Nancy Pelosis Husbands Attacker Found Guilty

Nancy Pelosi’s Husband’s Attacker Found Guilty

From Le Figaro with AFP

Published 3 hours ago, updated 2 hours ago

U.S. Representative Nancy Pelosi attends the presentation of the President’s Memorandum on Advancing Worker Empowerment during Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation Leaders’ Week in San Francisco, California, November 16, 2023. FREDERIC J. BROWN / AFP

The suspect initially targeted the Speaker of the House of Representatives.

The conspiratorial assailant who attacked the husband of former Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi with a hammer in October 2022, a few days before the midterm elections in the United States, was arrested by a court on Thursday, November 16, according to several American media outlets San Francisco found guilty.

Jurors convicted David DePape of the violent attack in which he fractured Paul Pelosi’s skull and also found him guilty of attempting to kidnap Nancy Pelosi. His sentence, which could be up to life in prison, must be handed down at a later date.

Enthusiastic listener of right-wing extremist podcasts

Nancy Pelosi, then Speaker of the House of Representatives, was the third person in the American state and a regular target of conspiracy theories fueled by the far right. The trial showed how David DePape, a Canadian carpenter in an illegal and rather lonely situation, immersed himself in a world poisoned by disinformation before taking action.

He “intentionally targeted Nancy Pelosi because of her work and her role in our political system,” said prosecutor Helen Gilbert. During the trial, the 43-year-old recounted, sometimes in tears, how he became an enthusiastic listener of right-wing extremist podcasts. In particular, he shared publications on social networks in which he claimed that American elites were corrupt and engaged in pedophilia or that the 2020 presidential election was stolen from Donald Trump.

Paul Pelosi “was never my target and I’m sorry he was hurt,” assured David DePape. He said he attacked him when he realized his “plan had essentially been ruined.”

Nebulous plan

By breaking into the Pelosi couple’s home in San Francisco with rope, gloves and duct tape, he initially wanted to attack the parliamentarian who was in Washington that day. He admitted to investigators that he planned to “break her kneecaps” if she didn’t admit to the Democratic camp’s “lies.”

But the seizure of Nacny Pelosi was only the first step in a larger plan, the defendant admitted in court. His nebulous plan included other targets, including California Gov. Gavin Newsom, the president’s son Hunter Biden and actor Tom Hanks.

His defense centered on a portrayal of a man consumed by what he saw as an anti-corruption crusade. A sentence that led Mr. DePape to plead not guilty. Without denying the attack, his lawyers contended that he was primarily motivated by his conspiratorial beliefs and that he did not specifically target Ms. Pelosi in her capacity as a federal official – a key factor, prosecutors say, in both Attack as well as the attacks to understand planned kidnapping. “Mr. “DePape did terrible things (…), he committed serious crimes that night,” admitted his lawyer Angela Chuang. “But he did not commit these two crimes,” she stressed, due to the official position of Ms. Pelosi.

Robbery filmed

During David DePape’s intrusion, Paul Pelosi managed to alert the police, who intervened at the last minute. The attack was filmed by officers’ pedestrian camera.

Images that the octogenarian, who was in the hospital for almost a week and had to undergo surgery, does not want to see even more than a year after the events. “It was so traumatic. I did everything in my power not to experience this again,” he told the jury. The affair occurred just days before the midterm elections and highlighted the severity of the impact of disinformation in the election campaign and the deep divisions in America.

Despite the images, some members of the Republican Party mocked the attack or expressed some skepticism. The boss of . After this federal trial, David DePape now has to answer in California courts.