January 6 Defendant William Pope Wins Hard-Fought Trial Delay as Presidential Pardons Loom
After a pitched battle between federal prosecutors and Jan. 6 defendant William Pope, U.S. District Judge Rudolph Contreras has agreed to delay Pope’s trial, saying it could be a waste of resources given the possible issuance of pardons by President-elect Donald J. Trump.
Pope, 38, of Topeka, Kansas, was scheduled to begin trial in Washington, D.C., Dec. 2 on five criminal charges, including a felony civil disorder count and four misdemeanors.
“I’m relieved that my four-year battle with the government is almost over,” Pope told Blaze News. “I’m going to win.”
Contreras adopted Pope’s reasoning from a Nov. 13 filing that said a long trial would be a waste of court resources given the post-election realities in Washington, D.C.
“Unfortunately, the prosecutor’s facial expressions won’t make it into the court transcript,” Pope wrote on X after the court’s ruling.
Judge Contreras has granted my motion to continue my trial because he agreed a long trial was not a good use of judicial resources considering the likelihood of January 6 charges being dropped. No new date has been set yet, but we'll have a status hearing in 30 days.…
— 🇺🇸 (@FreeStateWill) November 14, 2024
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