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Trump pardons Jan 6 defendants facing gun charges and FBI threats

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President Donald Trump has given new Parrons to 6 of the 6 people facing charges in other matters.

Suzanne Kaye, defendant Jan. 6, was sentenced to 18 months in prison for allegedly threatening to shoot communications agents.

The Department of the Biden Administration said that on Jan 31, 2021, the day before Kaye related to the FBI Chistract, he sent videos on social media, saying that he would “shoot” at FBI Agents if they came to his house. The FBI learned of Kaye’s press release on February 8, 2021, and arrested Kaye at his Florida home on February 17, 2021.

A White House official told FOX News Digital that Kaye was prone to depression and suffered while the jury read its verdict in 2023. The official said that this case is one of the first amendments.

Trump is pardoned almost all of Jan. 6 Defendants on opening day

President Donald Trump gave Jan. 6 Defendant’s Other Pardon to cover expenses related to firearms. (Al Dragonberg / Bloomberg via Getty Images; Eric Lee / Bloomberg via Getty Images)

US special counsel Ed Martin posted about the pardon on Saturday, thanking Trump in a post on X.

“Biden doj target Suzanne Kaye for months on social media – and sentenced to 18 months in Federal Lock up.

Jan. 6 Defendant Daniel Wilson was arrested after he pardoned Trump, who was pardoned by protesters because he confessed to gun charges. A White House official told FOX News Digital that the President made the decision to grant Wilson an extra pardon because guns were found during a search of Wilson’s Capitol-related home.

Although it is included in the findings of the trial given by Jan. 6 The defendants are Jan.

While the Trump Administration’s Justice Department said the gun charge should not count under Man.

Jan. 6, 2021 Capitol Riot

Situation from the US Capitol Rick on Jan. 6, 2021. (Jose Luis Magana, File/AP Photo)

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In his original pardon, Trump announced that he was pursuing his authority under Article II, section 2, which deals with the sentences of those “convicted of a crime related to the events that took place in the Capitol on January 6, 2021.” That pardon included Wilson’s six crimes on Jan. 6, but not the firearms-related ones.

U.S. District Judge Dabney Friedrich, a Trump attorney involved in Wilson’s case, rejected an expanded explanation of what Trump’s extension was, saying it stretched the order’s boundaries too far. In his opinion, Friedrich criticized the use of the word “related” to Trump’s original pardon to expand its meaning.

“The text surrounding the pardon makes it clear that it is ‘related’ to show ‘some relationship that exists between the conduct that is subject to the violation of the law and what happened in the US Capitol on January 6, 2021,'” Friedrich said in his opinion.

The Court of Appeal later upheld his objection, saying Wilson should remain behind bars during the appeals process.

The Capitol Riot

Protesters try to break through a police barricade, on Jan 6, 2021, at the US Capitol in Washington, DC (AP Photo / Julio Cortez, File)

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Wilson previously identified himself as a member of the Oath Keepers and the Gray Ghost Partisan Militia, according to Politico.

“Dan Wilson is a good man. After more than 7 months of unjust imprisonment, he is free to be at home with his loved ones,” Georson Pallas and Carol Stewart, told the politicians in a statement. “This act of mercy not only restores his freedom but also shines a light on what has divided this nation.”

FOX News Digital reached out to the Justice Department and Wilson

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