Trump pardoned them for Jan. 6. Now they want millions of dollars

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By Zoe Tillman, Bloomberg News

WASHINGTON — Almost 400 people pardoned or granted clemency by President Donald Trump in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol are now seeking millions of dollars in payouts from the federal government, according to their lawyer.

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Attorney Mark McCloskey on Wednesday delivered hundreds of claims in person, wheeling a cart with five bankers’ boxes into a Justice Department office building in Washington. The St. Louis-based lawyer declined to share copies, citing his clients’ privacy, but said most are seeking $1 million to $10 million for alleged injuries and property damage during their arrest, prosecution and, in many cases, imprisonment.

It’s the latest instance of Trump supporters and allies pressing claims for taxpayer funds since he reclaimed the White House a year ago. The Justice Department confirmed in court papers that it’s in settlement talks with Michael Flynn, an ex-Trump administration official and conservative activist, and Stefan Passantino, who served as a White House lawyer during Trump’s first term.

Trump previously told reporters that the Justice Department “probably” owes him “a lot of money” but said he’d give it “to charity” or use it to pay for White House renovations. The New York Times reported that he had filed administrative claims seeking $230 million for the now-defunct investigations into his 2016 campaign and his handling of classified material after he left the White House in 2021.

After Trump won the 2024 presidential race, he signed a proclamation on his first day in office granting pardons, sentence commutations and other clemency to the more than 1,500 people charged with playing a role in the riot that unfolded as Congress met to certify Joe Biden’s 2020 victory over Trump.

Trump’s order described the prosecution effort — the largest in the Justice Department’s history — as “a grave national injustice.”

Earlier this year, U.S. officials agreed to pay nearly $5 million this year to settle a claim brought by the family of Ashli Babbitt, who was shot and killed by a police officer inside the Capitol on Jan. 6.

A Justice Department spokesperson declined to comment. A White House spokesperson did not respond to a request for comment on Wednesday.

The president’s Jan. 6 clemency action covered an array of crimes prosecuted by Biden’s Justice Department, from misdemeanor trespassing to felony charges for assaulting police — approximately 140 officers were injured, according to government reports — carrying guns and other weapons to the Capitol, and seditious conspiracy. Trump pardoned nearly everyone who had pleaded guilty or been convicted at trial and ordered pending cases dropped.

McCloskey said in an interview his clients deserved to be paid because they had “lost everything,” from jobs and professional licenses to their ability to travel freely and maintain bank accounts. McCloskey gained notoriety — and support from Trump — after he and his wife faced state charges for pointing guns at racial justice protesters passing their home in St. Louis in 2020. They later received gubernatorial pardons. He expressed optimism that Trump would aid the Jan. 6 defendants, noting the president’s record of public support before and after his November electoral win.

Mary McCord, a former senior Justice Department official, said that Trump’s clemency actions didn’t undermine the original legal foundations for Jan. 6-related charges, and that the bar generally is high to press claims against prosecutors and law enforcement officers.

“Because somebody was pardoned, that absolutely does not mean there wasn’t a basis for the prosecution,” said McCord, executive director of the Institute for Constitutional Advocacy and Protection at Georgetown University Law Center.

The U.S. government and federal employees are largely immune from being sued for official actions, but there are exceptions for allegations of personal injuries or property damage. Under the Federal Tort Claims Act, individuals can sue in federal court if an agency denies their claim — known as a Standard Form 95 or SF 95 — or fails to act within six months.

Paul Figley, a former senior official in the Justice Department office that handles tort claims, said that presidential clemency shouldn’t affect how the government decides if a person has a valid case for government compensation.

“If they were convicted and had a good claim, they could still bring the claim,” said Figley, an emeritus professor at American University’s Washington College of Law and a visiting professor at Villanova University’s Charles Widger School of Law.

McCloskey said the Justice Department rebuffed several Jan. 6-related claims he submitted earlier in the year for what he described as procedural defects, but that more recently he hadn’t received rejections. He said the collection of claims he brought to Washington on Wednesday — directed to the Justice Department, FBI, Bureau of Prisons, U.S. Marshals Service and U.S. Capitol Police — was the largest group he’d filed to date.

“I’m hoping this mass filing today will bring it to the attention of the powers that be,” McCloskey said.

©2025 Bloomberg L.P. Visit bloomberg.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Vikings star Justin Jefferson still cares about reaching 1,000 yards

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The most recent example of Justin Jefferson handling himself with class amid a frustrating campaign came on Thursday afternoon at TCO Performance Center.

