Zachary Alam, a participant in the U.S. Capitol protest on January 6, 2021, has been sentenced to eight years in prison, one of the longest terms handed out among participants. He has already been in pretrial detention for around four years.
Alam was frequently spotted leading demonstrators on January 6, and he entered Capitol premises through a shattered window. Inside, he assaulted law enforcement and caused property damage. A jury convicted him in September on eight felony counts alongside a series of misdemeanors.
In court, Alam asserted that he acted on what he believed was right, despite acknowledging the illegality of his actions. Wearing an orange prison uniform on Thursday, he reiterated his beliefs about the 2020 election being illegitimate. “Trump just won the presidential election less than 48 hours ago,” he said. “Was the 2021 transfer of presidential power warranted? I don’t think so.”
Alam has been a point of discussion in “fedsurrection” theories, notably appearing on Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson, which suggested he was collaborating with police. He told the court that he was moved to solitary confinement after other January 6 inmates began to believe he was a “confidential human source.”
Throughout his trial, both federal prosecutors and Alam’s defense rejected allegations of him being a federal agent. Instead, they described him as a fervent Trump supporter acting of his own accord. Judge Dabney L. Friedrich dismissed any evidence of such cooperation.
Alam’s legal representation emphasized his mental health in pursuit of a lesser sentence. Prosecutors had asked the court for 11 years.