The David Knight Show - Exclusive Interview: Ex-Navy Contractor Turned J6 Political Prisoner Reveals Shocking Government Frame-Up
Episode Date: February 11, 2025   In an explosive interview, newly pardoned January 6th protester, Timothy Hale Cusinelli, reveals the dark underbelly of his ordeal   Describing his time in what he calls the "DC Gulag," C...usinelli paints a grim picture of solitary confinement, denied rights, and a kangaroo court trial where justice was anything but blind.   From alleged government plants inciting violence to a biased jury selection process, every step of his journey through the legal system screams a tale of political vendetta.   His account raises chilling questions about freedom, democracy, and the lengths to which powers will go to silence dissentIf you would like to support the show and our family please consider subscribing monthly here: SubscribeStar https://www.subscribestar.com/the-david-knight-show Or you can send a donation throughMail: David Knight POB 994 Kodak, TN 37764Zelle: @DavidKnightShow@protonmail.comCash App at: $davidknightshowBTC to: bc1qkuec29hkuye4xse9unh7nptvu3y9qmv24vanh7Money should have intrinsic value AND transactional privacy: Go to DavidKnight.gold for great deals on physical gold/silverFor 10% off Gerald Celente's prescient Trends Journal, go to TrendsJournal.com and enter the code KNIGHTBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/the-david-knight-show--2653468/support.
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Joining us now is one of the J6 prisoners who has been pardoned by President Trump.
His name is Timothy Hale Cusinelli, I think is the right way to pronounce that.
Let me know if that's the right way or not.
32 years old, Navy contractor, held a government security clearance.
And he was there on January the 6th.
I want to talk to him about what happened there and especially about what happened with his trial and with his prison
sentence, and of course, the way he was attacked in the media. He was significantly attacked in
the media. So joining us now is Timothy Hale Custinelli. Did I pronounce your last name
correctly? That would be correct, sir. Good job. Thank you. Okay, well, great. I'm glad you're out
of prison, and I've looked at this, and just so you know where I'm coming from, I strongly encourage everybody to stay away.
I was worried that it was going to be an entrapment.
And it turned out to be a bigger entrapment than I had anticipated in terms of 1,500 people being given excessive charges and excessive punishment for what happened there.
But I'd like to get your story.
Tell us a little bit about why you went.
Well, sure. You know, look, I was a, you know, I was a government employee. I served the country
for about 12 years by the time of my arrest. I majored in history. I very much believed in civics.
You know, I went to the Capitol in a suit and tie, and, you know, we'll get into how they sort of,
like, did a frame job on me.
But, you know, I went there thinking that essentially it was just going to be a historic day.
From my perspective, it would either be the last public speech President Trump would give
as president, you know, with his one term, or if they did pull a rabbit out of their hat,
then this would theoretically be the beginning of his second term. I thought it was going to
be a historic day regardless. And so i just went there to support
the president and that was essentially it i didn't even realize there was going to be any protests
over at the capitol i thought it would just be the speech at the ellipse so that was a that was
a surprise to me i think that's what a lot of people expected yeah tell me a little bit more
about what would the rabbit be that they would have pulled out that day yeah i mean theoretically if you know if mike pence had done you know as uh as
trump and his supporters had wanted if he if they had done that and they let's say theoretically
they challenged the uh you know this the certification then you know maybe they could
have sent it back to the states.
They could have analyzed if there was fraud, anything like that.
I mean, that was pretty much it.
And it's not to say that it was a 100% guarantee.
I don't think anybody really felt in their heart that everybody in Congress was going
to do everything that they wanted.
But it would have been nice to at least seen it challenged.
Because it seemed that uh from election night
onward there was just sort of an attempt to brush things under the rug that people saw as
inconsistencies and things like that and so a lot of people were there the judges were just running
from they didn't even want to hear the case you know and i i i got fired because i said on the
14th of december i said okay well that it. They've turned in the electoral college.
Their window for contesting this stuff is essentially over.
Thomas Massey said if they'd sent us a second slate of electors, and of course, there were four Republican states, Republican-controlled legislatures, and two of them had Republican governors as well. And if they had taken, since they were getting thrown out of the courts left and right,
and none of the judges wanted to put themselves in that position, it was too hot of a potato.
I said, if they would have made their cases to these Republican legislatures,
they might have gotten enough of them to send a second slate of electors.
And then, as Thomas Massey said, we would have had a choice.
Do we go with a slate of electors that's coming from the governor
or the slate of electors that's sent by the state legislature?
