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Miami Proud Boy pardoned by Trump in Capitol attacks greeted by cheers, taunts at Miami airport

Jay Weaver and Claire Healy, Miami Herald on

Published in News & Features

MIAMI — Walking out of the gate at Miami International Airport wearing a “Make America Great Again” hat with “Never Surrender” written on the side, Enrique Tarrio returned to Miami after being convicted of seditious conspiracy for orchestrating an attack on the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

The former chairman of the Proud Boys was greeted by a group of friends, family and other “j-6ers” waiting for him at the airport to celebrate his pardon by President Donald Trump.

From a crowd waiting at the gate exit, a voice yelled “welcome home,” while someone else shouted “traitor.”

Escorting Tarrio out of the airport and into a car, Gabriel Garcia, who was also pardoned by Trump on Monday, was approached by someone in the crowd.

“F-you, come visit us in Seattle, brother,” a man yelled at him, and the two began to argue.

“He won!” Garcia said, pointing at a shirt sporting Trump’s mug shot.

Tarrio, who was released from a federal correctional facility in Louisiana on Tuesday, said he was “just excited to see my family” as he was interviewed by a WPLG Local 10 News reporter after his arrival.

“I’m just happy Trump kept his promises,” Tarrio, who was arrested in Miami in March 2022, said about the president’s Jan. 6 pardons.

Tarrio said he hopes the Trump administration investigates former top Justice Department officials, including ex-Attorney General Merrick Garland, whose office oversaw the Jan. 6 probes.

“If they committed any crimes, they should be prosecuted,” he said. “The same exact system that we went through, put them through.”

At his trial, Tarrio’s defense team said he never saw himself as the field general of the Proud Boys as his colleagues stormed the U.S. Capitol with thousands of others on Jan. 6 — mainly because he watched the violence unfold on TV at a hotel room in Baltimore. Nonetheless, he was sentenced to 22 years in prison in 2023 after a federal jury in Washington found him and other Proud Boys guilty of seditious conspiracy and related charges.

But whatever jurors may have thought about Tarrio’s guilt after his months-long trial, it doesn’t matter anymore. Tarrio, 40, returned to Miami a free man on Wednesday after Trump pardoned him and about 1,300 individuals convicted of crimes in the attack on the Capitol. Trump also commuted the sentences of 14 others convicted in the Jan. 6 probes.

Veteran attorneys in Miami said Trump’s clemency favors for the Jan. 6 offenders were a travesty — and not only because they were convicted of assaulting police officers while vandalizing the U.S. Capitol after Trump had urged his supporters at a rally earlier that day to march to Congress. On Tuesday, the deputy attorney general in the Justice Department issued a memo requiring federal prosecutors to pursue stiffer charges and sentences against a variety of criminal suspects.

“In listening to some of the interviews of some of the J6 defendants who have been pardoned and released, I am amazed but not surprised that none of them have shown any remorse or accepted responsibility for their actions,” said Miami defense lawyer Frank Quintero.

“The new DOJ policy will result in more severe charges and longer sentences for anyone charged with a crime, not just foreign gangs, drug cartels and immigration offenders,” he added.

Prime of Proud Boys

The Proud Boys was in its prime during Trump’s first term as president, describing itself as a “pro-Western fraternal organization for men who refuse to apologize for creating the modern world, aka Western Chauvinists.”

But its reputation — along with that of other white nationalist organizations like the Oath Keepers — took a huge hit after the violent Jan. 6 attack on the Capitol.

Tarrio, the Proud Boys chairman, was accused in an indictment of organizing a group of hard-core members — the Ministry of Self Defense — to develop “national rally planning” for a “Stop the Steal” protest on Jan. 6 to coincide with Congress’ certification of the Electoral College vote that same day.

The indictment further accused Tarrio and the other Proud Boys defendants — Ethan Nordean, Joseph Biggs, Zachary Rehl — of devising a militant strategy to target the Capitol, using the Internet not only to develop strategies and recruit members but also to raise funds and buy paramilitary gear for the assault.

Tarrio and the other leaders of the Ministry of Self Defense hand-selected members of the organization, including Dominic Pezzola, to serve as “rally boys” during the attack on the Capitol, according to the indictment.

On the afternoon of Jan. 6, as the Proud Boys and other extremist groups stormed the Capitol, Tarrio did not join in the attack. He watched the assault on TV news in Baltimore after he had been ordered out of the District of Columbia by a federal judge stemming from his arrest in an earlier protest in the capital.

 

Tarrio was not absent, however. He expressed his support for the Proud Boys in online posts, giving them inspirational direction.

“After I finish watching this I’ll make a statement about my arrest (on Jan. 4) ... But for now I’m enjoying the show ... Do what must be done. #WeThePeople.”

A few minutes later, Tarrio posted: “Don’t f---ing leave.”

A Proud Boy member responded, “Are we a militia yet?”

In a series of posts, Tarrio said:. “Yep ... Make no mistake ...We did this ...”

As Tarrio rejoiced from the sidelines, the carnage in the capital was widespread.

At least five people, including a police officer and a rioter, died during or soon after the attack. Four additional police officers defending the Capitol that day later died by suicide. More than 170 police officers were also injured during the siege.

Hearings from the House Select Committee on the Jan. 6 attack also highlighted Tarrio’s role. Committee members found that he and other Proud Boys were captured on video acknowledging that Trump’s remark about their group at a 2020 presidential debate — that the Proud Boys should “stand back and stand by” — was interpreted by followers as a green light for their actions.

Tarrio previously had served as Florida state director for an independent Latinos for Trump group.

At an inaugural rally on Monday night, Trump did not mention Tarrio by name, but told a crowd that he planned to make good on his promise to pardon people charged in the Jan. 6 riot, referring to them as “hostages.”

“Tonight, I’m gonna be signing on the J6 hostages’ pardons to get them out,” Trump told a crowd at Capitol One Arena. “We’ll be signing pardons for a lot of people. A lot of people.”

The president made the announcement while standing on a stage, in front of the families of Israeli hostages held by Hamas.

About 30 minutes after Trump left the rally, Tarrio’s mom posted on social media that her son had been released from custody.

“Omg! Lord Thank you!!! TARRIO IS FREE!!!” Zuny Tarrio wrote in a post.

But at a White House news conference on Tuesday, Trump was asked by a reporter about pardoning a man, Daniel Rodriguez, who was sentenced to more than 12 years after pleading guilty to assaulting a police officer with a stun gun on Jan. 6. The veteran officer, Mike Fanone, later suffered a heart attack and resigned from the Metropolitan Police Department in DC.

“You would agree it’s never acceptable to assault police officers?” the reporter asked.

“Sure,” Trump said.

“Among those you pardoned is a guy who used a stun gun on a police officer. Why does he deserve a pardon?” the reporter asked.

“Well, I don’t know,” the president responded. “We’ll take a look at everything.

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©2025 Miami Herald. Visit at miamiherald.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

 

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