Showing posts with label Darrell Neely. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Darrell Neely. Show all posts

Darrell Neely sentenced to 28 months in prison for stealing plates, police jacket from Capitol


Darrell Neely is now the first misdemeanor defendant to receive more than a year in prison in the so called insurrection. Or Capitol riot case. Right out of Washington a federal judge sentenced one of only a handful of D.C. residents charged in connection with the Capitol riot to 28 months in prison Tuesday marking the first time a misdemeanor Jan. 6 defendant has received more than a year behind bars.

Darrell Neely was convicted in a bench trial in May of five misdemeanor counts. Prosecutors said the radio and YouTube broadcaster had spent more than an hour inside the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6 and stole four china plates, as well as multiple items belonging to a Capitol Police officer, including the jacket bearing his badge. U.S. District Juge John Bates, who presided over the trial, acquitted Neely of a felony count of civil disorder.

Although the misdemeanor charges Neely was convicted of carry a maximum statutory penalty of one year in prison, prosecutors asked Bates to sentence him to 33 months behind bars. They argued his lengthy criminal history, which includes a domestic violence case, his decision to abscond from D.C. while he was on pretrial release and his lack of remorse warranted nearly three years in prison.

Bates, a 2001 nominee of former President George W. Bush, explained in court Tuesday that to give such a prison term he would have to use what’s known as “stacking” or consecutive sentences. Prior to Tuesday, no judge had ordered consecutive sentences in a Jan. 6 case. But Bates said he thought Neely warranted it.

“What really convinces me that the sentences should be stacked… is that criminal history, which is pretty unique among misdemeanors, your lack of respect for the law, which is glaring, and your flight while facing prosecution,” Bates said.

Bates ordered Neely held without bond last year after he failed to appear for multiple court appearances. Neely’s attorneys, Kira Anne West and Nicole Ann Cubbage, asked Bates to sentence him to effectively time-served for the period he spent in the D.C. Jail. West highlighted a number of continuing education courses Neely had completed while in detention, including courses in digital marketing and veterinary studies.

Neely said Tuesday he went inside the Capitol as a journalist because another Jan. 6 defendant initially described in his filings as the “woman in a pink beret” now identified and charged as Jennifer Inzunza Vargas Geller told him she would help him interview members of the Proud Boys. Neely also previously alleged, without evidence, that he believed Vargas Geller had a connection to law enforcement.

Neely asked Bates to look past his criminal record and sentence him far below what prosecutors were requesting. 
“A person’s record is not who they are,” Neely said. “You’re trying to make a person out of a piece of paper.” Bates ultimately sentenced Neely to 28 months. He said the DOJ’s request for 33 months was excessive, but Neely clearly had been deterred by his previous encounters with the justice system.

He also rejected the idea that Neely entered the building as a journalist. 
“The encouragement of other rioters is certainly not the conduct of a neutral, uninvolved journalist,” Bates said.

Neely was the first Jan. 6 defendant to receive a stacked sentence, but quickly gained company in that category Tuesday afternoon. Later in the day, U.S. District Judge Timothy Kelly ordered former Proud Boys chairman Enrique Tarrio to serve 22 years in prison for his role in a plot to incite violence at the Capitol and stop the certification of the 2020 election.

Because the most serious charge Tarrio was convicted of, seditious conspiracy, carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, Kelly ordered the sentence on a separate count served consecutively to reach 22 years and he wasn't even at the so called insurrection. How does that work? You give a guy 22 years who wasn't even there and nobody from his group did anything to do anything. The Proud Boys have been other wise been known to STOP Antifa/BLM in the past from looting and burning down buildings. 

UPDATE: Darrell Neely Still MIA!


Well this folks is getting dire and we’re really worried about our friend “Darrell Neely” who seems to have gone missing for weeks now. Nobody can find him including those on his online radio network “G.E.R.N” (Global Enlightenment Radio Network) Jordan Fischer just posted this over on Twitter…


Still MIA!

There is currently growing concern for his safety and well being… This video was made to joke on when he would return. Let’s just hope he’s ok and it don’t take that long for him to come back. We do wish his quick and safe return. Right now a lot of members of his online network have been left wondering what will happen to their shows, and online network in general. We will try and keep you posted here on PSN as much as possible, and to the best of our ability.

A bench warrant is out for Darrell Neely of GERN Related to capitol Break-in!


A D.C. Superior Court judge issued a warrant for Darrell Neely on Aug. 10. Three weeks latter, police can’t locate him and his attorney says she can’t get in contact. We over at PSN (Public Streaming Network / Pure Solid News / Angel Espino) have not seen or heard from him a weeks. He’s a friend, and we’re all praying for his safety and for a peaceful resolution to what’s currently happening. We’re are in talks with anyone, and no authority or anyone has reached out to us concerning his whereabouts.

