Crime

Update: Pardoned Tri-Cities Jan. 6 rioter sentenced for threats to Obama

Key Takeaways
Key Takeaways

AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom.

Read our AI Policy.


  • Two federal prosecutors placed on leave after Jan. 6 language in memo.
  • Taylor Taranto convicted on weapons, ammunition and bomb-hoax charges; sentencing pending.
  • Case intertwined with Jan. 6 pardons, Capitol attack allegations and civil suit.

A Tri-Cities man was sentenced this week for threats to lawmakers when he tried to gain access to former President Barack Obama’s D.C. home.

But a new twist in the case threatened to derail its conclusion.

Two federal prosecutors in the case were put on leave after describing the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol riots as a “mob of rioters” who “attacked the U.S. Capitol” in a sentencing memo, according to NBCNews.

Taylor Taranto, 39, of Pasco, was found guilty during a four-day bench in federal court in May.

He was sentenced to 21 months on Thursday, which covered the time he served awaiting trial without bail.

Taranto is a former webmaster for the Franklin County Republican Party and U.S. Navy veteran. Local Republican Party officials previously told the Herald that they had cut ties with Taranto months before his 2023 arrest due to his erratic behavior.

He was convicted this year of carrying guns without a license, unlawful possession of ammunition and false information or hoaxes after a series of threats to lawmakers and the former President.

The now-suspended prosecutors also wrote that Taranto promoted conspiracy theories about Jan. 6 and that President Trump had posted Obama’s address on Truth Social, just before Taranto attempted to find “tunnels” to get into the residence in June 2023, NBCNews reported.

Prosecutors Carlos Valdivia and Samuel White, were locked out of their government devices and told Wednesday they were being placed on leave, according to ABCNews.

Taranto was pardoned earlier this year by President Donald Trump for his allegedly violent role in the riot. Federal prosecutors had charged him with a number of crimes related to breaking into the Capitol and allegedly helping attack a police officer.

Those charges were previously part of this same case.

He was also named a co-defendant in a wrongful death civil suit brought by the widow of D.C. Metropolitan Police Officer Jeffrey Smith, who died by suicide that medical examiners attributed to a concussion. Smith was attacked by D.C. Chiropractor David Walls-Kaufman, who hit the officer with a heavy metal cane reportedly handed to him by Taranto.

Taranto was seen in photos from the riot carrying the cane throughout the day.

Taylor Taranto is seen clashing with Capitol police during the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in this image included in court documents. Taranto is circled in yellow. David Walls-Kaufman, his co-defendant in a lawsuit for wrongful death of MPD Officer Jeffrey Smith is circled in red.
Taylor Taranto is seen clashing with Capitol police during the riot at the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, in this image included in court documents. Taranto is circled in yellow. David Walls-Kaufman, his co-defendant in a lawsuit for wrongful death of MPD Officer Jeffrey Smith is circled in red.

Walls-Kaufman, who was also pardoned, admitted to “scuffling” with the officer during his trial. Taranto was placed on hold while on trial for newer charges for threatening lawmakers and a bomb hoax. He was dismissed from the lawsuit earlier this year, but Kaufman was found liable and ordered to pay Smith’s widow $500,000.

New prosecutors take over

On Wednesday, two new prosecutors filed to be added to the criminal case, according to court documents.

Later in the day the newly added prosecutors submitted a new sentencing memorandum, which appears to omit any mention of President Trump or Jan. 6. The original memorandum, which NBCNews reports was filed Tuesday, was not available through the court’s online portal.

Court records showed prosecutors still asked for Taranto to be sentenced to 27 months with three years community supervision on the bombing hoax charge. Prosecutors also asked for concurrent two-year sentences for each of the gun charges and a 12-month concurrent sentence for the ammunition charge.

Taranto will not serve any additional time in jail. He was held without bail for nearly two years after U.S. District Court Judge Carl J. Nichols agreed he presented a threat to the community.

After his May conviction, Nichols agreed to release Taranto until his sentencing, provided he return home to the Tri-Cities and stay away from D.C. He was also required to travel to a Puget Sound veterans clinic for mental health treatment for PTSD.

