued the confrontation even after the person tried to leave, and escalated the encounter by raising his shirt, showing a gun, and wrapping his hand around the weapon’s grip. The alleged victim reported fear for his life and deputies arrested Nichols for deadly conduct. Nichols previously admitted attacking officers with pepper spray and making a video predicting violence during the Capitol riot.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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