Matthew Martin said police officers let him into the U.S. Capitol
A federal contractor was acquitted by a judge on April 6 of four charges in relation to entering the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.
Prosecutors failed to prove that Matthew Martin, who worked at the Los Alamos National Laboratory in New Mexico, committed crimes when entering the Capitol for about 10 minutes, U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden ruled.
McFadden, a Trump nominee, said it was reasonable for Martin to believe that outnumbered police officers allowed him and others to enter the Capitol through the Rotunda doors on Jan. 6. The judge also said Martin’s actions were “about as minimal and non-serious” as anyone who was at the Capitol that day.
According to court filings, Martin attended a rally held by former President Donald Trump on Jan. 6 before returning to his hotel, where he heard that the Capitol had been breached. Martin left the building and ventured onto the Capitol grounds before eventually entering the Capitol.
“While I was at the top, they started letting people into the building. And I—so I joined the—they were holding the doors open, the guards were. And I walked in and saw the rotunda,” Martin told an FBI agent during an interview.
Martin, whose bench trial started April 5, testified that a police officer waved him into the building after the riot erupted. A prosecutor dismissed that testimony as “nonsense,” although the government acknowledged in a filing that “police officers stood on either side of the doorway as the defendant entered” the building.
Video shows two police officers standing near the Rotunda doors and allowing people to enter as Martin approached, McFadden said. One of the officers appeared to lean back before Martin placed a hand on the officer’s shoulder as a possible sign of gratitude.
McFadden described Martin’s testimony as “largely credible.” The judge said it wasn’t unreasonable for him to believe that officers allowed him to enter the Capitol, even though alarms were blaring and broken glass was strewn about the floor.
McFadden also said there was no evidence that Martin intended to disrupt Congress from certifying President Joe Biden’s electoral victory and described the defendant as a “silent observer of the actions of others.”