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Background: Clifford Meteer speaks to local media in Knoxville, Tenn., about his January 6 case (WBIR). Inset left: Donald Trump addresses the annual Road to Majority conference in Washington, DC, in June 2024 (Allison Bailey/NurPhoto via AP). Inset right: Clifford Meteer inside the U.S. Capitol Building on January 6, 2021, as documented by the Department of Justice (DOJ).
On the day when a federal judge in Baltimore extended President Donald Trump’s wide-ranging pardon for January 6 defendants to a firearm charge, a different verdict emerged in Tennessee. There, a judge rejected a request for the same pardon application, with the defendant arguing that his gun-related case was “completely unconnected” to the 2021 Capitol events.
“The court ultimately concludes that the explicit text of the pardon restricts its coverage to offenses associated with actions on January 6, 2021, at the U.S. Capitol. The language does not extend to completely separate firearms possession offenses that occurred on a different date and in a different location merely because the offense was uncovered during the investigation into the defendant’s activities on January 6, 2021, at the Capitol,” wrote U.S. District Judge Thomas A. Varlan in a June 6 order.
Defendant Clifford Meteer was sentenced in 2022 to 60 days in prison, 36 months probation and 60 hours of community service for entering the Capitol on Jan. 6. Meteer got hit with four charges related to his actions that day and pleaded guilty to one count of parading, demonstrating or picketing in the Capitol building. He reportedly described himself in the past as “one of those idiots scaling the wall,” according to NBC News.
Prosecutors had argued in Meteer’s sentencing memo that he should serve 75 days in prison followed by three years probation because of his “total lack of remorse” and prior criminal history, WBIR reported. He served his time at a prison facility in Kentucky and was later granted clemency under Trump’s pardon order in January.
Meteer was arrested on a felony gun charge after federal authorities indicted him and took him into custody in July 2021. The arrest was in Knoxville, approximately 485 miles away from Washington.
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In his ruling, Varlan — a George W. Bush appointee — poked numerous holes in Meteer’s arguments for dismissing his gun case under Trump’s executive order, saying Meteer misinterpreted multiple words and phrases from the order.
“The ordinary meaning of the term ‘near,’ defined as ‘close at hand’ and ‘not distant,’ could not be understood to encompass, for example, all events occurring within the District of Columbia,” the judge explained. “Nor could ‘near’ be read to include events occurring in an entirely different state.”
Varlan wrote that he agreed with arguments from Meteer and his legal team that the Baltimore case involving Jan. 6 defendant Elias Costianes, which was dismissed by U.S. District Judge James K. Bredar — a Barack Obama appointee — involves “near-identical” facts to his case. But Bredar was required to approve Costianes’ request after both parties in the case complied with the correct rule of federal civil procedure.
The same determination was apparently not made for Meteer.
“The parties have provided no case law that would support a finding that defendant’s offense in this case would fall within the scope,” Varlan concluded.
“And the court’s independent review of cases from around the country only supports a finding that unrelated offenses discovered during the investigation of January 6 activity do not fall within the scope of the pardon,” he said. “Indeed, the court has located no apparent decision in any case in a post-conviction setting where any court has granted a defendant relief under the pardon under these circumstances.”
Varlan made a similar ruling earlier this year when he declined to toss convictions for Jan. 6 defendant Edward Kelley, of Maryville, Tennessee, who had asked to get a conviction for leading a separate plot to kill FBI agents thrown out.