A privileged Ivy League brat gets his less- than- satisfying comeuppance:
A then-Princeton University student who yelled "drag them out" while he joined rioters trying to storm the U.S. Capitol was sentenced to two months in federal prison Wednesday, according to court records.
Larry Giberson pleaded guilty to a felony over the summer, admitting that he obstructed, impeded or interfered with law enforcement officers in the lawful performance of their official duties. Giberson was a sophomore during the Jan. 6 attack, when he "participated in coordinated pushing and pulling against the police," according to a government sentencing memo, which said that at one point he even chanted “drag them out!” as rioters assaulted officers.
The government sought 11 months of incarceration for Giberson, who prosecutors say drove to Washington with his mother. Giberson, a political science major who specialized in "American ideas and institutions,” told FBI special agents he wanted to be at the Capitol to "support the parties that were making decisions regarding the certification of the electoral college, and that he was there to encourage what he believed to be the 'correct' certification."
Giberson told the FBI that he "saw the fear" in former Officer Michael Fanone's eyes as he was dragged away by the mob. "That man believed he was going to die," Giberson said.
The government said that while Giberson "is a young man," he "is evidently capable of appreciating the implications of the January 6 attack on the Capitol and of his participation in that attack, having recently graduated college and earned a bachelor’s degree in Political Science."
His defense attorney said Giberson "studied the issues surrounding the 2020 [election] and concluded that state actors had interfered with the electoral process in unconstitutional ways."
Giberson's mother said that for her son, the 2020 election was like watching his favorite baseball team on a World Series run.
"You get caught up in the hype and excitement and you want to be at that winning game. I feel Larry wanted to be a part of something that he was passionate about, I know he had no intent to be caught up with the wrong crowd," she wrote.
The Associated Press reported that Giberson said in court Wednesday that he was ashamed of his "careless and thoughtless actions" at the Capitol, and U.S. District Judge Carl Nichols said he believed Giberson was genuinely remorseful...
No doubt young Giberson was remorseful that he participated in the insurrection (or more precisely, that he got caught in a felony), because it tanked his getting that valuable Princeton political science degree. We're willing to bet, though, that he ends up some day in a far- right think tank or PAC, or in a Christofascist MAGAt Republican Congressional office, where he can provide his expertise in "American ideas and institutions," based on his actions on January 6.
Trump- appointed Judge Nichols, by the way, is noted for his more lenient sentencing of January 6 insurrectionists, and for having his ruling on not allowing DOJ to bring obstruction charges against hundreds of insurrectionists overturned by the appellate court. Giberson got lucky.
There are more of these enemies of democracy out there, so please check out the FBI January 6 website and call 1-800-CALL-FBI (800-225-5324) or visit tips.fbi.gov, if you see anyone you recognize.
(Photo: Giberson, on the left / U.S. District Court)