But they didn't do any of that.
So that was the thing.
I said, on the 14th, I said, well, that's it.
No, there's not any official slate that you could even make the case for that.
Because you could always make the case that the legislature could,
had the power to do
that and that's where they would have heard the determination if there'd been a difference between
the legislature and the executive branch in these different states as to which slate of electors
they were going to have but yeah that's all beside the point uh so you went because it was going to
be a historic day uh you went to overthrow the government in a suit and a tie right unarmed as all these people did right yeah disavow no
yeah no it's a you know yeah then that's the thing it doesn't even make sense from uh even when you
look at people who went in there like body armor and stuff like that people wore armor for instance
because they previously stopped the steel rallies people were getting stabbed by antifa there's a
context to this you know i mean if you know trump supporters
you know that there's they if if that was their motivation they mostly wouldn't have gone unarmed
or armed with flagpoles you know and so yeah the narrative makes no sense that's right so so after
the day how long before you start to um have engagement from the b Biden Department of so-called justice. How long did that take?
Right.
It took about a week.
So I was a union rep.
You had mentioned I worked for the Navy.
I was a Navy weapons contractor.
So I secured Navy bases and the kind of facilities that rearmed warships.
So I was a security contractor there and I was also a union rep.
So I had a very poor relationship with the management of that company because they violated, it doesn't matter, but basically they violated laws that protected veterans.
And so we were always at odds.
And I was actually working with my local congressman, Chris Smith, who threw me under the bus after the fact.
Was he Republican or Democrat?
Yeah, he's a rhino
he's a rhino out of new jersey and um but so management tipped off ncis that i was at
i was in dc not necessarily that i did anything wrong but just that i was there and so they came
to my home my apartment on the base looking for me and then ended up finding my roommate and they
strapped a wire to him to get him to uh incriminate me wow and uh they went to extreme lengths to to try to set me up yeah uh so um they have been
wearing a wire and they tried to get him to get you to say certain things did were they successful
in that uh you could say yeah i had been joking i've been drinking that night somewhat out of depression.
I was like, that did not go the way I wanted it to go that day.
And I was just kind of like, you know, waiting.
And just, you know, they were saying each day just got a little bit worse in the coverage.
These guys were insurrectionists, 20 years in prison.
It's like, oh, boy.
My roommate was a BLM guy, but we had gotten along.
We'd known each other for years
we lived together for years and so typically saying incendiary stuff was like not out of you
it was not strange in our household um and so yeah he had basically recorded me saying yeah i think
there might be a civil war and then when i said i don't actually want a civil war they cut that out of the transcripts
so they could use it to deny me bail so I get denied bail and I get sent to solitary confinement
in what they call the DC gulag so uh yeah so how long were you in the DC gulag before you got a
trial 16 months a year and a half before I got a trial in solitary. And then I was there for about two years in total
before I finally, after I was convicted, I was sentenced to four years. So I did another year
in the Bureau of Prisons. But President Trump signed what's called the First Step Act.
So that gave me first step credits if I took classes and stuff. So I only had to do three
years on a four-year bid. So that was nice. Tell us what it was like in the D.C. Gulag for 16 months.
You know, there's, how do I put, you know, when we first got there, there was solitary confinement.
So you were in your cell 23 hours a day.
You barely got out an hour to shower or to use the phone.
You couldn't get legal visits. They used COVID-19 as an excuse
not to provide you visitation with family, to see your lawyer. If your lawyer did show up and
he did get in the building, sometimes they would just not allow you to leave the unit.
It's funny enough, Marjorie Taylor Greene came to the jail to inspect her conditions
in the summer of 2021, and they turned her away,
the same day, they also turned my lawyer away. So they would play games like that. You couldn't
have religious services. You couldn't receive communion. There was basically no medical care.
And what's interesting is that a lot of these things, they would hold you hostage.
They would basically use, well, COVID was sort of a Trojan horse
for the
facility in D.C. to deny you any civil rights
but what they would also do, it was very tricky
they would offer you
they would offer you your rights if you
took the COVID shot, so they would basically hold
you hostage to the jab
so, oh, you want to go
to church? Okay, well
you just take the shot and you can go.
And granted, not everybody took it.
A few people did, and they lied to them.
So it was all just carrot and stick.
So even after they took the shot, they wouldn't give them the promised privileges, right?
Yeah.
Wow.
Yeah.
Yeah.
We were segregated from the rest of the unit as well.