Even if we knew we wouldn’t say anyway but again we really don’t know where he’s at and it’s been weeks since we last heard from him… IF you are in contact with him make sure you let him know in case he’s not aware that they’re is a warrant for his arrest. Now as it’s being reported from D.C.

WASHINGTON — A D.C. judge issued a bench warrant earlier this month for a District resident charged with entering the U.S. Capitol Building on Jan. 6, but police say they haven’t been able to locate him for three weeks and now his attorney in his Capitol riot case says she can’t reach him either.

On Aug. 10, D.C. Superior Court Judge Kimberley Knowles issued a warrant for Darrell Neely for failure to appear at a probation violation hearing for a 2021 domestic violence case. Court records show Neely was charged with assault and destruction of property in February 2021 and pleaded guilty to the assault charge in August of last year. Neely was sentenced to 60 days in jail, all suspended, and a year of probation. Since then, court records show, at least five probation violations have been reported, resulting in two bench warrants in the case. A judge also ordered a bench warrant for Neely’s arrest in D.C. family court in November after Neely was found in contempt for refusing to pay more than $5,000 in alimony and child support. It was unclear from court records how or if that warrant was resolved.

Since Aug. 10, however, police have not been able to locate Neely to serve the most recent warrant. A DC Police spokesperson told WUSA9 last week Neely’s whereabouts were “unknown” and confirmed again on Wednesday that no arrest had yet been made. Neely’s attorney in his domestic violence case, Chidi Ogolo (who does not represent him in his Jan. 6 case), told WUSA9 he had been in contact with Neely since the bench warrant was issued but could not comment about whether his client had plans to accept service of the warrant.

D.C. Superior Court records show Neely has a history of failing to appear at court hearings and was briefly declared a fugitive in a November 2007 case. Neely was picked up by police three days later and the court record is unclear as to whether he faced any further prosecution. As of Wednesday, Neely had not been declared a fugitive in connection with the unserved bench warrant. In D.C., failure to appear for a court hearing in a misdemeanor case carries a penalty of up to 180 days in jail. A person declared a fugitive can face a maximum sentence of up to 5 years in prison.

In addition to his troubles in D.C. Superior Court, Neely was arrested and charged in September with five misdemeanor counts for allegedly entering the Capitol on Jan. 6 and stealing multiple items, including four china plates and a jacket, badge, nametag and hat belonging to the U.S. Capitol Police Department. The charging documents against Neely include an image of a video stream from his radio show, Global Enlightenment Radio Network, in which he appears to be wearing a USCP cap while broadcasting.


Neely was identified to the FBI by at least three separate witnesses, all of whom had worked with him at his radio station. According to charging documents, Neely made a video call while inside the Capitol and “narrated” events inside. In a second call, witnesses told the FBI, Neely allegedly displayed what appeared to be a police jacket with a badge on the front and two china plates that he insinuated were taken from inside the building. Prior to this week, the most recent action by the attorney representing Neely in his Jan. 6 case, Kira Anne West, came on Aug. 8 — two days before the bench warrant was issued — when she filed a motion asking a judge to suppress statements Neely made during a law enforcement interview. On Monday, West filed another motion asking for an extension of time to file replies to the government’s response to that motion – noting, among other issues, that she hasn’t been able to get in contact with Neely.

“Undersigned counsel has tried unsuccessfully to reach her client in the last week to discuss the government responses to motions and the motion to suppress,” West wrote in her motion. West declined a request from WUSA9 last week seeking comment. Neely was scheduled to appear in court next for a status conference on Sept. 21 and for a jury trial on Oct. 5. His pretrial release conditions required him to submit to regular supervision and notify his probation officer of any travel outside of D.C. As of Wednesday, no notice of probation violation had been filed with the court in his Jan. 6 case.

A Capitol Police officer’s baseball cap & Jacket were taken on Jan. 6, and worn on a YouTube says feds?


So this was reported by Washington Post originally and knowing the person they’re talking about I doubt they will have him sent to prison over this as he didn’t lead the people breaking in and he didn’t hurt anyone so while the left is trying to gaslight this as they reported it we don’t think they will do much to Darrell Neely the podcaster who joined the so called mob of President Donald Trump supporters as they stormed the U.S. Capitol building on Jan. 6. He invited three friends to a video call to recap his day.

During the chat, Neely showed off several items he claimed to have nabbed from the Capitol, three witnesses told FBI agents. He flashed four china plates, a baseball cap, and a jacket with a silver badge on the front and white letters on the back, court documents state. Maybe he needs plates for dinner? LOL Seriously these charges are as idiotic as to call the JAN 6th event a riot or insurrection.

