Proud Boys leader Ethan Nordean has been jailed for 18 years – the joint longest sentence given to anyone involved in the January 6 Capitol riots so far.
Nordean is the latest to be jailed after other leaders and members of the group were convicted of spearheading an attack aimed at preventing the peaceful transfer of power from Donald Trump to Joe Biden after the 2020 presidential election.
He was described as the “undisputed leader on the ground on 6 Jan,” by prosecutor Jason McCullough, who also asked the judge to sentence him to 27 years.
Nordean was convicted of seditious conspiracy and other crimes by a jury.
In a statement to the judge, Nordean called the riots a “complete and utter tragedy” and said he had gone to the Capitol to be a leader and to keep people out of trouble.
“While it is true that I wholeheartedly regret what I did that day, what I regret more is not being a better leader,” he said.
It comes after Stewart Rhodes, the leader and founder of another far-right group, the Oathkeepers, who was also sentenced to 18 years.
Earlier on Friday, a former member of the far-right Proud Boys shouted “Trump won” as he was jailed for 10 years for his part in the January 6 Capitol riots.
Dominic Pezzola, 46, took a police officer’s riot shield and used it to smash a window, allowing rioters to make the first breach into the Capitol.
He later filmed a “celebratory video” with a cigar inside the building, prosecutors said.
Pezzola was a recent Proud Boys recruit, however, and a jury acquitted him of the most high-profile charge of seditious conspiracy.
“He was an enthusiastic foot soldier,” prosecutor Erik Kenerson said.
US District Judge Timothy Kelly noted that Pezzola, of Rochester, New York, was a newcomer to the group who did not write the kind of increasingly violent online messages that his co-defendants did leading up to the attack.
However, he was in some ways a “tip of the spear” in allowing rioters to get into the Capitol, the judge added.
“The reality is you smashed that window in and let people begin to stream into the Capitol building and threaten the lives of our lawmakers,” the judge told Pezzola.
“It’s not something that I ever dreamed I would have seen in our country.”
The defence had asked for five years for Pezzola, saying he got “caught up in the craziness” that day.
Pezzola told the judge that he wished he had never crossed into a restricted area on January 6 and he apologised to the officer whose shield he took.
“There is no place in my future for groups or politics whatsoever,” he said.