So we were forced to be and especially in my i wanted to
be in general population actually because we would have had more freedom but they actually segregated
us in a facility called ctf you had cdf and then there was ctf cdf is central detention facility
that's the main jail we were in central treatment facility it was a literal madhouse it was a nut
house um feces hair clumps stuff jammed into the walls and the corners of everything.
And the guards actually admitted they cleared that out for us weeks before January 6th.
They knew we would be there.
So they planned the houses there.
It was a setup.
Absolutely was.
How big was the cell that you were stuck in for 23 hours a day i'd say it's
about seven feet you know so yeah seven by seven yeah roughly and uh of course uh you're in solitary
confinement uh you don't have any anything to read uh you don't do you have a light uh what
kind of uh situation is it with that uh yeah there's a there's a light switch um and then but i mean
you don't necessarily need it even though it's uh dark in your cell you know there there's
artificial lighting throughout the entire unit non-stop um and even outside of dc like i went
to a facility before that the marshals move you around the country they call it diesel therapy
they just bounce you around until you settle down where you're supposed to be i remember they did
that to a congressman and and just destroyed his body doing that he transferred him from one place
to the other yeah yeah i mean and that's that's what it was so before dc i was in a place called
northern neck virginia or the warsaw facility and they had they just kept the lights on yourself
24 7. so i mean good luck sleeping and there lights on your cell 24 seven. So, I mean,
good luck sleeping. Um, and there's just other things like that, but, uh, yeah, I mean, you,
in DC, your cell had a toilet, um, a bed quote unquote, you know, it's, it's basically a metal
bunk bed and you have like an inch thick foam mattress and, uh, you have a three inch wide
window, but there's nothing to look at.
The only view I had out of my window was a graveyard.
There's a graveyard right outside the jail.
So it was kind of not the most optimistic thing.
Do you have, and you don't have anything that you can read either, right?
No, no.
Unfortunately, eventually we got some Bibles mailed in,
but asking for that was like, you know, pulling pulling teeth the jail didn't want to provide us and even to have like our own bible studies as opposed to getting to
have religious services um you know that that was a complete pain in the butt um and there were these
tablets these black tablets they were like these bricks and you could theoretically find stuff on there
to read or to look at but they charged you for it so in order to have entertainment tablet access
you'd have to have money on your books and that wasn't exactly that wasn't exactly beneficial for
people who were uh broke you know so wow everything everything behind a paywall so that's
the dc gulag and then you spend 16 months there. Then they transfer you to another prison facility.
What was that like?
Better in some regards.
You know, prison and jail are different animals.
We were pretrial detainees in D.C.
In prison, though, I was on Fort Dix.
So it's funny because in the Army, I actually worked on Fort Dix here in New Jersey, but there was also a prison to it so that on the prison side um it's not what i was expecting you know working on the army base
i would be told when i was a reservist they would say oh you should get a part you should get a job
uh working for the uh working for the prison as a guard or something it's a white collar prison like
okay i figured that meant that it would be like financial crimes and stuff. But no, it's all child molesters and illegal aliens.
It's like used as an ICE facility, and it's a low security for all kinds of degenerates.
So that was interesting.
But, you know, it was just killing time.
Then I could read.
So that's what I did, nonstop.
I'm surprised that, you know, kind of a low security, white collar prison would have child molesters in it.
I guess they don't consider pedophilia to be much of a big deal.
You'd be surprised what the BOP considers them.
Yeah, they're a protected class, actually, unfortunately.
Wow.
Yeah.
Well, tell us a little bit about the trial and about the charges that they brought against you.
Well, first of all, tell us what you did that day besides wearing a suit and tie.
Did you get involved in any kind of violent altercation? um well first of all tell us what you did that day besides wearing a suit and tie um did you
get involved in any kind of violent altercation was there any property destroyed uh did you
go into the building tell us a little bit about that yeah so i actually did go inside the capitol
i was in there for approximately 40 minutes so for that time i wandered throughout hallways uh
i took some selfies with statues in an area called the Crypt.
Someone had put a Trump flag in a statue's hand.
I'm like, that's pretty funny.
I'm not going to lie.
I danced in an area called the Capitol Visitor Center.
And basically, I just goofed around until the cops told us to leave.
And that was pretty much it.
So no, I never engaged in violence.
I never damaged anything.
I didn't steal anything.
