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Parliamented on January 6, Rieder said “I'm shooting myself” before Indiana Deputy Tötlich shot him | Indiana

The pardon attacker, who was shot by a sheriff deputy by an Indiana during a traffic stop of a sheriff in January in January, first told the officer: “I shoot myself” before trying to call up a weapon from his car, so civil servants and newly published video of the encounter.

Matthew Huttles Murder Due to the MP and Dashboard cameras, a video about the traffic stops-and would not “legally justify” and would not lead to criminal charges, the prosecutors said in a declaration published on Thursday.

The 42 -year -old Huttle had traveled to Washington DC with his uncle Dale, as a lot of Donald Trump supporters stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021 to extend his presidency, even though he lost the choice of the White House of 2020 against Joe Biden. Matthew Huttle entered the Capitol for about 15 minutes – and took it to video – and agreed to a plea deal that was about six months in prison.

Dale Huttle has now received 30 months in prison, after he was guilty, to use a long flag mast to overthrow a police officer who protected the Capitol.

The Huttles included more than 1,500 Capitol attackers who were pardoned by Trump on January 20, his first day in the Oval Office after defeating Kamala Harris in the November elections.

A deputy Matthew Huttle stopped six days after Trump's Massenklnaz when he drove at 113 km/h in a 55 km/h zone near the border between the Northwest Indiana Grafs Jasper and Pulaski. The deputy said Huttle that he would be arrested because he is an ordinary traffic offender who prompted the driver – who had been ordered from his car – to say: “No, I can't go into prison for it.”

Huttle later sprinted for his car when the MP called: “No, don't do it, buddy! No, no, no, no, no! “

The deputy and Huttle fought in the latter man's car. The video conquered Huttle, who screamed: “I shoot myself”, and the investigators said that he had “reached in a way that matched the calling up of a weapon”.

The prosecutors said that the deputy had fired several shots on Huttle – fatally injured him after seeing him after raising a weapon. The investigators later found a loaded 9 -mm gun and additional ammunition in the Huttle car, said prosecutors.

“Based on the evidence … According to the law of Indiana, the actions of the deputy were justified,” says the explanation signed by the public prosecutor's office, which Huttle killed as a self -defense. “This investigation has now been completed and no fees are submitted.”

Attempts to contact a lawyer for Huttle were not immediately successful. In court files in connection with the case against him in the attack of January 6, Huttle's lawyer Andrew Hemmer claimed that his client was “not a believer in a political cause” and only went to the Capitol on this day “Because he thought it was a historical moment”.

“He had nothing better to do after he had come out of prison” in connection with a driving injury, Hemmer wrote about Huttle.

Those who criticized the grace that Trump granted the Capitol attacker belonged to the largest police union in the United States, which had approved him via Harris, a former prosecutor.

In a joint explanation, the fraternal command of the police announced with the international association of police chiefs: “Crimes against law enforcement authorities are not just attacks on individuals or public security – they are attacks on society and undermine the rule of law.”

Huttle was one of several enthusiastic Capitol attackers who have since ended up in news headings about other legal questions.

This group included a man who had unsolved charges in Texas to set up a minor.

Another apologized participant on January 6th was redesigned due to federal violence. And according to the authorities, a 10-year prison sentence was imposed on a woman killed in a separate crash of 2022.