New legislation in House would ban taxpayer money from going to Jan. 6 rioters
CBSN
Amid a wave of lawsuits filed by pardoned Jan. 6 riot defendants against the federal government, some House Democrats are introducing legislation Wednesday to block any further taxpayer money from being awarded to participants in the Capitol siege, after at least one financial settlement.
Amid a wave of lawsuits filed by pardoned Jan. 6 riot defendants against the federal government, some House Democrats are introducing legislation Wednesday to block any further taxpayer money from being awarded to participants in the Capitol siege, after at least one financial settlement.
The legislation is sponsored by Rep. Deborah Ross, a North Carolina Democrat who raised concerns at a hearing in January about the attempts by pardoned rioters to secure awards or restitution from their cases.
"The pardons have re-traumatized the victims," Ross said at a hearing last month. Ross also noted that President Trump's blanket clemency of riot defendants also absolved the attackers from having to pay restitution for the millions of dollars in damages they caused during the Insurrection.
Ross' new bill in the House would prohibit the distribution of taxpayer money for any "January 6th compensation fund" and ban any further refund of damage payments made by convicted Capitol rioters.
"We now have the Proud Boys trying to take people's tax dollars and act like they were the victims on Jan. 6, which we know is patently false," Ross told CBS News.

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