“Neely boasted that he had attacked a [U.S. Capitol Police] officer and had taken the USCP jacket, badge, name tag, and baseball cap from the officer,” a person described as Witness 3 told investigators.

Neely, who runs an online conservative radio station called Global Enlightenment Radio Network that we at PSN Radio work with from time to time, and I’m friends with Neely and I can’t tell you he isn’t a threat to national security so I highly doubt he will be under major charges, and if they do come down hard on him it would be an incredible crime against him and our given right to protest for our rights. At worse this is misdemeanor but since he didn’t hide his souvenirs he now has this to deal with. In the days that followed, he wore the Capitol Police baseball cap during several broadcasts on his network’s YouTube channel, according to the FBI.

“Neely faces five federal charges of theft of government property, entering a restricted building, disorderly conduct in a restricted building and a Capitol building, and demonstrating at a Capitol building. He was arrested in D.C. on Monday.” According to the Washington Post.

Court documents do not say whether Neely has an attorney. He did not immediately respond to The Washington Post’s request for comment early Tuesday. But I just spoke to him and he seemed upbeat about what his outcome would be, and we’re all hoping nothing happens to him over this issue.

As the first anniversary of the so called insurrection approaches, federal prosecutors continue to charge Trump supporters like if they were terrorists even tho none was armed, and only one person died and she was shot by Nancy Pelosi personal officer who violated laws in killing Ashli Babbitt.. Neely is one of more than 600 people accused of breaching the Capitol on Jan. 6. On Oct. 1, a mother and son were arrested for allegedly helping steal a laptop from the office of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.). A week later, federal agents arrested two women for their alleged role in the riot. One claimed she stole beer from Pelosi’s office which is very believable since Pelosi looks like she’s loaded everytime she speaks. She looks high or drunk most of the time.

The FBI first became aware of Neely’s activity at the Capitol on Jan. 9, when investigators received a tip from someone claiming Neely had entered the building. Agents soon identified him through video footage that showed him in the Capitol while appearing “to be holding a marijuana cigarette,” court documents state. He was also captured leaving the building while holding a cellphone.

Investigators matched the surveillance footage with an image of Neely in law enforcement databases. They also used subpoenaed cellphone data to prove he was in the vicinity of the Capitol on Jan. 6, according to investigators. FBI agents spoke with three witnesses who worked with Neely at his radio network. The trio spoke with Neely twice on Jan. 6 in group calls, according to court documents. They also told investigators they spoke with Neely in a Facebook Messenger group chat on Jan. 6 and 7.

Witness 1 said during the first call, a portion of which was on video, Neely entered the Capitol and narrated what he was seeing, according to court documents. The second video call was around 5:30 p.m., Witness 1 said, as Neely left Capitol grounds.

Witness 2 recalled Neely telling them that he “acquired a jacket as a souvenir,” according to court documents. Witness 1 added that Neely claimed the jacket belonged to a Capitol Police officer. Later that night, Neely allegedly sent a picture of off-white china plates with an eagle in the center to the Facebook Messenger group.

“Based on what Neely said, Witness 2 believed it was stolen from the Capitol,” investigators said. According to court documents, Witness 3 saw Neely on the evening of Jan. 6. Witness 3 said Neely showed off the four china plates and a Capitol Police jacket, badge, name tag and baseball cap, according to investigators. (The officer to whom the items belong later told investigators that he or she removed them while decontaminating from tear gas and could not find the items after.)

In the days after the Capitol riot, Neely spoke about his experience at the insurrection, the FBI said. Investigators watched several of his broadcasts and noted that Neely wore a Capitol Police baseball cap in some of the videos. Agents interviewed Neely two times, during which he said he went to the Capitol to document the rally “because he felt the events were newsworthy,” according to court documents. He also admitted to going into the Capitol and showed investigators videos he took while inside. He agreed to send the FBI images he took on Jan. 6, including a selfie on Capitol grounds.

A federal judge signed a warrant for Neely’s arrest on Sept. 30. Neely was released from jail following his arrest, court records show.

Rabbit Punched Episode #1 "Darrell Neely"

928 views Premiered May 23, 2021 A rousing political discussion of current events and the search for a reality everyone can agree on. Yeah…. like that is going to happen.

Special guest for this show was Darrell Neely owner of Global Enlightenment Radio Network and one heck of conservative voice in the world of media. Also his nickname is Odin, and he loves to Asgard or guard ass. Not sure how that goes. But either way it was great having him on the show.

Website: https://www.globalenlightenmentradio….

Websites:
Angel:
https://www.angelespino.com
https://www.patreon.com/AngelEspino

Spud:
http://www.beta.spudgoodman.com/