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March 7, 2025 - Liberty Hangout - Kaitlin Bennett
13:15
J6 Prisoner Shares UNTOLD Story
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So when we were at January 6th, everyone was standing there peacefully.
We walk up to the line, everybody's standing in the line, and it's like they antagonize the crowd to get them to react.
And so we were there.
Yeah, the police.
And so they were spraying pepper spray across the fences and all the stuff and beat.
They would take batons and stuff.
So anyone who you put your hands up to block a baton or something, that's assault.
And so that was my assault charge was the pardoning of the January 6th insurrectionist.
The violence they partook on police officers.
It's like a thin blue line everything on the red side until it happens to be January 6th fugitive Olivia Pollack was on the run for 10 months until she was busted with two others last month hiding in Groveland, Florida.
Now fresh off her capture, she was out of jail again.
Olivia Pollock and Joseph Hutchinson were set to go to trial last spring, but both removed their ankle monitor and skipped town.
And I anticipate the government to come after them extremely hard and ultimately if convicted they will be sent to prison.
Just tell us who you are and what you just said to me when you came up.
Okay, I'm Olivia Pollock.
I just got out of DC jail after Trump pardoned the January 6ers.
And so we were there for 13 months.
It was me, my brother, and a friend of ours who were arrested in Polk County or Marion County, Florida, down from here.
I was arrested a year and a half or six months after January 6th, put on an ankle monitor.
And then after that, I was going to trial and was kind of sick of just the sham trials that everybody was going through and what they were putting everyone through.
So I said, okay, well, I'm going to make it, you know, I ain't going to play the game.
So I cut my ankle monitor off.
And just, you know, I don't know.
It probably, I don't regret it.
What did they charge you with?
They charge, it was assault charges.
I had a lot of trespassing charges, but it was the assault charge.
Anybody who, so when we were at January 6th, everyone was standing there peacefully.
And it was just the amount of absolute, like, we walk up to the line, everybody's standing in the line, and it's like they antagonize the crowd to get them to react.
And so we were there.
Yeah, the police.
And so they were spraying pepper spray across the fences and all the stuff and beat.
They would take batons and stuff.
So anyone who you put your hands up to block a baton or something, that's assault.
And so that was my assault charge was an assault.
No, not really.
But yeah, so we just got out.
But yeah, I think it's awesome what you do.
I've been watching you for a while.
And just, you know, just keeping people informed.
Yeah.
So you're really, you were really excited, one, when he won.
And were you like, oh, I'm going to be free?
Actually, honestly, like, through this whole thing, I believe God called us up to DC and we just saw the corruption for the last couple of years.
And we were just like, this is the last straw.
They're taking our First Amendment now.
And so I was like, we just felt led to go up there.
And then after that, we're like, you know, we were shocked the next day after it was all over of what the news turned it into immediately.
Like, I knew the news has been, you know, fake news for so long.
Right.
But to actually be against you and to see, like, oh my goodness, like how they twist the story.
And it's totally just there.
We had it ready to go, you know, within hours of it happening.
Almost like they thought it was going to happen.
So what was your ankle monitor for?
Where did they want to monitor where you were going?
So I was in, I had to like stay in certain counties in this area and I wasn't allowed to leave Florida without getting permission.
I was on Inkmon for a year and a half.
Almost two years.
How long were you supposed to be with that?
Well, just until trial.
Oh.
After trial.
But then you probably would have been sent to jail.
Oh, yeah, yeah.
Everybody, that's the thing.
Like, that was the whole thing.
We had friends that had charges that were even more ridiculous than our charges.
They had evidence that supported them.
They weren't allowed to bring their evidence to trial.
And then all the people that were allowed, like, they had their evidence suppressed.
And then the federal government can show whatever they wanted.
And it was stuff for other people.
Like, it wasn't even against them, but yet they were allowed to make this rhetoric and this whole, you know, storyline of leading up to it that had nothing to do with their actual charges, but yet they weren't allowed.
So It's like you couldn't even defend yourself.
And the ones that were in jail, like when we got arrested the next time, my brother was with me and he was looking at 40 years.
They wanted to give him 40 years for he had a couple of assault charges and a couple of other felons.
But it's just charges on stock stacked on top of each other, stacked on top of each other.
And your brother didn't touch anybody either.
He was in a little bit more in the front.
So there were quite a few people that were actually getting like trampled to death and stuff because of the crowd coming in.
And so he went in there and he stood in front of, you know, stood in between the police and the rest of the protesters.
And so he had a lot more charges.
And so, yeah, but I mean, it's like any, you know, red-blooded American that sees that happening to women and older.
There's a lot of older people there and stuff.
And they're just getting like the amount of CS gas and the amount of pepper spray that they threw right in the middle of the crowd to almost like rile it up.
You had nowhere to go.
Yeah.
And there was no way to get out.
And it was just, it was terrible.
Like, you're supposed our police officers should know how to de-escalate a situation.
And they did everything to escalate a situation.
And so that was the evil of it.
And, you know, we were up there for a cause.
And I think everybody has the right, no matter what it is, what you believe to stand up for what you, you know, and to make known what you think is right.
And this, you know, we the people.
But you're free now.
Oh, Christopher.
So thankful.
I bet you're like, oh my gosh, Trump, thank you so much.
Promises made, promises kept.
How long were you going to be in there without his pardon?
Probably, we were about to go to trial on the 27th.
We got our pardon on the 20th.
And I was probably looking at four years.
My brother was probably looking somewhere close to 20 to 15.
And so we literally got our lives back.
And yeah, and I, you know, praise the Lord that, you know, yeah, I'm so happy.