Asked about some of his goals for the rest of this season, the Vikings’ receiver didn’t bring up any individual accolades, choosing instead to highlight the importance of Minnesota stacking wins on top of each other.

Technically, the Vikings still have a chance to make the playoffs, even if the odds of it happening are incredibly slim.

“It’s all about us sticking together as a team,” Jefferson said. “Not really listening to the outside noise.”

Though he generally has avoided questions about his own statistics amid the offensive struggles that have plagued Vikings this season, he finally took the bait when the topic of him reaching 1,000 yards was brought up.

Asked if he still cared about that milestone, the 26-year-old face of the franchise made himself very clear.

“Yeah for sure,” Jefferson said. “That’s always a goal.”

It’s something he has done in every season since the Vikings selected him in the first round of the 2020 draft. His current streak of five consecutive seasons reaching 1,000 yards to start his career is part of an unprecedented trajectory that already has him being compared to some of the best receivers to ever do it.

It’s never been a matter of if he was going to reach quadruple digits. It’s always been a matter of when he was going to reach quadruple digits. The only time he even flirted with missing the mark came when a strained hamstring limited him to 10 games in 2023.

That’s why the next month could get interesting with Jefferson currently on pace for the lowest output of his career. He has recorded 64 receptions for 810 yards  with games against the Dallas Cowboys, New York Giants, Detroit Lions and Green Bay Packers remaining.

It’s reasonable to wonder if Jefferson gets there with how much his production has dipped with J.J. McCarthy throwing him the ball.

Never mind that Jefferson has been productive with almost everybody that has lined up under center since he arrived. There’s been a significant drop off when McCarthy is starting, as Jefferson is only averaging 47 yards per game.

“I’ve had to learn how to be patient,” Jefferson said. “It’s tough. You want to be a big part of the offense. Sometimes I’ve got to sacrifice that to be a leader and to be a person that has that energy even though it might not be going the best.”

As he thought about what it was going to take to reach 1,000 yards, Jefferson acknowledged that it could come down to a few plays here and there.

“It doesn’t matter if it’s a screen, a hitch or a go,” Jefferson said. “As soon as that ball is up in the air, I’ve got to make the most of my opportunities, because I don’t really get too many of them.”

If Jefferson is able to reach quadruple digits again, he would tie a franchise record set by Randy Moss for the most consecutive seasons reaching 1,000 yards to start his career.

“To be able to still overcome all of that and get 1,000 yards is something that a lot of people wouldn’t be able to do,” Jefferson said. “We’re pretty close. There’s definitely more work to be done. Hopefully this is a breakout game for me.”

It would go a long way in him keeping his current streak alive.

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Oklahoma Black Lives Matter leader indicted for fraud, money laundering

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By SEAN MURPHY

OKLAHOMA CITY (AP) — A federal grand jury indicted the leader of the Black Lives Matter movement in Oklahoma City over allegations that millions of dollars in grant funds were improperly spent on international trips, groceries and personal real estate, prosecutors announced Thursday.

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Tashella Sheri Amore Dickerson, 52, was indicted earlier this month on 20 counts of wire fraud and five counts of money laundering, court records show.

Court records do not indicate the name of Dickerson’s attorney, and messages left Thursday at her mobile number and by email were not immediately returned.

According to the indictment, Dickerson served since at least 2016 as the executive director of Black Lives Matter OKC, which accepted charitable donations through its affiliation with the Arizona-based Alliance for Global Justice.

In total, BLM OKC raised more than $5.6 million dating back to 2020, largely from online donors and national bail funds that were supposed to be used to post bail for individuals arrested in connection with racial justice protests after the killing of George Floyd by a Minnesota police officer in 2020, the indictment alleges.

When those bail funds were returned to BLM OKC, the indictment alleges, Dickerson embezzled at least $3.15 million into her personal accounts and then used the money to pay for trips to Jamaica and the Dominican Republic, retail shopping, at least $50,000 in food and grocery deliveries for herself and her children, a personal vehicle, and six properties in Oklahoma City deeded to her or to a company she controlled.

The indictment also alleges she submitted false annual reports to the alliance stating that the funds were used only for tax-exempt purposes.

If convicted, Dickerson faces up to 20 years in federal prison and a fine of up to $250,000 for each count of wire fraud and 10 years in prison and fines for each count of money laundering.

In a live video posted on her Facebook page Thursday afternoon, Dickerson said she was not in custody and was “fine.”