I didn't really do any of that stuff but um what i was charged with was a statute called 18 usc 1512
for those who haven't been up to date on the way they prosecuted us this is a statute that relates
to tampering with documents and so the original statute is called tampering with a witness goes back to the 80s after the enron scandal they adjusted it they amended it with a
sub statute in 2003 and they call obstruction of an official proceeding it has to do with tampering
with documents or destruction of documents that's the context enron um they never applied that to
protesters rioters whatever you want to call it.
And so after January 6th, the Biden administration starts indicting a bunch of people with this fake felony charge
and basically saying that because both houses of Congress were in session together,
that was obstruction of an official proceeding, ignoring the fact none of us tampered with documents or even attempted to.
I got convicted under that, and basically all they had to do was show that there was evil intent.
The term is corrupt intent, which, you know, I mean, what is corrupt?
Typically, if you don't mean it's evil, then you mean that there's some sort of self-gain,
like a corrupt judge or a corrupt executive.
That didn't really, none of that even made sense.
And so last year, actually,
the Supreme Court finally overturned the application of that statute. They overturned
1512, I believe, in June of 2024. And that's great, but myself and many others spent years
in prison over a statute that turned out to not be applicable. So that's that.
How did that affect your sentence before Trump pardoned you?
You know, I would have done a year max because my other charges were misdemeanors. So I mean,
the maximum you can do for misdemeanors a year, I mean, they theoretically could have stacked it
consecutively, but they don't typically do that. You get sentenced concurrently. The longest charge
or longest sentence per charge, that's what your time is based on. But because I had that fake felony, they're guidelines, but typically the judge will go within a certain sentencing range based on point systems that they use to calculate how bad your offense was, your characteristics, this, that, and the other thing.
And I should have gotten approximately like 17 to 21 months, even after going to trial and losing.
But instead, because my judge had to make an example out of me,
he sentenced me to 48 months or four years. It's over twice my guidelines. So because of that
felony, yeah, they were able to put me behind bars for years and years and years. And I got screwed,
but I kind of got lucky compared to a lot of my other friends. I have friends from the D.C. gulag who got, you know, eight years, 12 years, 14 years. And so that felony was used to destroy people. It was
basically a Trojan horse, just like the COVID stuff. And they used that and they gave it to
President Trump on top of it. For those who aren't aware, they charged in the D.C. case,
they charged President Trump with 1512. It was just a weapon.
The whole time, it was a weapon.
Of course, he didn't do any time.
How do you feel about the fact that you weren't pardoned before he left?
You know, I mean, I've thought about that, but I don't think he even knew enough about things going on at the time.
Like I said, I was a history major.
I look back at pardons, and I don't think they should be issued flagrantly.
I think back to Adams, and this is why I think pardons were a good idea.
But when I think back to Adams, you know, he actually seriously studied the cases of people,
like during the Frays Rebellion, for instance.
And it's a funny quote where he says, these weren't insurrectionists. studied the cases of people like during the phrase rebellion for instance and
yeah it's a funny quote where he says these were these weren't in these
weren't insurrectionists these weren't you know this wasn't a rebellion
basically he says that this was a this was just a riot and these were these
were miserable that he says miserable Germans who are as ignorant of our laws
as they were of the language something like that and so you know it's I mean
it's kind of funny but you know I do think clemency and mercy are things that are important. I don't, I don't think
even he suspected, um, that the DOJ under the Biden administration was going to go so balls to
the walls, uh, balls to the wall after he left office and go as hard as they did i don't think most americans did and i
think years into it people were like why are they still doing this and so i mean again i can't read
the man's mind well there is a lot of discussion there was discussion that was going on with his
personal attorney um cipollone and others who were advising him not to pardon people so they
were aware of it they were talking about it it. And of course, you know, there were long historical precedents, even if you go back to the Insurrection
Act. The Insurrection Act, which was done after the Civil War, was really kind of an act of
vengeance against Confederate soldiers. And you had Andrew Johnson pardon them all blanket,
you know, just blanket pardon because we're not going to continue the Civil War.
And then, but within Trump's lifetime, it was pretty well known what happened with Richard Nixon being given a pardon by Gerald Ford.
And so we had precedents that were there.
And so I was kind of wondering, since he decided that he would pass over it, you know, I suspected
that it was his
lawyer uh giving him advice that um you know this is you don't want to kick the ant bed by pardoning
these people because i'll come after you well they came after him anyway although he didn't
go to jail for any of this stuff like everybody else but um it was i don't know i i thought it
was an an interesting thing i always i i wonder wonder how the people that were there saw it.
