On his first day in office, President Donald Trump made good on his promise to pardon all of the roughly 1,500 Jan. 6 insurrectionists. But while many MAGA supporters like Jacob Chansley, the self proclaimed βQAnon Shamanβ and the face of the deadly Capitol riot, celebrated their pardons, one MAGA celebrity is singing a different tune.
Pamela Hemphill is a 71-year-old Boise, Idaho resident. She was known as βthe MAGA grannyβ to Trumpβs supporters, but in May 2022, she was sentenced to two months in jail on a misdemeanor charge in the Capitol attack, according to the Department of Justice.
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Hemphill pleaded guilty to the charge after she was caught live streaming the insurrection and posting videos on YouTube from inside the Capitol during the attack. More than two years later, Hemphill said she got exactly what was coming to her. βWe were wrong that day, we broke the law,β she told BBC. βThere should be no pardons.β
Itβs been confirmed that five U.S. citizens were killed during the Jan. 6 riot. This includes Capitol police officer Brian Sicknick, who died on Jan. 7 as a result of injuries sustained during the attack, according to U. S. Capitol Police.
Rachel Scott, a senior congressional correspondent for ABC News, said she spoke to Sicknickβs brother. βWe now have no rule of law,β he reportedly told Scott. The brother even went as far as to call Trump βa poor excuse of a man.β
Hemphill said accepting the presidentβs pardon βwould only insult the Capitol police officers, rule of law and, of course, our nation.β She continued to the Idaho Statesman saying, βThe J6 criminals are trying to rewrite history by saying that it was not a riot; it wasnβt an insurrection. I donβt want to be a part of their trying to rewrite what happened that day.β
So with that, sheβs turning down the pardon offer, going against the president and his MAGA movementβs wishes, and sheβs well within her rights to do so. The MAGA granny wouldnβt be the first person to reject a presidential pardon. In 1833, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that a pardon recipient can indeed turn down the offer. The ruling was later upheld in 1915, according to the Library of Congress.Β
Hemphill says her attorney plans to file an official letter of rejection of the presidentβs pardon.
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