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Trump fan who assaulted Officer Fanone on Jan. 6 sentenced to more than 7 years in prison

WASHINGTON — A Donald Trump fan who brought his teenage son along as he assaulted then-D.C. police officer Mike Fanone and another officer at the Capitol on Jan. 6 was sentenced to more than seven years in prison on Tuesday.

Kyle Young, a 38-year-old HVAC worker from Iowa whose lawyer said he was “injected” with lies about the 2020 election and who had asked his Facebook followers to join him at the “Stop the Steal” rally, pleaded guilty in May to a felony count of assaulting, resisting or impeding officers.

Young admitted that he used a strobe light to disorient police, helped throw a large audio speaker at police, grabbed Fanone’s wrist when the D.C. officer was abducted by the mob and made contact with another officer abducted by the mob.

Kyle Young at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.U.S. District Court for D.C.

Young’s 86-month sentence matched what federal prosecutors sought in the case. They argued that Young took part in the assault at the lower west tunnel of the Capitol where “some of the most barbaric violence” took place on Jan. 6. As discovered by online sleuths, the government argued that Young handed a Taser to Danny Rodriguez, a MAGA fanatic who used it to electroshock Fanone in the neck on Jan. 6.

Young, trailed by his 16-year-old son, was right nearby as Rodriguez electroshocked Fanone, extensive video evidence shows. Rodriguez, who has been charged in connection with the Jan. 6 riot, admitted those actions to the FBI but his case is still pending.

U.S. Capitol Police Officer Morris Moore, who was dragged into the mob, gave a victim impact statement in court Tuesday, saying the actions of rioters reminded him of the film “300,” or a zombie movie. He said he’s had nightmares about facing down the mob.

“It’s almost like a war,” he said. “It was crazy.”

Moore, a former college football player, said he was reminded of the words of a coach who told him the to leave it all on the field. He said wanted to get back in the fight after he was removed from the riot.

“I wanted to leave it out there on the west front,” he said. “We did out best. We did our best.”

Fanone, who gave his own victim statement and recounted how officers fought to defend the Capitol on Jan. 6, told the judge this “isn’t my first rodeo” in federal court, noting that he had been to the courthouse numerous times as an officer. He referenced Young’s criminal history in describing how Young had prevented him from finishing his career in law enforcement.

Fanone said that while he was “serving my community and my country with distinction,” Young was “racking up felony criminal convictions.”

Fanone added that he believed Young should have received a sentence of 10 years in prison.

“I hope you suffer,” he told Young.

After Fanone’s statement, a supporter of the Jan. 6 defendants who was in the courtroom called Fanone a “piece of s—.” There was a brief stare down between them before Marshals escorted out the supporter and banned him from the courthouse for the rest of the day.

Young turned directly to Fanone before his sentencing and apologized, saying he hoped that Fanone would one day forgive him.

“If I could take it back, I would,” Young said, adding that he was not proud of what he did that day and that it eats at him every day.

“Whatever you give me as a punishment I accept, and I probably deserve it,” he told the judge.

Prosecutors laid out in a sentencing memo how Young’s actions impacted Fanone that day.

“When Young spotted Officer Fanone being pulled into the crowd, he purposefully moved toward the attack, and joined at a pivotal moment — restraining Officer Fanone’s wrist by pulling it away from his body seconds after the officer was repeatedly tased and amid shouts of ‘kill him with his own gun,'” federal prosecutors said.

“Young’s restraint of Officer Fanone prevented the officer from protecting his service weapon at a time when the officer’s life was in danger and gave Young’s co-defendant Thomas Sibick an opening to forcibly remove Officer Fanone’s badge from his chest and his police radio from a pocket on the front of his vest,” prosecutors added.

Fanone’s badge was later buried in the woods behind Sibick’s backyard, the government has previously said.

Image: Michael Fanone
Former Metropolitan police officer Michael Fanone during a House select committee hearing on July 12.Amanda Andrade-Rhoades / Sipa USA via AP file

Young had written in a letter to Judge Amy Berman Jackson that he was sorry for his actions on Jan. 6.

“I still can’t believe I let myself and my son get swept up into such terrible events,” Young wrote in a letter to the judge, adding he was “highly ashamed” and that he’ll “never do anything like that again.”

More than 850 people have been charged in connection with the Jan. 6 attack and more than 350 have pleaded guilty. The longest sentence of 10 years in federal prison went to an ex-NYPD officer who assaulted a D.C. cop with a flagpole and tackled him to the ground, and then lied on the stand about his conduct. There are hundreds more arrests still to come.

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