Nope. You amplified some of what I referred to and you would have preferred me to have used more antiseptic terminology for some of what happened. I "get" all of that--you want to exonerate the government however possible. But the "This is false" reply is what's false.
O'rly?
I don't care how septic your language is, but if you make gross misrepresentations I also feel free to respond with force.
I'm not here to "exonerate the government" as that is not my purpose. I'm only interested in the facts in this posting. Perhaps you are unaware of the facts. I am aware of them.
In particular you made certain incendiary claims that people charged with trespass were being held in dungeons without lawyers. This is clearly false. No one has been denied a lawyer. A few have refused, but that is their problem.
There are about 650 people that have been publicly charged and arrested. About 250 of those are for violent felonies or conspiracy. Of that 250 about 40 are being held in the DC jail prior to trial (or in a few cases prior to sentencing). That's right the majority of the people with *felony* charges including violence are not in jail pre-trial.
Of the remaining ~400 defendants there are some with other felonies (theft, destruction of property) including obstruction of congressional proceedings (the EV count, remember that thing?), especially the obstruction for entry into the Senate chamber and similar places. A few of these other felony cases are also detained, including 2 of the 3 "trespass" cases I mentioned before.
About half of the full case load from the Capitol attack are the misdemeanor-only "trespass" cases (illegal entry into the capitol, demonstrating in the capitol, failure to leave restricted grounds) and I know of only *1* case in this category with pre-trial detention (the first one I listed) and that defendant had a violent past including attempted murder. Since the FBI couldn't find any evidence of crimes beyond the originally charged trespass crimes the DOJ offered a plea to the lowest charge (parading) and the judge sentenced him to the 6 months (max on charge) he'd already served and he was out of jail and completed his sentence within a couple days of his guilty plea.
As for "dungeons"...
NEWSFLASH: US jails and prisons are pretty rough. Prisoner treatment is quite poor.
NEWSFLASH: The DC Jail is one of those rough places.
NEWSFLASH: The complaints of the Jan 6 defendants got the US Marshals to investigate and they moved all of the prisoners out of the truly awful wing.
IRONY: The Jan6 defendants weren't in the worst part, so they haven't been moved.
SUMMARY:
Only 1 in 12 Jan6 defendants are in jail pre-trial, almost all of them for violence against cops or conspiracy (and not even the majority of defendants in *those* categories are incarcerated) and virtually *none* of the "trespass" cases involve detention. Those who are detained aren't even in the worst federal jail in DC and all defendants have lawyers if they so choose.
I've been following these crimes since before it happened. I've read dozens of charging documents and follow many beat reporters on this case as well as analysts and investigators.