- Prosecutors asked a judge to deny Kenneth Harrelson's sixth request for pre-trial release on Friday.
- Harrelson has pleaded not guilty to five charges related to the
Capitol riot onJanuary 6 .
Prosecutors slammed a Capitol riot defendant's sixth request for pre-trial release in which he said he entered the Rotunda "peacefully" to take photos and that the crowd around him "looked like Disney World crowds."
According to
Harrelson is accused of entering the Capitol on January 6 and faces charges of conspiracy; obstruction of an official proceeding and aiding and abetting; destruction of government property and aiding and abetting; entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds; and tampering with documents or proceedings. Harrelson has pleaded not guilty to all charges.
The prosecution noted in its request for denial that Harrelson has attempted to obtain a release from jail six different times with four different lawyers representing him over the time span of the requests, court documents show.
"Defendant Harrelson has now retained another new attorney, but he puts forth no new facts or law in his present bond motion," prosecutors said.
The court has repeatedly denied Harrelson's requests for bond and release, saying that he failed to address any of the evidence that the prosecution presented against him and "merely makes assertions about the lack of evidence that he engaged in violent acts or directly destroyed property," according to court documents.
Harrelson claimed in his most recent request for release that the thousands of people who entered the Capitol building on January 6 did so peacefully and looked like "Disney World crowds," court documents show. He questioned why "the act of peacefully entering the Capitol ... Should see these Americans magically transformed into charged, despised, and dehumanized insurrectionists."
Prosecutors shut down Harrelson's "ludicrous claim" that crowds entered the Capitol peacefully, citing a video he took inside the building showing "his co-conspirators (and possibly Harrelson himself)" chanting "Treason!" as they forced their way inside, court documents show.
More than 700 people have been charged and at least 120 people have pleaded guilty to charges connected to the Capitol riot.