In the two years following the Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol, several hundred rioters have faced criminal charges of varying degrees of severity. Many have been convicted of felonies and begun their prison sentences.
But seditious conspiracy trials are qualitatively different kinds of cases — and when there are convictions in such cases, they matter. NBC News reported this morning:
Four members of the far-right Proud Boys organization were found guilty Thursday of seditious conspiracy in connection with the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol. Enrique Tarrio, Joseph Biggs, Ethan Nordean, Dominic Pezzola and Zachary Rehl each faced nine counts. All but Pezzola were found guilty on the rare charge of seditious conspiracy under a Civil War-era statute. Tarrio, Biggs, Nordean and Rehl were also found guilty of conspiracy to obstruct an official proceeding.
It’s worth emphasizing for context that the proceedings are not yet fully complete: Jurors are apparently still split on the seditious conspiracy charge against Pezzola — the judge in the case has asked them to keep deliberating — though the defendant has been found guilty of other crimes related to Jan. 6.
Part of what makes these developments striking is how unusual they are. Sedition charges are rarely brought — in part because they’re hard to prove, and in part because Americans rarely try to overthrow their own government. With this in mind, by most measures, the sedition trials in the wake of the Jan. 6 attack are the most notable since the aftermath of World War II.
It means today’s convictions are important, not just as a matter of accountability, but also in their historical weight.
As the political world takes stock of the jury’s findings, let’s also not forget that in the not-too-distant past, some on the right saw the lack of sedition charges as proof that the Jan. 6 violence was not an actual insurrection. Fox News’ Brit Hume, for example, argued via Twitter early last year, “Here’s a thought. Let’s base our view on whether 1/6 was an ‘insurrection’ on whether those arrested are charged with insurrection. So far, none has been.”
As a Washington Post analysis explained, Hume had plenty of company. A year ago, then-Fox host Tucker Carlson added, “Oh, it was an ‘insurrection.’ So how many of the participants in that insurrection had been charged with insurrecting? With sedition? With treason? Zero.” Fox’s Mark Levin also told the network’s audience, “Has anybody been charged with sedition? Nobody. Has anybody been charged with treason? Nobody. So why do they keep calling it an insurrection?”
And it wasn’t just Fox: Jon Chait found all kinds of voices on the right making the same pitch, seemingly confident that there’d be no seditious conspiracy convictions.








