Capitol Riot

Jan. 6 defendant dubbed ‘Conan O'Riot' gets prison time for role in Capitol attack

Derek Nelson, a former Marine, admitted that he "came to D.C. prepared for the possibility of violence" and "attempted to body-check" an officer’s shield during the Capitol attack.

"Conan O'Riot"
Joseph Prezioso / AFP via Getty Images

A Jan. 6 defendant dubbed "Conan O'Riot" for his resemblance to comedian Conan O'Brien was sentenced this week to 75 days in federal prison for his role in the U.S. Capitol attack.

Derek Nelson, a former Marine, was arrested in October, over two years after he was first identified by online "sedition hunters" who have aided the FBI in hundreds of arrests of Jan. 6 defendants. Nelson pleaded guilty to a count of entering and remaining in a restricted building back in March.

Federal prosecutors had sought six months in prison for the 31-year-old Nelson, who entered the Capitol alongside his friend and fellow former Marine Derek Dodder, who told federal authorities that Nelson wore his Revolutionary War costume to be a “rabble rouser.”

The duo purchased respirators from a local hardware store, and were part of the breach of police lines, with Nelson grabbing one officer's shield and attempting to body-check another, and then helping a fellow rioter pick up the shield after the officer dropped it. In one video from Jan. 6, Nelson told a videographer he was in Washington “to start a revolution.”

Derek Nelson at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia
Derek Nelson at the Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

“Who do they work for?” Nelson yelled inside the Capitol while pumping his fist into the air. “Us!”

Nelson soon joined the mob trying to breach the main door to the floor of the U.S. House of Representatives, where rioters shattered windows and had a stand-off with members of Congress while armed law enforcement officers pointed guns through the broken glass. In total, he spent about 48 minutes inside the building.

Nelson spoke with the government twice pursuant to his plea agreement, but federal prosecutors said he gave many explanations that "were either internally inconsistent or did not stand up to serious scrutiny." He later said that he thought his revolutionary clothing was a "fitting symbol for the occasion" and admitted that when he shouted “To protect the Constitution of the United States against enemies, foreign and domestic," he was referring to members of Congress as "enemies."

Derek Nelson
U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia
Nelson, second from right, captured wearing a gas mask in footage from within the Capitol building on Jan. 6, 2021.

Nelson's lawyer wrote in a sentencing memo that the former Marine regretted his actions on Jan. 6, and that he was a "foolish and impressionable young man" when he came to Washington "lured by a guileless but misguided sense of patriotism."

"Derek Nelson was steeped in the language of division, and fed a diet of discourse that demonized the other side," his lawyers wrote. "It’s no wonder that he came to the Capitol deluded by a line of thinking that had been served ad nauseum."

Now, they wrote, Nelson is a devoted husband and father whose "remorse and acceptance of responsibility for his criminal conduct is manifest and sincere."

U.S. District Court Judge Carl Nichols, the federal judge whose ruling against the government's use of the obstruction of an official proceeding statute made its way to the Supreme Court and is now causing a ripple effect on many Jan. 6 cases, on Wednesday sentenced Nelson to 75 days in prison, ordering him to surrender within 60 days. Nelson will also have to serve a year of supervised release.

The FBI has made more than 1,400 arrests in the 3.5 years since the Capitol attack, and federal prosecutors have secured more than 1,000 convictions. More than 540 defendants have been sentenced to prison, with terms of incarceration ranging from a few days behind bars to 22 years in federal prison for Enrique Tarrio, the former Proud Boys leader convicted of seditious conspiracy. Hundreds of other rioters have received probationary sentences. The statute of limitations for crimes committed on Jan. 6 expires in less than 1.5 years, in January 2026.

This article first appeared on NBCNews.com. Read more from NBC News here:

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