Alleged Federal Asset Ray Epps Receives NO JAIL TIME Over Role in Violence on Jan. 6

Ray Epps, an alleged federal asset who was caught on video telling people to go into the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, has received no jail time and will only have to serve probation for his role in the rioting.

Epps pleaded guilty to disorderly or disruptive conduct in a restricted building or grounds and could have served up to a year in jail. Prosecutors called for him to receive six months behind bars as a result of his guilty plea. But ultimately, the presiding judge decided to not give Epps any jail time.

“This is not an easy sentencing,” Chief Judge James Boasberg of the U.S. district court in Washington stated. Boasberg was originally appointed to the U.S. District Court by Barack Hussein Obama in 2011.

Big League Politics reported on the fake news suspiciously going to bat for Epps and defending his character as suspicion began to mount against him after Epps was caught on video stoking the flames in the lead-up to violence on Jan. 6:

The fake news is running cover for Jan. 6 provocateur Ray Epps even after Epps admitted saying he helped to “orchestrate” the riot that happened at the Capitol that day…

While any other Jan. 6 protester would be crucified by the media for this admission, Ray Epps – for some peculiar reason – is getting a free pass and being cast as a victim of conspiracy theories in news stories.

NBC News painted Epps in a sympathetic light in their recent coverage of his Jan. 6 commission interview.

“We had a tour bus come by our home and our business with all these whacked out people in it,” Epps said. “There are good people out there that was in Washington. Those aren’t the people that’s coming by our house. This attracts — when they do this sort of thing, this attracts all the crazies out there.”

“I saw people crawling all over the Capitol, climbing the walls. It made me kind of ill to my stomach. … There was no point in going back. It had gone beyond to what I wanted it to be,” he claimed.

By signing up, you agree to our Privacy Policy and Terms of Use. You may opt out at any time.

Our Latest Articles