Proud Boys

“You can give me 100 years and I’d do it all over again,” Marc Bru told the judge.
Christopher Worrell cut off an ankle monitor and went on the lam for six weeks. When he was finally found, he faked a drug overdose, authorities said.
Anthony Sargent said he threw a rock at the Capitol doors to help police. A judge went above the Justice Department's recommended sentencing in response.
The Florida governor argued that there's "some examples of people that shouldn't have been prosecuted" following the Capitol riot.
Five Proud Boys leaders are going to prison over Jan. 6. But we haven't seen the end of the gang, or the damage it inflicted on the American political landscape.
“He sees political advantage in continuing to say that he might pardon people,” the New York Times reporter suggested.
The Trump loyalist and former vice presidential candidate made the remark about the Jan. 6 sentences in a stunning whitewash of what happened.
In asking for a lighter sentence, Tarrio’s lawyers pointed out that he has a history of working undercover with law enforcement.
Pezzola was sentenced to 10 years in prison. Nordean, the gang's most notorious bruiser, was sentenced to 18 years.
Biggs, an Army veteran and former Infowars correspondent, was sentenced to 17 years for seditious conspiracy. Rehl was sentenced to 15 years.