
DENVER – An Erie man pleaded guilty this week to a federal count of parading, demonstrating, or picketing in a Capitol development after he entered the U.S. Capitol and stayed on limited grounds on Jan. 6, 2021.
Logan Grover agreed on Tuesday to plead guilty to the lone depend after he was originally charged in May with 4 federal crimes, together with disorderly habits and violent access to Capitol grounds.
Grover’s sentencing is scheduled for Dec. 2 in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. He faces up to six months in prison, up to 5 years of probation to practice, and a advantageous of up to $5,000, according to his plea settlement.
Additionally, as a part of the deal, he agreed to be interviewed by way of legislation enforcement in regards to the events on and surrounding the Jan. 6 revolt at the Capitol and to pay $500 in restitution to the Architect of the Capitol in order to lend a hand pay for the $2.7 million in harm led to through rioters that day.
Grover flew to Washington D.C on Jan. 4, 2021, to attend former President Donald Trump’s rally on Jan. 6. On Jan. 5, according to the statement of offense Grover agreed to sign as a part of his plea agreement, he posted a number of messages to Facebook about is expectancies for tomorrow.
“If you accept the truth that the election was once stolen, than [sic] you cannot accept Biden as the brand new president – & neither can I… which is why I flew to DC the day prior to this,” he wrote in one put up. “I fought for this country. Brothers & Sisters misplaced limbs & lifestyles for this country. I received’t sit down idle while the nation is stolen in some insane, sluggish movement, treasonous rebellion.”
In every other post that day, he wrote: “I haven't any interest in violence. Sadly, I acknowledge that violence is highly most probably. I’m now not certain what’s going to happen day after today. I am certain I need to be right here.”
The Denver Post reported Grover served in the Army Reserve for nearly 10 years, from 2001 to 2011, and deployed to Iraq in 2004.
Also on Jan. 5, Grover took a photo of himself in entrance of one of the signs on Capitol grounds that stated the world was once closed. He went to Trump’s rally the following day, then back to his lodge, prior to he went over to the area in entrance of the Capitol that have been breached through others around 2:45 p.m. on Jan. 6.
While outside the Capitol, he took photos of himself and others, and round 3:15 p.m., he entered the Capitol Rotunda east door, where police officers were attempting to stay people from coming within. He and others have been able to push past the officers, (*6*)
He was once in the Rotunda with others until about 3:21 p.m., when officers compelled them away, and left the Capitol building just after 3:30 p.m., despite the fact that he would remain in the limited Capitol grounds till shortly after Five p.m., in accordance to the file.
Grover is one among 15 Coloradans charged in connections with the Jan. 6 revolt, and several others both traveled there from Colorado or have been arrested in Colorado to face federal charges:
- Jacob Clark of Trinidad was arrested in April 2021 on more than one charges in connection to the Jan. 6 riot. He demanded law enforcement officials to stand down all through the attack.
- Glen Wes Lee Croy, of Colorado Springs, pleaded guilty to parading, demonstrating or picketing throughout the Capitol in August 2021. He was sentenced in November to 90 days of house arrest together with 14 days in a group correctional facility. He known as himself an idiot.
- Tyler Earl Ethridge of Colorado Springs was arrested in July 2022 in Denver and faces six federal charges for his participation in the rebel. He is a pastor who graduated from Charis Bible College in Woodland Park.
- Robert Gieswein of Woodland Park was arrested and faced more than one fees in January 2021 in connection to the Jan. 6 riot, including assault on an officer “with a sprig canister, temporary barrier, and baseball bat,” in accordance to his arrest affidavit. He remains in custody.
- Logan Grover of Erie was charged in April 2021 with disruptive habits in a limited development, violent access and disorderly habits on capitol grounds, and demonstrating in a capitol development. He has pleaded not guilty. He served in the Army Reserve for just about 10 years and was deployed to Iraq, according to The Denver Post.
- Thomas Patrick Hamner of Peyton was arrested and charged in November 2021. Videos allegedly showed him preventing with Capitol and Metropolitan Police.
- Lisa Ann Homer of Colorado Springs was arrested in November 2021 in Colorado Springs. She faces fees of illegally entering the capitol, disorderly and disruptive conduct on capitol grounds, and parading, demonstrating, or picketing in a capitol building.
- Jennifer Horvath of Colorado Springs was arrested and charged in May 2022 on multiple federal charges. She was situated after FBI agents related her to her boyfriend Glen Wes Lee Croy (indexed above), who used to be additionally arrested, charged and sentenced for his involvement.
- Klete Keller, an Olympian from Colorado Springs, pleaded guilty to obstructing an respectable continuing after storming the U.S. Capitol in September 2021. He faces 21 to 27 months in jail.
- Avery Carter MacCracken of San Miguel County was charged in December 2021 with assaulting officers in the Jan. 6 rebel. He was once arrested in Norwood on six federal fees. He used to be captured on movies and in footage combating with U.S. Capitol Police officials.
- Patrick Montgomery of Douglas County was charged in January 2021 with knowingly coming into a limited construction without lawful authority and violent access and disorderly conduct on Capitol grounds. According to a sworn statement for his arrest, federal investigators have been tipped off through somebody who noticed Montgomery in pictures from inside the Capitol posted to Facebook.
- Daniel Michael Morrissey was charged in federal court in November 2021 for illegally coming into the U.S. Capitol. He faces fees of knowingly getting into or ultimate in any limited development or grounds with out lawful authority, knowingly engaging in disorderly or disruptive habits in any limited buildings or grounds and violent entry and disorderly behavior on Capitol grounds.
- Hunter Palm of Colorado Springs was arrested in May 2021 after he allegedly entered U.S. Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s administrative center on Jan. 6. He was recognized to federal investigators by means of a family member.
- Jeffrey Sabol of Jefferson County is accused of dragging a police officer down steps to be beaten via an American flag out of doors the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6. A federal judge denied him bail in April 2021. After the assault, prosecutors said he attempted to fly to Switzerland.
- Timothy Williams of Trinidad was charged in June 2021 with multiple federal crimes. FBI brokers found Williams on videos of the rioters within the Capitol that day.
In addition, Rodney Milstreed of Maryland was arrested in Colorado in May 2022, and Lisa Ann Homer of Arizona was arrested in November 2021 in Colorado Springs.
Cleveland Grover Meredith Jr., who lives in North Carolina, mentioned he traveled from Colorado to Washington with an assault rifle for Jan. 6. He was charged in federal court in January 2021 with threatening House Speaker Nancy Pelosi and was sentenced to 28 months in prison in December 2021.
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