I saw it as a total betrayal of all of you, but you think that he really didn't know.
Yeah, and here's another thing to consider, too.
Playing devil's advocate here, if most of us were just given misdemeanors for trespass or things like that, not that we should have been, but if that were the case, if the law was applied even handedly, I don't think it would have been such a humanitarian disaster. crazy and they engaged in what they call the shock and awe campaign. And they started, you know,
raiding people's homes, you know, raiding people at gunpoint, putting rifles in, you know,
defendants' wives' faces. Oh, yeah. You know, there are defendants whose wives had miscarriages
because of how they were raided. And so they really went over the top in order to, and keep
in mind, I'm not defending rioting,
but when you look at the riots before and even after, because they were rioting in DC after we
were in jail, you know, and so it's like, when you look at it all, it was a strange precedent
that was set. And keep in mind one thing also as well. I don't think President, I think,
I think there were elements that set President Trump up just like they did with us. I don't think President Trump, I think, I think there were elements that set President
Trump up just like they did with us. I don't think he knows, I didn't, I don't think he knew
at the time why the riot actually happened. The media had framed everything as, oh, we were
insurrectionists, we're trying to overthrow democracy, blah, blah, blah. The average person
today probably still doesn't know what actually started the riot. And the riot started because
Capitol Police officers were throwing ordinance into the crowd and they incited a riot
so it was a result of it was a result of excessive force but that video wasn't even made public at
the time so you know i give him leeway with that because i don't think he knew the full story i
think they were lying to him as much as they were lying about us frankly yeah what did you think
he meant when he said meet meet me at the Capitol?
What was his intention?
He didn't go, but what do you think he was going to tell people to do?
I think it probably would have been just the same thing.
It would have just been people there listening to a speech
or waiting to see if anybody in Congress challenged the results.
I don't think it would have been anything more than that. Keep in mind, you have to make assumptions about the chronology of events.
So there were people knocking barriers over at the Capitol before Trump's speech was even over.
And when I was there, if you look at the video, you can hear people are confused because there
are people already leaving his speech in mid-speech at the ellipse. There are caravans of people walking down city blocks to get to the
Capitol. And you can actually hear in one of my videos from my phone, someone behind me is like,
there's some sort of a march going on. And so there were people doing this even before he said
we were going to go to the Capitol to peacefully and patriotically protest. You have to assume
that he knew people were going to knock barriers down or something like and patriotically protest. You have to assume that
he knew people were going to knock barriers down or something like that. And I don't think he did.
I think that actually it made him look really, you know, it made him look bad and it actually
was embarrassing. And it actually, I think it set him up for a lot of legal trouble.
So I don't, you know, I don't blame President Trump for January 6th. I actually think that if you look at the Metro PD's body cameras, they had backup cops show up at the Capitol and they're telling each other, they set us up, they set us up.
And they're like, yeah, absolutely.
And so the question is, who's they?
Because the Capitol Police at the time answered to Nancy Pelosi and the Metro PD answered to Mayor Bowser. And so if there was a setup, and I think there was, I think it was elements within the D.C. infrastructure.
I think it was elements within the government.
And I don't even think it was just Democrats.
I think there were probably elements within the GOP leadership, like McConnell maybe.
I don't know that.
But the way that both parties were sort of in unison with the insurrection narrative,
I wouldn't be surprised.
I think there was collusion the entire time.
And I mentioned, you know, the way that they weaponized the 1512 charge.
The courts co-signed all that.
So really, all three branches, I think, you know, whether it be the administration,
even the executive with the FBI, we know there were FBI agents in the crowd.
I know some of their names.
I found one of their houses here in New Jersey. You know, we've identified feds. There were feds there.
You have them on satellite phones. You have CHSs, confidential human sources. We know that
the infiltrated groups like the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, we know their names. So yeah, I mean,
it was definitely an operation. I don't blame President Trump whatsoever. I think he was set up as much as we were.
The question is, to what extent was the infiltration?
And I'm hoping with this new administration they investigate that because a lot of lives—
I think the people in the corrupt Justice Department and the judges and all the rest of them, they need to be impeached.
They need to be tried and imprisoned, I believe.
And I think it's interesting that Bideniden did not pardon merrick garland um if anything he was running this whole thing so he
needs to do it but i go back and i look at you know we say that that trump was an innocent victim
and all this stuff he made more money with that save america grift that he did than he did in the
presidential campaign that he had and the guy that I worked for was running Stop the Steal.
