US prosecutors suspended after calling January 6 a ‘mob of rioters’
WASHINGTON — The U.S. Justice Department placed two prosecutors on leave on Wednesday, hours after they referred to Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol on January 6, 2021, as “a mob of rioters” in a sentencing memo, said four people familiar with the matter.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Samuel White and Carlos Valdivia were placed on administrative leave and locked out of their government devices, one day before their scheduled appearance in federal court on Thursday for Taylor Taranto‘s sentencing.
Taranto was convicted on gun charges after driving to former President Barack Obama’s Washington neighborhood in June 2023, shortly after then-former President Donald Trump posted what he asserted was Obama’s address online.
Two new prosecutors, including a senior official in the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington, withdrew the initial sentencing memo on Wednesday and replaced it with one that made no mention of the attack on the Capitol and removed a reference to Trump posting Obama’s address.
Taranto had previously been charged for his role in the 2021 assault on the Capitol and was pardoned in January on Trump’s return to the White House. He was one of nearly 1,600 people pardoned but remained incarcerated on the 2023 gun charges.

