Timothy Hale-Cusanelli, a white supremacist who wore a Hitler mustache to work at a navy base, claimed that he was invited to Trump's inauguration and posted images indicating he was in Washington, D.C. He shared an image of an invitation to the inauguration, but it's unclear who or what group invited him.
Hale-Cusanelli was identified as a white supremacist with admiration for Nazi leader Adolf Hitler by prosecutors. He said on X that he was "Happy to say there was less Antifa this Inauguration than the one in 2017."
Hale-Cusanelli, along with others, overwhelmed police in the Capitol crypt during the attack on Congress on January 6, 2021. Videos revealed that he tried to get a rioter away from officers who were arresting the rioter.
He claimed that he was unaware that the officer was a member of the police and that he thought that the certification of the Electoral College vote would be "in a building called 'Congress.' As stupid as it sounds, I did not realize that Congress sat in the Capitol building."
Hale-Cusanelli was sentenced to four years in prison, with Trump appointee U.S. District Judge Trevor McFadden slammed the defendant for racist, sexist and antisemitic statements and also blasted him for his "decision to lie on the witness stand."
After three years behind bars, Hale-Cusanelli was released in December 2023 and has taken to posting on X as "Tim Hale — Criminally Funny J6er." He was only the seventh participant in the riot to go on trial, with prosecutors saying that he hoped for a second U.S. civil war.
Hale-Cusanelli was a Navy contractor with a government security clearance when he took part in the storming of the Capitol. In an internal navy probe, 34 of his co-workers said he had "extremist or radical views pertaining to the Jewish people, minorities and women."
A naval officer claimed that Hale-Cusanelli once said, "Hitler should have finished the job," in relation to the Holocaust.
He took the stand in his trial, saying that he "didn't know there was an actual building that was called the 'Capitol'."
"I feel like an idiot," he said.
But government attorneys argued that he was lying, citing conversations between Hale-Cusanelli and his roommate following the attack on Congress where he said that getting into the Capitol complex was "exhilarating."
"Hale-Cusanelli is, at best, extremely tolerant of violence and death," prosecutors said. "What Hale-Cusanelli was doing on January 6 was not activism, it was the preamble to his civil war.
10 Comments
Loubianka
How can he not know what the Capitol is? Sounds like a poor excuse for straight-up racism.
Eugene Alta
I just think it’s important to keep an open mind. People can have valid points, even if they’re expressed badly.
Loubianka
We could use more ‘criminally funny’ people to shake up the political landscape!
KittyKat
His experience could serve as a learning opportunity for others who might share similar views.
Noir Black
Hale-Cusanelli's so-called 'humor' is nothing but a cover for his hate. Pathetic.
Michelangelo
I can’t wrap my head around how he thinks his actions were justified. He should be ashamed.
Raphael
The past is the past; what matters is how he chooses to live his life moving forward.
Habibi
As long as he’s not causing harm now, we shouldn’t continue to vilify him.
ZmeeLove
It’s absurd that someone with such clear extremist views was ever in a position of influence in the Navy.
Mariposa
It’s a slap in the face to hear him call himself 'criminally funny'. His actions were revolting!