Jan. 6 rioter who brought guns onto US Capitol grounds sentenced to 5 years in jail
By Holmes Lybrand
A January 6 rioter who carried two loaded handguns onto US Capitol grounds during the insurrection was sentenced to 60 months in jail on Friday after pleading guilty to assaulting an officer that day and unlawfully carrying a firearm.
Mark Mazza, 56, entered the Capitol grounds armed with two handguns, one of which — a revolver called the “Judge” loaded with shotgun shells and hollow point bullets — he lost on the lower west terrace just outside the building.
After losing the gun, Mazza joined the mob in a tunnel leading inside the Capitol, a scene where police were brutally attacked for hours by rioters armed with bats, poles, chemical spray, and the officer’s own weapons.
During the attack, Mazza — still armed with his second pistol, according to prosecutors — took a baton from one officer and used it against him.
“This is our f***ing house!” Mazza yelled after attacking the officer, according to his plea agreement. “We own this house! We want our house! Get out of the citizens of the United States’ way!”
Dressed in a forest green prison jumpsuit, Mazza told Judge James Boasberg on Friday that he “got caught up in the mob mentality that I never anticipated.”
“I’m not quite the monster” the government “painted me as,” Mazza added, saying that he had never intended to fight police that day and left the tunnel as soon as he realized what he was doing was wrong. Mazza also claimed that he assisted other officers outside of the tunnel.
“The tale you have to tell is a familiar one,” Boasberg told Mazza, adding that “it was the decisions people like you made (to) assault the Capitol in what was a true insurrection.”
Boasberg added he was “alarmed” Mazza had brought two firearms with him and that, while Mazza claimed he was only armed because he heard Washington, DC, was the “murder capital,” the mall and Capitol building are not dangerous areas.
Before being sentenced, Mazza again asked for mercy, telling the judge he was still “hoping I’m going to see my parents again.”
Mazza will also have to pay a fine of $2,000 in restitution for damage done to the Capitol.
The-CNN-Wire
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CNN’s Casey Gannon contributed to this report.