A Hollywood actor best known for roles in Anchorman and Mr. Show has been sentenced over his role in the January 6 US Capitol riots.
Jay Johnston, who also had supporting roles in Arrested Development and Bob’s Burgers, was sentenced to 12 months and a day in federal prison on Monday.
The 56-year-old from Chicago was arrested in June 2023 and pleaded guilty in July to a felony offence of obstructing officers during a civil disorder.
He was dropped as a featured voice in Bob’s Burgers long before the legal repercussions of his involvement.
In their sentencing memo, federal prosecutors, who had sought a sentence of 18 months, included a photo of him “dressing up as Jacob Chansley, known as the ‘QAnon Shaman'” at a Halloween party two years after the attack.
Prosecutors said Johnston spent about 10 minutes in the lower west tunnel that leads into the Capitol on 6 January 2021.
During that time, he was accused of having helped “at least four other rioters” wash their eyes out after being sprayed with pepper spray.
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He was also accused of having used a stolen riot shield to make a “shield wall” against the police and participated in a “heave-ho” push that crushed officer Daniel Hodges against a door frame.
Johnston “sent messages to friends and family in the days after 6 January claiming the events at the US Capitol were exaggerated by the media”, prosecutors added.
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Lawyer Stanley Woodward, representing Johnston, said the government had “persistently overstated” his client’s role in the attack “because he is an acclaimed Hollywood actor”.
In a sentencing memo, Mr Woodward wrote that Johnston “had not been able to sustain his livelihood as an actor” and he had “essentially been blacklisted by Hollywood”.