Rep. Jamaal Bowman criminally charged with a misdemeanor for pulling a fire alarm


Remember we had Rep. Jamaal Bowman (D-NY) @repbowman pulling what now we jokingly call "ALARMGATE" as he pulled the fire alarm and his excuse was "He was running late and thought this would open the doors... To a direction which Marjorie Taylor Greene later proved would have seen him going the wrong way! But it looks like finally this man has been criminally charged with a misdemeanor for pulling the fire alarm in the Cannon House Office Building, allegedly to prevent a vote on the House floor.

The charge carries a maximum sentence of six months in jail. NBC News’s Frank Thorp first reported the story. “We finished our investigation,” reads a statement from the U.S. Capitol Police (USCP). “Our agents gathered all the evidence, packaged it up, and sent the entire case with charges to prosecutors for their consideration.”

USCP presented a probable cause arrest warrant for 22DC1319A – False Fire Alarm – to the D.C. Attorney General, who is charging Bowman. Bowman has been ordered to appear in D.C. Superior Court Thursday morning at 9:30 a.m, EDT for his arraignment. The former middle school principal insisted that he pulled the fire alarm in order to open the door to make a government funding vote. Breitbart News first broke exclusively that Bowman threw emergency warning signs to the floor before pulling the alarm and running down a set of stairs before exiting the building from another floor, contradicting his claims.



Republicans have drafted a resolution to expel Bowman from Congress. We do know that Bowman reached an agreement with the Attorney General to pay a $1000 fine and issue a formal apology in exchange for having his charge dropped after three months, according to Axios. The congressman will avoid serving any jail time if adhering to the agreement. “I am responsible for activating a fire alarm, I will be paying the fine issued, and look forward to these charges being ultimately dropped,” a Bowman statement read. Bowman is still subject to additional actions from Congress, including censure and even expulsion.

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