*Video and audio links to my interview with George Tanios are found in the links below. (Also available on all major podcast platforms.)
I've repeated this line in dozens of interviews about what I saw on January 6, 2021:
"I saw bad people doing bad things, good people doing good things, and otherwise good people doing stupid things."
This is one of the most egregious stories of the political weaponization of federal agencies against average American citizens, related to the events of January 6.
George Tanios of Morgantown, West Virginia didn't fall into either of those categories. He effectively did nothing other than attend the largest political protest in the country that day, then reluctantly made his way over to the Capitol where eight additional permitted events -- legally permitted by the Capitol Police -- were scheduled to take place following the rally at The Ellipse.
Despite what half of America seems to believe, George's attendance at that Ellipse rally in DC was not illegal. He is a diehard Trump supporter who believes the 2020 presidential election was stolen and openly says so. Also, none of which is illegal.
George and his travel companion to DC -- Julian Khater -- didn't arrive at the Capitol grounds until approximately 2:00 pm on January 6, over an hour after violence had begun, and long after all evidence of restricted areas had been removed by the early-arriving provocateurs. There was no longer any fencing, no bike rack barricades, and no "Closed Area" signs along their path. Those had been removed and hidden. There was also no police presence seen during their walk from The Ellipse to the Capitol to inform them of any restricted areas.
For the Department of Justice and their Stasi henchmen in the FBI to target, arrest, charge, and prosecute the thousands of individuals who arrived at the Capitol with even misdemeanor trespassing is shamefully beyond the pale. Every first-year law student knows the concept, "ignorance of the law is no excuse," to be a canard.
In fact, upon arriving close enough to witness the battle line between violent perpetrators and police that was taking place, George actually retreated to a safe distance.
Unfortunately, George's travel companion that day fell into the latter category of what I observed from protest participants on January 6. An otherwise good person who did a really stupid thing. An action he hid from George for over two months, before their arrests on March 14, 2021.
Even though George pulled back and away from the violence he saw, Khater decided to move closer to the battle line, and as such, was hit by police pepper spray. His reaction was to find George and reach into his backpack, which contained a can of bear spray that he'd acquired before leaving West Virginia for DC. George prevented Khater from accessing that can of bear spray, but he had already given Khater the smaller, key-chain-size pepper spray the night before.
Bear spray and pepper spray are legal to carry in The District, as commonly-used defensive tools by residents and visitors alike. Everyone who'd followed the news of recent protest events in DC knew that Antifa and other counter-protest groups regularly attacked Trump supporters at those events. George's only intention for bringing those two cans of spray was so that he and Khater could safely get back to their vehicle in the event of an Antifa attack later that day.
The full description of George's and Khater's interaction when Khater attempted to acquire the pepper spray and return to the police line is contained in the podcast interview linked below, so I'll not write about that here. Suffice it to say . . . George was under the impression Khater had relented, and took a bottle of water instead, to wash off the pepper spray he'd been hit with. Unfortunately, that was not the case.
Khater hid from George the fact that he'd already used that smaller key-chain-size of the spray against police officers, which eventually led to his being charged with having sprayed Capitol Police officer Brian Sicknick -- who tragically died the next day. (As a reminder, Sicknick is the officer about which the press initially reported as having been hit over the head with a fire extinguisher. That assertion was quickly disproven, and eventually, the DC coroner's report showed that he died on the 7th of a stroke.)
The FBI -- touted as "the greatest investigative agency on the planet" -- had over two months before arresting George to get the evidence and facts of his actions on January 6 correct, and clearly distinguished from the individual behaviors of Khater. Except . . . they didn't. They were egregiously wrong in their subsequent actions against George, operating under a highly-charged political agenda to make arrests and worry about the ramifications and destruction of innocent lives, later.
In short . . .
Both George and Khater were arrested on March 14, 2021. George and his family were "swatted" by at least 15 officers from multiple agencies. The FBI, US Marshals, and local Morgantown police were among those. Curiously, representatives of the Capitol Police -- far from their jurisdiction -- were also present at his arrest.
The arresting agents refused to show George a warrant or even describe the charges levied against him. Days passed, while detained in a West Virginia holding cell before he was given access to an attorney. Only then did George discover he was being accused of having killed Officer Sicknick, and those charges included a total of 10 felony counts. As such, he was denied bond in the first such hearing, before a West Virginia judge.
George was then transferred to the now infamous DC Gulag, which was then beginning to be filled with other high-profile January 6 defendants. Over five months passed as the details of George's innocence were being presented to Judge Thomas Hogan. Nevertheless, in another bond hearing, Hogan denied George's release from jail. Fortunately, his attorneys were successfully able to petition the DC Appellate Court -- based on the Bail Reform Act -- and that court ruled 3-to-0 in favor of George's release, saying Hogan had ruled "in error" against his bond.
Another year and a half of legal wrangling proceeded before all 10 felony charges were dropped, and a plea bargain was accepted by George and his attorneys. To effectively end the two-year nightmare, George ultimately pleaded guilty to two misdemeanor charges of entering and remaining on restricted grounds, and disorderly and disruptive conduct on restricted grounds. He is guilty of neither, but it was, either accept that plea arrangement -- which included time served, one year of probation, and a $1,800 fine -- or face a trial before a DC jury. (Which we have observed to be a no-win situation for any J6 defendant thus far.)
During the same January 27, 2023 sentencing hearing, Julian Khater was sentenced to 80 months in prison for two felony counts of assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers with a dangerous weapon.
But . . . George's nightmare is not over. Just before the sentencing hearing, he received notice that he is one of only three named defendants in a wrongful death lawsuit being brought by Officer Brian Sicknick's family. He, Khater, and former President Donald Trump are being sued for $10 million apiece. Presiding over the lawsuit will be none other than District Court Judge Amit Mehta, who oversaw all three Oath Keepers trials, and who has also issued a lengthy opinion rejecting Trump's claim of "absolute immunity" against lawsuits for actions taken while serving as president.
I hope you'll watch or listen to George Tanios' entire story at the following links:
Video -
Please help with George's legal fees, here:
https://www.givesendgo.com/GeorgeTanios