And he made millions of dollars off of that.
So, you know, they kind of directed people in it.
I was trying to get people to go away from it.
I could see this all coming from months ahead of time.
I knew the people who were running this Stop the Steal stuff.
And I knew what they were in it for
and i knew they didn't care about the supporters that they were setting up they just wanted the
money with all that stuff but but let's talk a little bit about um the um uh what happened with
the uh with the trial aspect of it you said you went to trial rather than taking a plea bargain
um how do you feel about the way the trial progressed? Because I've covered a
lot of these political stories, and whenever the government's got a beef against you, and it's
something that is highly politicized by them, I know that they pull out all the stops. What was
the trial like? It was very surreal, and I'll start with this you have what are called voir dire hearings and so this is jury selection
and
you only get so many strikes
for cause where you
can be like no we can't use that guy they're biased
no we can't use that person we can't
correct any errors there with that
potential juror jury selection
was bananas because everybody
on my jury more or less
worked for the government.
Yeah.
They worked for the Department of...
Yeah.
Who was your lawyer?
Did you represent yourself or did you have a lawyer?
I had a lawyer.
His name was Jonathan Crisp.
He's a JAG officer.
So he was a colonel in the U.S. Army and he represented me then.
And yeah, it was crazy.
It was crazy.
These were all the DOJ employees.
They actually tried to put someone
from Chuck Schumer's office,
one of his aides on my jury.
And people, like, it's crazy.
I mean, you would think DC is biased enough as it is
because of the voting,
like the voting pattern there,
the political bent.
And then you would think it's even more biased, course because it was so dc's so condensed obviously
everyone there was familiar with january 6 maybe not the truth but certainly the reporting on it
and the perception but they were especially biased because they would tell you they're biased
like hey can you be fair and impartial in this jury no okay sounds good to me you know
like that's that that seriously well i have the transcripts it was that bad um they made their
hostility towards us and president trump very well known how did the jag officer feel about this this
wasn't his first rodeo how do you feel about the whole process the jury selection the trial
everything do you feel like it was rigged yeah I mean look
even he was surprised by how that trial went down because you know look lawyers are not particularly
known for being like you know particularly uh right-wing partisans you know they work within
a system they it's similar to any you know professional I think that they
I think that they like the uh the thrill you know I think that they like being excellent they they want to be the best and they like to win cases and so winning is their prerogative and now granted a
lot of them are you know they make backroom deals with uh you know the prosecutors and stuff like that but this wasn't that situation
we fought um and we couldn't get our evidence uh we we we it's crazy because you know i ended up
winning like with the sentencing enhancements later on but during that trial and even before
that with motions the court would give the prosecution anything they wanted. We wanted to change a venue because of bias? Denied.
We wanted bail? Denied.
We wanted to suppress this? Denied.
And so it really was that the court was colluding with the prosecution.
And that's really what it was.
It was an uphill battle.
We weren't going to win.
We did what we could, but at the end of the day,
we put the government to its burden.
The government technically won by convicting me, but they still didn't actually prove their case.
And so, I mean, it is what it is. Let me ask you about evidence, you know, exculpatory evidence like, you know, video cameras and things like that.
Were you able to get any of that, or did they deny that to you?
You said that, you know, they were selective, and of course we know they were they cherry picked what they wanted to
show um what happened with that aspect of it so for and they're still hiding video by the way um
i thought they had all that stuff no that means they got all that stuff i don't know what happened
with that i think that they released some cctv it's frankly, it's not even, it's barely a fraction of what exists.
They're still hiding thousands and thousands of hours of video.
We eventually, in the DCGL, eventually we would get access to another tablet.
It basically was this clear tablet where we could stream video off of a website called evidence.com. And basically this is where they had all the CCTV and,
and MPD body cameras,
though not really all of it.
They would secretly at night drop like thousands of hours.
Like they would have video dumps in the middle of the night,
especially after people's trials,
after they'd already been convicted,
exculpatory evidence.
And yeah,
basically they hid this under protective orders as well.
So if you're a defendant and you want to go public like hey the the reason the cop I
allegedly assaulted because they were murdering a woman at the lower West
Terrace tunnel yeah the video of her getting killed right here that's under
protective order I can't tell the public you know stuff like that was suppressed
the government did not want the video getting
released to the public they put protective orders on it the the judges imposed it and um
this was really just a way to gatekeep and and keep the truth under wraps and so uh yeah i mean
it was it if it wasn't an uphill battle already it certainly was that it was almost impossible
for some people to build their cases not everybody was
uh you know incarcerated with us we actually did eventually using that system we kind of broke into
it a little kind of hacked it a bit you know quote unquote hack not really but we found we found you
know back doors to find certain things without actually having to sign the protective orders
and we were able to watch thousands of hours of video. And we proved that there were provocateurs in the crowd,
but also the cops initiated the riot.