His Thursday sentencing requires Taranto to continue this mental health treatment while on community supervision for three years.

Jail records show he was released May 22.

In this image from U.S. Capitol Police security video, released and annotated by the Justice Department in the Statement of Facts supporting an arrest warrant, Taylor Taranto, circled in yellow, enters the U.S. Capitol through the Upper West Terrace door on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington.
In this image from U.S. Capitol Police security video, released and annotated by the Justice Department in the Statement of Facts supporting an arrest warrant, Taylor Taranto, circled in yellow, enters the U.S. Capitol through the Upper West Terrace door on Jan. 6, 2021, in Washington. AP

2023 arrest for targeting lawmakers

When Taranto was arrested, investigators found two guns in his van that he was not registered to be carrying, along with a significant amount of ammunition and multiple cell phones.

A charge for a high-capacity magazine was dropped after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling said the law enforcing the ban on those magazines was unconstitutional.

Taranto was allegedly in Obama’s neighborhood in response to a conspiracy theory posted by Trump on social media, which listed the address, according to court documents.

His attorneys claim Taranto’s statements about “trying to get a shot” were about filming. He has claimed he is a self-styled satirical journalist. However in May, a video was introduced into evidence that prosecutors say showed Taranto admitting that his claim of being a journalist was a ruse, according to WUSA9 reporter Jordan Fischer.

Trump later denounced Taranto’s actions and said the two had never met, after a picture circulated online of Taranto posing with a cardboard cutout of Trump. That photo was from a Franklin County Republican Party meeting.

A photo gallery from a 2018 Franklin County, WA Republican dinner shows Taylor Taranto posing with a cutout of Donald Trump. Facial recognition technology used the photo to identify Taranto as being inside the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 riot, according to the HuffPost.com.
A photo gallery from a 2018 Franklin County, WA Republican dinner shows Taylor Taranto posing with a cutout of Donald Trump. Facial recognition technology used the photo to identify Taranto as being inside the U.S. Capitol during the Jan. 6 riot, according to the HuffPost.com.

In the days before his arrest, Taranto allegedly had made a series of threats on livestreams and through messaging apps against former Vice President Kamala Harris, and two members of Congress for their roles in the Jan. 6 investigation. Federal agents were keeping tabs on his broadcasts after the threat to the federal building, according to court documents.

He had been traveling back and forth between Pasco and D.C. to attend various protests, court documents said.

Jan. 6 and wrongful death of officer

His arrest came after a warrant was issued for now pardoned Jan. 6 charges because of the threats he had been making online to lawmakers, which court documents say included going onto a school campus near a congressman’s home.

He also threatened to use his van as a bomb to blow up a federal building and claimed in private messages that he had a contract to kill former Vice President Kamala Harris, according to court documents.

While Taranto was pardoned, along with 1,500 other rioters, for his role in the 2021 insurrection, Nichols denied Taranto’s earlier attempt to drop charges for the guns, hundreds of rounds of ammunition found in his van during the D.C. arrest and the bombing threat.

For his role in the Jan. 6 riots, Taranto was accused of entering the U.S. Capitol, his involvement in the attack on Officer Smith and remaining on Capitol grounds. He later identified himself in videos on a livestream.

A review panel ruled that Officer Jeffrey Smith suffered a concussion which led to his suicide after returning to duty. They said the injuries suffered in the riot were the “sole and direct cause” of his death when awarding his widow death benefits.

Walls-Kaufman was later pardoned after being sentenced to two months in jail.

This story was originally published October 29, 2025 at 6:20 PM.

Cory McCoy
Tri-City Herald
Cory is an award-winning investigative reporter. He joined the Tri-City Herald in Dec. 2021 as an Editor/Reporter covering social accountability issues. His past work can be found in the Tyler Morning Telegraph and other Texas newspapers. He was a 2019-20 Education Writers Association Fellow, and has been featured on The Murder Tapes, Grave Mysteries and Crime Watch Daily with Chris Hansen.
Get one year of unlimited digital access for $159.99
#ReadLocal

Only 44¢ per day

SUBSCRIBE NOW