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Prosecutors 'to focus on worst Capitol rioters' before Trump takes office

An effort is said to have been launched to prosecute the worst cases of violence from the US Capitol riots before President-elect Trump takes the reins of power again in two months.

Trump supporters scale the wall of the Capitol Building in Washington DC on 6 January 2021. Pic: Reuters
Image: Trump supporters stormed the US Capitol on 6 January 2021. Pic: Reuters
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A plan is in place to arrest and convict the "most egregious" January 6 rioters still to face justice before Donald Trump retakes power, according to a law enforcement official.

Mr Trump is expected to halt a years-long investigation into the incident and previously said he would "absolutely" pardon some - if not all - of the rioters if he regained the White House.

The 2021 storming of the Capitol building happened when Trump supporters gathered in Washington DC to try to stop President Biden's election win being certified.

More than 1,100 people have already been convicted over the riots.

Five people died in the hours and days following the riots, including a Trump supporter who was shot by Capitol police and one officer, Brian Sicknick, who was attacked as he responded. His death was later attributed to the natural causes.

A further four police officers who responded to the riots took their own lives in the following months.

A bipartisan report - released in June 2022 - before two of the suicides - found that seven deaths that were connected to the attack.

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However, Democrats, including Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, have put the figure at "almost 10" - though this has been contested by opponents.

Mr Trump's speech on that day, in which he told them "if you don't fight like hell you're not going to have a country anymore", has been accused of inciting the violence.

His lawyers said he was speaking figuratively, but he has also been accused of not intervening as the disorder unfolded.

The January 6 incident forms part of one of his outstanding criminal cases.

Following Mr Trump's election win, prosecutors in the Capitol siege section of the Justice Department have received guidance to expedite cases for the "most egregious" offenders, an official .

Their instructions include opposing any request by a defendant for a delay.

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For new arrests, they have been told to hone in on "the most egregious conduct and cases until the end of the administration" in January.

Felony assault cases are likely to be prioritised over people who entered the Capitol but did not attack law enforcement, according to the official, who spoke to NBC anonymously.

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Members of the public - so-called "sedition hunters" - have trawled the internet since the riots to help identify offenders.

One told NBC News: "We didn't spend the last four years tracking these criminals down just to have dozens of them avoid prosecution because half of the country are f* morons. Our work continues, as should the DOJ's."

It comes as Mr Trump's decisive election victory was capped off on Sunday when US networks said he had also won the final outstanding swing state of Arizona.

:: This story has been updated with more information on those who died.