But people on the outside, a lot of people who did get bail,
they didn't have access to this sort of thing.
And basically, when you're a defendant,
if you're not actively spending hours upon hours watching video,
you only have what the government provides you.
So the government will provide you their worst case scenario and they'll give you nothing
exculpatory.
It's called a Brady violation.
And so, yeah, basically you're screwed.
You know, if you're looking for anything that actually it works in your favor, you have
to go find it yourself.
And most lawyers on the outside didn't know what they were looking for.
They basically only had to go off of what the government offered them and those of us on the inside who did see the
truth we were censored and we couldn't tell the public and so for for again even to this day and
this is what's so messed up and this is why like i look at the house republicans like what are you
doing because i don't know if you heard this but like they started releasing a lot of CCTV a year or so ago on a Rumble page.
But they started blurring people's faces.
And you think, well, that's interesting because the FBI already has all this video and they have facial recognition software.
Why are they blurring people's faces?
The sedition hunters have been finding people just with pictures of their clothing.
Like, that's interesting. And I think that they were hiding confidential sources and feds inside
the crowd. Personally, that's my opinion. They stopped doing it, but that was just weird. It
just seemed like there were just constantly these barriers to hide the video from the public so that
they can't find out what actually happened that day. Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. Yeah. I was not surprised
at all. As a matter of fact um
the morning of january the 6th my program runs in the morning all this stuff kicked off about an
hour and a half after the program and i warned everybody for the final time i said stay away
from it it is going to be filled with agent provocateurs they're going to provoke something
uh i knew this was going to be happening because of the things that alex jones was doing when i
work for him and and all the rest of the stuff so i knew that was going to be happening because of the things that Alex Jones is doing when I work for him and all the rest of the stuff.
So I knew that was going to happen.
I've been saying it for weeks and weeks on air there before he fired me.
But I could see this stuff shaping up right after the election happened.
They immediately started talking about how they're going to raise money.
It's going to be like falling off a log.
And certainly they did raise a lot. Let's talk about the personal attacks on you.
More than anybody else, I think, when I Google your name, I see, you know, in conjunction with January the 6th, I see the BBC, everybody coming after you as the Hitler mustache capital rioter.
And they put pictures up of you.
And let me see if I can pull this one up here uh yeah now this was this a joke the one that they've got there because i mean it looks
like you're um well you tell me what was the circumstance of this what were you doing with this
right it was a joke it was a joke and i did not go to the Capitol looking like that. And so just to be perfectly clear, that's from a year before January 6th.
I was an Internet comedian, comedian, if you want to call that. I was a satirist my whole life.
I produced satire. And so that was that was basically political.
Those political satire aimed at Governor Phil Murphy of New Jersey with the COVID lockdowns.
Long story short, he did an interview with Tucker Carlson, and Tucker Carlson said, yeah,
COVID's bad and all that, but what about the Constitution?
And Phil Murphy says, well, Tucker, that's above my pay grade.
I remember that.
Yeah, and so I did a series of reaction videos on YouTube and stuff like that where i i posed like that and i'm like
yeah emergency powers why would you ever question the state right on you know and it was it was
ironic um but that gets completely lost in translation it was a year before january 6.
i did not go to the capitol with a hitler mustache i was like i said i was there in a suit and tie
the cctv shows this too but if you look at
the pictures it's just like well that doesn't match up at all that doesn't comport with reality
and the reason they did that was well one one again to further prejudice any potential jury
two to smear me in the public three to cover up the fact that i was entirely peaceful and I didn't actually do anything at the Capitol.
And four, and this is, again, take it with a grain of salt, but I think they were trying to frame me as like the next Timothy McVeigh or a far right extremist who was a potential security
threat. The FBI just came to my house last week to return my property after I was arrested for
January 6th. Well, the problem is they didn't return any of my property.
All my property, according to them, is still in the D.C. office.
This was the Newark office here in New Jersey.
And the property they gave me, they returned to me, was a postcard.
And it was like, well, that's interesting.
I never got this postcard.
I didn't even know it existed.
Well, what's the postcard?
