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Related: About this forumYou Won't Believe the Defense in the January 6th Pipe Bomb Case - Talking Feds
Harry Litman reads you in on the alleged January 6 pipe bomber, Brian Cole, making the argument in court that Trump's sweeping pardon for January 6th offenders covers him. - 03/17/2026.
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You Won't Believe the Defense in the January 6th Pipe Bomb Case - Talking Feds (Original Post)
Rhiannon12866
4 hrs ago
OP
Deadline Legal Blog-Why Trump's Jan. 6 pardon doesn't apply to alleged pipe bomb planter Brian Cole
LetMyPeopleVote
3 hrs ago
#1
LetMyPeopleVote
(179,092 posts)1. Deadline Legal Blog-Why Trump's Jan. 6 pardon doesn't apply to alleged pipe bomb planter Brian Cole
Even if Coles alleged conduct is related to Jan. 6, 2021, his motion to dismiss still faces a fatal problem.
Why Trumpâs Jan. 6 pardon doesnât apply to alleged pipe bomb planter Brian Cole
— CVJ (@enuffsaysv.bsky.social) 2026-03-17T22:00:44.260Z
Even if Coleâs alleged conduct is related to Jan. 6, 2021, his motion to dismiss still faces a fatal problem.
Read in MS NOW: apple.news/Ayx7uAHXaRCe...
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https://www.ms.now/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/why-trumps-jan-6-pardon-doesnt-apply-to-alleged-pipe-bomb-planter-brian-cole
President Donald Trumps sweeping pardons for Jan. 6 defendants continue to generate litigation over how broadly they apply. The latest example comes from alleged Jan. 6 pipe bomb planter Brian Cole, who said the clemency unequivocally applies to him.
But theres a simple reason for the courts to find that it doesnt.
To understand why, lets first look at the Jan. 20, 2025, proclamations text, which grants relief to three categories of people. First, it commutes sentences to time served for a list of people named in the order (Cole isnt one of them). Second, it pardons all other individuals convicted of offenses related to events that occurred at or near the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021. And third, it directs the attorney general to drop all pending indictments against individuals for their conduct related to the events at or near the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021.
So, before getting to the allegations against Cole, who has maintained his innocence, he faces a threshold issue: He doesnt fit into any of those categories. He was charged in December 2025, long after Trumps January order, and he hasnt been convicted. Therefore, he was neither charged nor convicted at the time that Trump granted the pardon. .....
To be sure, had Cole been charged or convicted by the time Trump issued his proclamation, it wouldnt have been ridiculous to argue that it covered him, even if that argument were not as airtight as his dismissal motion suggested.
But in any event, the timing is important enough that courts could rule against him on that threshold matter alone that is, without deciding whether his alleged conduct qualifies as related enough to Jan. 6. Courts like not having to decide things they dont have to when they dont want to.
And though the governments position on the pardons scope doesnt dictate how the courts decide that scope, that the Trump DOJ brought this case shows that it doesnt think Cole qualifies.
Of course, if the courts reject Coles motion to dismiss, Trump will be free to issue him a fresh pardon if he wants to. In fact, the president doesnt have to wait for the courts to weigh in. He could do it today.
But theres a simple reason for the courts to find that it doesnt.
To understand why, lets first look at the Jan. 20, 2025, proclamations text, which grants relief to three categories of people. First, it commutes sentences to time served for a list of people named in the order (Cole isnt one of them). Second, it pardons all other individuals convicted of offenses related to events that occurred at or near the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021. And third, it directs the attorney general to drop all pending indictments against individuals for their conduct related to the events at or near the United States Capitol on January 6, 2021.
So, before getting to the allegations against Cole, who has maintained his innocence, he faces a threshold issue: He doesnt fit into any of those categories. He was charged in December 2025, long after Trumps January order, and he hasnt been convicted. Therefore, he was neither charged nor convicted at the time that Trump granted the pardon. .....
To be sure, had Cole been charged or convicted by the time Trump issued his proclamation, it wouldnt have been ridiculous to argue that it covered him, even if that argument were not as airtight as his dismissal motion suggested.
But in any event, the timing is important enough that courts could rule against him on that threshold matter alone that is, without deciding whether his alleged conduct qualifies as related enough to Jan. 6. Courts like not having to decide things they dont have to when they dont want to.
And though the governments position on the pardons scope doesnt dictate how the courts decide that scope, that the Trump DOJ brought this case shows that it doesnt think Cole qualifies.
Of course, if the courts reject Coles motion to dismiss, Trump will be free to issue him a fresh pardon if he wants to. In fact, the president doesnt have to wait for the courts to weigh in. He could do it today.
This is not my area of the law but on pure contract interpretation principles, trump's poorly worded pardon may not apply
Rhiannon12866
(254,656 posts)2. Wow! Thanks so much for posting, makes sense to me!