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Prosecutors seeking 3 years in prison for East Texas veteran convicted of carrying tomahawk inside Capitol on Jan. 6

Meanwhile, his defense team has requested that Alex Harkrider receive time served, 120 hours of community service and $2,000 restitution, documents show.

WASHINGTON, D.C., USA — Editor's Note: The above video aired in January 2021. 

Prosecutors are seeking three years in federal prison for an East Texas man convicted of carrying a tomahawk to the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021.

In January, Alex Harkrider, of Carthage, was found guilty on seven counts, including obstruction of an official proceeding and entering and remaining in a restricted building with a dangerous weapon. He is set to be sentenced Thursday in a federal court based in Washington D.C. 

According to court documents, the federal government is asking the court to sentence Harkrider to three years in prison, three years of supervised release, restitution in the amount of $2,000 and special assessment fees totaling $445.

Prosecutors say Harkrider "extensively planned for violence." He also wore body armor, carried a tomahawk axe and stole a broken piece of a chair from the Capitol building.

Meanwhile, his defense team has requested that Harkrider receive time served, 120 hours of community service and $2,000 restitution, documents show. Our sister station WUSA reports Harkrider's time served would be about three months. 

The defense cited the following reasons of why they recommended this particular sentence: Harkrider doesn't need incarceration, his history of strong work ethic and volunteer service like serving in the Marines, and "his peaceful, non-destructive and non-violent behavior that day both outside and inside the Capitol building."

Credit: Department of Justice
Alex Harkrider, of Texas, was charged alongside fellow Marine Corps veteran Ryan Nichols in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, Capitol riot.

His co-defendant, Ryan Taylor Nichols, of Longview, was sentenced to more than five years in federal prison on May 2 for assaulting police and brandishing a crowbar at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021. He was sentenced to 64 months in prison and fined $200,000. WUSA reported that he recruited Harkrider to join him in D.C. on Jan. 6.

Harkrider wrote in a letter to the judge saying that he acknowledged the severity of his actions and he fell short of values that he learned as a Marine Corps infantryman serving in Iraq and Afghanistan.

He noted his efforts to assist in disaster relief in the past, allowing him to give back in a meaningful way. He helped in a search-and-rescue nonprofit that Nichols founded after leaving the Marines. 

In 2022, a judge allowed Harkrider to travel to Florida for two weeks to help after Hurricane Ian. He was also given permission to travel and assist in other disaster relief, according to WUSA. 

Harkrider added he has started a catering business that seeks to make a positive impact in his community. 

"However, my participation in the events at the Capitol has cast a long shadow over these efforts, and for that, I am profoundly sorry," Harkrider said, adding his actions let down the most important people in his life. 

He said he is committed to proving that his mistakes don't define his whole character while seeking to continue his ongoing disaster relief work and new business. 

"I understand the need to face the consequences of my actions, and I am prepared to do so, but I also humbly request the chance to demonstrate my capacity for making amends and for genuine rehabilitation," Harkrider wrote in the letter.  "Thank you for considering my commitment to change and my heartfelt remorse. I am ready to accept responsibility and recommit myself to a life of service and integrity."

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