“I cannot make an official comment about what transpired today,” she said. “I am home. I am safe. I have confidence in our team.”

“A lot of times when people come at you with these types of things … it’s evidence that you are doing the work,” she continued. “That is what I’m standing on.”

The Black Lives Matter movement first emerged in 2013 after the acquittal of George Zimmerman, the neighborhood watch volunteer who killed 17-year-old Trayvon Martin in Florida. But it was the 2014 death of Michael Brown at the hands of police in Ferguson, Missouri, that made the slogan “Black lives matter” a rallying cry for progressives and a favorite target of derision for conservatives.

The Associated Press reported in October that the Justice Department was investigating whether leaders in the Black Lives Matter movement defrauded donors who contributed tens of millions of dollars during racial justice protests in 2020. There was no immediate indication that Dickerson’s indictment is connected to that probe.

Ex-Oakdale officer found guilty of misconduct, not guilty of harassment for calls to surveillance subject

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A jury has found an ex-Oakdale police officer guilty of misconduct stemming from repeated calls he made to a man who had known mental health issues and was being surveilled because of a felony arrest warrant.

Charles Anthony Nelson, 44, of Minneapolis, was convicted Wednesday in Washington County District Court of misconduct of a public officer by making false documents, a gross misdemeanor, for omitting the calls in his report of the 2022 incident.

Nelson was acquitted of misdemeanor harassing phone calls.

Nelson’s defense attorneys argued that he called the man, who had a history of mental health issues and was armed, to get him out of his house.

Prosecutors contended Nelson acted with intent to harass the man through the more than 30 calls — noting how the officer didn’t say anything when the man answered — and that they caused him to exit the home with a shotgun, potentially putting himself and others at risk.

“(Nelson) never had intent to harass anybody in this case, and the jury clearly agreed,” his attorney Pete Johnson said Thursday. “He was trying to help out this person in a mental health crisis, based on his own experience with mental health. And he had prior experience with this particular person.”

Nelson was put on paid leave after the Sept. 22, 2022, incident and resigned the following March, according to the city. He’d been an Oakdale officer since Dec. 20, 2006.

Jurors reached the verdict after less than two hours of deliberations following a two-day trial before Judge Gregory Galler. Sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 13.

Disguised phone number

According to the criminal complaint, Nelson and his partner Andrew Dickman were dispatched to Greystone Avenue to look for the man, who had a felony arrest warrant for allegedly making threats.

The officers were told by command staff “not to engage with the individual, specifically due to his reported mental health issues and potential diagnosis of schizophrenia,” the complaint stated. “His recent actions were escalating, and it was known that he possessed firearms and had recently made threats of violence.”

Shortly after arriving at the home just after midnight, Nelson downloaded a phone app that disguises the phone number of incoming calls. He began making calls over the next three hours.

The man answered several of the calls, but Nelson did not say anything. When the man called Nelson back at 1:25 a.m., the officer denied making the calls.

The man reported the calls to Washington County dispatch, and also called the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension and asked who was calling him.

At one point, he came out with a shotgun, before retreating back into the house. Washington County SWAT was called and eventually arrested him.

Nelson worked the remainder of the weekend and, “despite knowing that his phone calls and actions exacerbated the situation” with the man, he did not disclose that he made them, the complaint said.

He omitted the calls in his incident report related to the man’s arrest, “despite the knowledge that the Oakdale Police Department was attempting to determine the veracity of the claims by Victim that he had been getting repeated calls,” the complaint continued.

Five days after the incident, Dickman reported to a sergeant that Nelson was the source of the calls.

BCA investigation

Oakdale Police Chief Nick Newton contacted the BCA, who began an investigation.

The surveillance subject’s wife told a BCA agent that he called her that night and told her about the calls, which she said made him “paranoid,” the complaint said.

In an interview with BCA agents, Nelson admitted to making the calls and “claimed it was to ‘build rapport’ and incredulously stated he did not identify himself because he did not want to scare [the man],” the complaint stated.

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Johnson, Nelson’s attorney, when asked Thursday why the officer did not divulge that he made the calls, said that he believed it was known to others within the police department.

“And he thought, like the normal procedure is, if somebody wanted that to be in there, and thought that was important to this, somebody would talk to him and say, ‘Why don’t you add that to your report before we finalize this?’ That happens routinely,” Johnson said.

During Nelson’s trial, Johnson said, Dickman testified that “he believed everybody knew who made the calls. … So their understanding was that the supervisors knew and this was no secret, there was no scandal.”