After the judge noticed the appearance of "she is wearing a tutu", the capitol mob was saved from jail. Daily Mail Online

2021-11-25 11:36:29 By : Ms. Cherry Gu

Author: Alex Hammer for Dailymail.Com

Published: November 24, 2021 11:26 EST | Updated: November 24, 2021 12:13 EST

On Tuesday, a federal judge pardoned a female congressional mob from imprisonment and pointed out that the woman appeared "in a tutu" on January 6, rather than wearing a military uniform like many others.      

Judge Carl Nichols read out the 41-year-old Rasha Abual-Ragheb (Rasha Abual-Ragheb) in the Federal Court in Washington DC on Tuesday. 

The 51-year-old Judge Nichols was not sentenced to jail as the prosecutor requested. Instead, he issued a two-month house arrest order to the single mother of two children-General Abul Rajb Serving sentence at her home in Fairfield, New Jersey.

Rasha Abual-Ragheb, 41, wore a ballet skirt on the left during the January riots at the Capitol and posed triumphantly on the right among other rioters, avoiding jail at a federal hearing about her role in the Tuesday attack . She will change to house arrest

In addition to home detention, according to Nichols’ sentence, Abual-Ragheb will also serve three years in prison and pay a fine of $500

In addition to family detention, according to Nichols' sentence, Abual-Ragheb will also serve three years in prison and pay a fine of $500.

The ruling was made after Rasha Abual-Ragheb sobbed and begged during a virtual hearing for nearly 90 minutes, begging the judge not to manage prison time.

At the same time, prosecutors argued that during the January riots, the lady was wearing the aforementioned tutu, dressed in a red, white and blue Uncle Sam-style costume, and wearing a red MAGA-style "Keep America Great" hat. She should serve. She was sentenced to at least one month in jail for her role in the attack-the woman recorded this through social media posts.

The New Jersey mother cried bitterly and insisted that her imprisonment was a pain for her two young children. She said she had to withdraw from class due to bullying after her arrest earlier this year. And home school. 

"I never intended to cause any harm," Abual-Ragheb demonstrated in a brief but emotional speech to Judge Nichols, before she was sentenced, and after admitting to marching, demonstrating, or picking at the Capitol in August. She expressed regret for her behavior-a misdemeanor. 

Federal prosecutors argued that the 30-day imprisonment for Abual-Ragheb was justified, on the grounds that her social media posts mentioned the civil war, which showed that she brought guns to the national capital and showed anarchy towards the presidency Doctrine-She said the authorities will "have to kill her" to prevent her from protesting against President Joe Biden's inauguration. 

"Civil war is coming," Abel-Laqb wrote days after the controversial riots in the Capitol on January 6, one of many Facebook posts highlighted by prosecutors at the hearing on Tuesday.

After heading to Biden from her hometown of New Jersey, the single mom wrote in another post, "I won't stop." They must kill me. 

Federal prosecutor Michael Liebman tried to use Abule-Rajb’s post fully demonstrating her political views to argue that the woman deliberately participated in a shameless act of terrorism and should be sentenced to prison. 

However, Nicole’s subsequent ruling runs counter to this sentiment. After Abual-Ragheb’s defense attorney Elita Amato proved that her client was not malicious and was making peaceful protests, she let the woman get out of the car and used her to get up as evidence. 

Rasha Abual-Ragheb documented her role in the attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6, 2021 in a series of Facebook posts-many posts were later deleted

During the riots, Abual-Ragheb showed off her red, white and blue clothing and red MAGA-style "Keep America Great" hat on social media. In a post like this, the single mother wrote,'I won't stop. They must kill me," referring to her role in the riot

Prosecutors stated that the riots caused nearly 1.5 million U.S. dollars in damage to the U.S. Capitol.

Abual-Ragheb's indictment. The prosecutor argued that the New Jersey woman should serve at least one month in prison for her role in the attack.

"Obviously, she never intended to participate in the civil war in the capital because she did not wear a tactical vest, gas mask, bulletproof helmet, body armor, radio equipment, military backpack, shield, pitchfork or any other type of combat weapon," Amato wrote in a court document earlier this month.

Amato added at the hearing on Tuesday: "Her actions were not for destruction, nor for violence... but people who came to rallies and protests."

"In terms of what she wrote before or after, she admits that many of them are stupid."

During the January protests, Abual-Ragheb smoked and chatted with other mobs. She was sentenced to two months under house arrest for participating in the January 6th attack

The single mother’s lawyer admitted on Tuesday that her client admitted that her politically-driven social media posts during the attack were “stupid”

Nichols admitted at the hearing on Tuesday that he was troubled by Abual-Ragheb’s social media posts — but added that he thought she was “relatively gentle compared to the others who rushed into the Capitol” because of what he had done to her. A light sentence.

Nichols added that “inferring the worst intentions” behind social media posts is inappropriate, and sympathizes with Lebanon-born Abual-Ragheb's assertion that she has a weak grasp of English.

He concluded: "I think it is unreasonable to conclude that she plans to be an active participant in the civil war."

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