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  • Writer's pictureThe San Juan Daily Star

Blaming Trump, Jan. 6 suspect says he fell down a ‘rabbit hole’ of lies


Supporters of President Donald Trump charge the Capitol in Washington, on Jan. 6, 2021.

By Alan Feuer


Dustin Thompson’s trip down what he called “the rabbit hole” of election misinformation began eight months before a single vote was cast in 2020. It ended inside the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, where he was part of the mob of Trump supporters that stormed inside during Congress’ counting of electoral votes in the worst attack on the building since the War of 1812.


An exterminator from Columbus, Ohio, Thompson, 38, was laid off in March 2020, at the start of the pandemic. Alone at home with his new wife, he began spending long days on the internet, steeping himself in conspiracy theories about the upcoming vote.


As the election approached, he said, he fully believed that if Donald Trump ended up losing, it would only be because the voting had been rigged, as the president had been warning publicly for months. Even after Joe Biden was declared the winner, Thompson could not accept that it was true.


All of this, he told a jury at his criminal trial Wednesday, led him to Washington on Jan. 6 for a Stop the Steal rally, where he and a friend listened to Trump give an incendiary speech near the White House.


In an hour on the witness stand, Thompson blamed Trump for what eventually occurred, saying that he had been answering the president’s call to go to the Capitol and “fight like hell” when he joined the throng swarming into the building and made off with a bottle of bourbon and a coat rack.


“If the president’s giving you almost an order to do something,” he said, “I felt obligated to do that.”


Thompson’s story is not unusual. At several points during the Justice Department’s vast investigation of the Capitol attack, many people charged with crimes have sought to blame Trump in various ways for their actions, mostly at pretrial bail hearings or at sentencings after pleading guilty.


But Thompson is the first defendant to attempt the argument at trial in front of a jury. In making his case, he offered a window into the toxic and relentless flood of conspiracy theories and lies, stoked by Trump, that helped give rise to the riot.


The move comes with considerable risk, and its success or failure could determine not only Thompson’s fate but also that of other defendants accused of taking part in the violence of Jan. 6.


Before the trial began, Thompson admitted to prosecutors that he had gone into the Capitol and stolen government property, agreeing in advance to nearly every element of the six charges he faces. His defense will rest almost entirely on the question of his state of mind during the riot.


Thompson has claimed that he did not knowingly or corruptly break the law, but rather, as his lawyer said Tuesday, was “so influenced — so used and abused” by Trump that he could not be held accountable for his behavior.


The Trump-made-me-do-it defense has not fared well with judges. While it could work better on a jury, Thompson seemed to stumble Wednesday during cross-examination, undercutting key elements of his argument.


William Dreher, a prosecutor, got him to admit several times that Trump had not been at his side, offering him step-by-step instructions, when he walked into the Senate parliamentarian’s office and walked out with the whiskey and the coat rack. Thompson acknowledged that he was a married adult with a college degree who could make his own decisions.


Well before the trial began, Thompson’s lawyer, Samuel H. Shamansky, made a bold request of the judge in the case, Reggie B. Walton, asking for permission to subpoena Trump as a witness. Walton ultimately rejected the move, saying that hauling the former president into the courtroom would only have been a distraction.


Instead, at his trial this week, Shamansky has painted Thompson as an impressionable man who filled his days of pandemic-driven isolation with a steady diet of election fraud conspiracy theories. Thompson agreed that a “perfect storm” of circumstances, as Shamansky put it, had caused him to fall prey to Trump’s lies about the race and ultimately led him to the Capitol.


“It was just an awful year — being unemployed, newly married, quarantine, COVID,” he told the jury. “I don’t know where my head was.”


Before Thompson offered his account, his wife, Sarah Thompson, took the stand.


Sarah Thompson, who works in the corporate offices of Victoria’s Secret, told the jury that she was a Democrat who had voted for Biden and never believed the “conspiracy theory-type” material she increasingly saw her husband looking at on YouTube, Twitter and various other websites.


Still, she said it had been “a rough year” for the couple, who were married in January 2020 after 12 years of dating. She told the jury that Dustin Thompson’s anger about the election appeared to have grown worse because he was stuck at home without a job.


“Dustin spent a lot of time on the internet,” she said.


When he went off to Washington on Jan. 5, she said, driving with a friend, Sarah Thompson did not think that her husband would get into trouble. She was happy, as she put it, to be at home with the “house quiet.”


But on the evening of the riot, Dustin Thompson texted her a video of himself, milling about with others in the looted parliamentarian’s office. The room was littered with paperwork and overturned furniture.


Her response to him was simple and direct.


“I will not post bail,” she texted back.

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