I wonder what like the liberals roaming around here would think knowing they have no idea they're passing like a January 6th insurrection.
Even in the DC jail, I was in there for, I was there for 12 months.
I was locked up for 13.
It took about a month to get up there, jumping from jail to jail.
And even a lot of the inmates in jail were like, oh yeah, Trump is the only one that's ever stood up for inmates or prison reform or anything because that's the thing.
I've never been in trouble in my life, never had any jail experience.
And you actually get eyes on the inside of our federal, you know, the BOP and the jails.
It's ridiculous.
Like how we run, how those systems are run.
It's a money racket.
And that's what, you know, I would have never known if it hadn't been for this.
So I, you know, I hate that it happened and my family had to go through it all, but it's very been very eye-opening as far as seeing how corrupt it really is.
You're probably like, I do not have anywhere near.
It's like you guys and me, we're not the same.
Not that they're bad people, but it's like, I did nothing.
I'm in here with them.
So that's crazy.
But a lot of them like support.
They were all about like when we would sit around and they watched the elections and different things with us with me and because I was in there by myself as far as the only January 6th person.
And they're like, yeah, we, you know, we hope he gets in for you.
I'm like, so I would tell them like, yo, you're rallying around me.
But it's neat.
Like you even coming down, like after we traveled down from Florida, we would stop at gas stations and stuff.
You're like, because I mean, we've been in for so long.
We were so excited.
Like, we just got out of here.
Hey, everybody.
That's awesome.
That's so good.
And like, I've had a lot of good feedback from it.
Well, I'm happy for you.
Welcome home.
And I hope that everything's going well for you and your family.
So glad to see you out here.
Another one is the pardoning of the January 6th insurrectionists.
Like watching a video of some of them that got off this week and like the violence they partook on police officers and Capitol Security.
It's like, you know, thin blue line everything on the red side until it happens to be from insurrectionists.
You know, stand with the police until.
And it's just kind of horrifying and a little scary to see.
So that one is like, wow, this is sort of unprecedented power episode.
Do you think all 1500 of them that were pardoned deserve to be in jail?
That's a blanket statement.
And so I don't want to say yes or no.
But a lot of them do deserve to be in jail and to do some sort of restorative action towards what they partook in.
Do you think it's fair to say like conservatives they wanted them pardoned but a lot of the Black Lives Matter rioters they wanted them in jail?
Do you think there's like kind of hypocritical?
I think it can be because you know like destruction of property is just destruction of property but the insurrectionist movement was oh it's like a little tentacle.
It has ideas too.
It's like let me have a turn was like an attack upon democracy in a very certain way.
And so I believe like one can say like what about what about isms all day, right?
And so it has to be a case-by-case basis.
So yeah.
Because I've seen a lot of people on the left say well you guys wanted the Black Lives Matter rioters locked up or whatever, but then these insurrectionists get out.
And do you think it should be fair across the board?
Like maybe they should all be in jail?
Well depending on what occurred, I would say yes.
I think the really awesome thing about America is we have due process.
Yeah.
You get arrested, you get arraigned, you are put in front of a judge.
You can have a lawyer to defend yourself.
All of these things go up for trial.
I think it's anything that starts with everyone should or they all need to or if they do then all of them.
Yeah, I think like we all need to think a little bit, right?
We can't just hear a statement and not be like, why?
Right.
Not be like why.
Five-year-olds, as you said earlier.
Five-year-olds ask why.
Why?
Where did we lose the curiosity?
So why is the sky blue?
There's other criminals that he also pardoned that should be in jail.
So who?
Insurrectionists.
Oh, okay.
So that would be another executive order that you would say.
Another type of weird hypocrisy, you know?
It's okay for the Americans to hurt people, but it's not okay.
They, what?
For Americans, for, I don't know, legal citizens to hurt police officers and storm the Capitol and do all that.
That's okay.
And they're okay.
Nope, no problem.
But people who smoke marijuana that are illegal and get caught and go to jail, nope, you're criminals, get out of here.
That's kind of not fair.
I think it's the fact that they're in the country illegally.
Yeah, so are you worried about the January 6th fuel?
Because there were 1,500 people that were pardoned.
Do you think any of them deserve to be pardoned?
I think those men might have got caught into the middle of it maybe doing this type of thing where everybody's, if they got arrested and they were just there, yeah.
If they were inside the Capitol, definitely.
They all should, not pardoned, they all should have had some sort of some sort of prosecution, some sort of punishment.
If they actually walked through and got into the Capitol building, yeah, they should get some kind of something, penalty, but if they were just caught up in there, but of course, anyone that hurt anybody, and it's not a long video, it's nothing.
And a lot of people pleaded guilty.
Those people pleaded guilty should serve out their sentences.
There was one man who was sentenced to 33 years, 33 years, and the judge took it down to 22.
Do you think someone who wasn't, he wasn't even there.
He wasn't even there.
His name's Enrique.
Do you think he deserved 22 years and to be called an insurrectionist and didn't deserve to be pardoned when he wasn't even at the Capitol?
What was he charged with?
I'm sorry, I'm not familiar.
He was called an insurrectionist.
I don't know the exact charges, but it was for 22 years.
Do you think that's a little overkill?
Well, that depends on the fact that you're not going to be able to do that.
I have to know what the circumstances are to you.
That's very vague.
I don't know the phrase.
I don't know.
Again, don't know if they thought he was involved with planning anything with the insurrection.
That's what they say.
That's what they say.
Well, yeah, he wasn't even there.
Well, it's impossible to say.
Don't know the details.
All right.
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