
Indiana Man Pardoned By Trump For Jan. 6th Terrorist Attack Shot & Killed By Police
News has recently surfaced that an Indiana man who was pardoned for the January 6 terrorist attack on the capital of our nation by now President Trump has been shot and killed by police during a traffic stop.
KTVU reports that the man, 43-year-old Matt Huttle, was involved in some kind of altercation with the police Over the weekend which led to him being fatally wounded at the hands of the police officers.
There’s currently an investigation going on to determine what led to the shooting, however, according to police, the suspect was in possession of a firearm during the time of the traffic stop. The investigation hasn’t yielded any results or insight as of now, but the state police are looking into this, as the sheriff for Jasper County related in a statement:
Our condolences go out to the family of the deceased as any loss of life is traumatic to those who were close to Mr. Huttle
Matt Huttle was one of many Americans who stormed the nation's capital on January 6, 2021, in a terrorist attack that led to deaths and many injuries. According to the report, he was in the Building for 16 minutes and recorded video while inside which led to his six-month sentence for entering a restricted building.
But according to his defense attorney, Andrew Hemmer, Mr. Huttle didn’t go to the capital with nefarious, intent, and instead wanted just to be a part of a historic moment.
We should soon know more about what led to his passing during a routine stop.
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In June of 1966, following a number of unidentified flying objects spotted in Southern Michigan and other parts of the country, then United States Congressman Gerald R. Ford took the United States Air Force to task for trying to dismiss his constituents' sightings as the result of swamp gas. Here are the papers, courtesy of the Gerald R Ford Presidential Library & Museum.
Gallery Credit: Scott Clow