Well, the return address is to the Russian embassy in Washington, D.C. Well,
that's weird. There were phone numbers there for me to get free money, two numbers, one out of
Nevada, one out of Florida. And it basically has a bunch of racial epithets on it. And it's like,
well, this is interesting. And so what's interesting is that the officers or the FBI
agents, they said oh yeah
this came for you right after you got arrested it's like well i never got it well they mailed
it to the base i was living on the navy base i protected uh well i still never got it and there
was again the address was not towards my apartment it was specifically to the navy
and um it what i suspect is that if i had not if i had done better during my bond, if I had been given bail,
I think that they were attempting to set me up as some sort of foreign asset or something like that.
I did get bail by a magistrate judge, but the district court overruled it when the government appealed.
So I had to go all the way to D.C. That's why I had to go there in the first place from Jersey to D.C.
And when I was in D.C., I started getting suspicious mail from white nationalist organizations
asking me if I wanted books and puzzles and stuff like that. I'm like, I'm not responding
to any of this mail. There were multiple times where the feds were using informants inside
the jail as well to try to get me to discuss plotting another Oklahoma City bombing, things
like that. They were trying to set me up as a domestic Oklahoma City bombing, things like that.
They were trying to set me up as a domestic terrorist.
That's one of the reasons why I, as a nonviolent defendant, was constantly being denied bail.
They were trying to set me up, and it just never went anywhere because I knew what they were doing.
So this is a very long way of saying they set me up and they framed me for a narrative.
Yeah, that's
that's all that you see when you look at it now the bbc article says they added over the course
of an internal navy probe into you uh that 34 your colleagues said that you had extremist or
radical views pertaining to jewish people minorities and women uh when did that internal
navy probe happen this happened after my arrest when I was no longer the union rep,
and they could basically squeeze my co-workers and my employees. So I'd mentioned the issue
with management at the company. They had been threatening people at the job, and I couldn't
protect them as the union rep anymore. Now, first off, that report is a lie.
They did not interview 44 of my coworkers. If you actually look at these NCIS reports,
which took months for me to actually get access to, and half of them are redacted, half of them
are, you can barely read them, the quality is so poor. And again, these, these interviews were being done all the way up until March of 2021.
I was arrested in January. Um, these weren't my coworkers. There are some of my coworkers,
but for the most part, these are just Navy petty officers. These aren't people. These are not my
coworkers. And so they manufactured a bunch of stuff. If you look at the, if you read the
questionnaires, they say things like, well, I heard from someone who heard this. This is all, it's all hearsay.
And it's just, it was completely manufactured.
I actually, when I finally got out of prison,
I was able to reach out to my actual coworkers
and they sent me screenshots and stuff that completely contradicts this.
I still talk to my coworkers.
I actually have released screenshots that show, again, I was the union rep.
They voted for me to protect their civil rights.
I won every minority vote.
Every black, Hispanic, and Asian employee voted for me to defend their civil rights for management
because they were the ones who were discriminating against them.
So this is complete nonsense.
It was just a narrative.
But again, this was created by NCIS.
And it's not like the TV show.
They're not the good guys.
NCIS, they're the feds.
They're basically the good guys. NCIS, they're the feds. They're basically the FBI
for the Navy. And again, the Navy and the FBI were both there to set me up. Yeah. And so that's one
of the reasons I wanted to have you on was because my sense was that from what I've seen in political
trials and things like that, that there uh exculpatory evidence is withheld
and smears and things like that against people i wouldn't have you on if i really
believed that that was the case but i wanted to hear it from you and give you a chance to respond
to these public attacks on you because they don't give your side of it they don't ever
talk to you and these hit pieces from the bbc of course they're getting lots of usa id money as
well let me ask you though um you know when, when you did the parody of the governor saying that this is above his pay grade, did you get involved in any protests in terms of, you know, one of the things that's always concerned me, it bothered me so much to see what was happening with lockdown, what I call medical martial law from the very beginning of it. And I didn't understand why people were so passive with
all this stuff. I mean, I didn't go do any protests, but I wouldn't comply with any of it
in the public sphere. And I looked at this as being predicated on money that was being paid by the by the president's by the Trump White House.
He gave money to the hospitals to identify to point finger people and say they had covid and gave them money to put them on the ventilators, gave them extra money to to do remdesivir and all the rest of the stuff and created the vaccine.
And I I knew where this stuff was headed because i had i was aware of all of the
war games that they'd done since dark winter on for 20 decades 20 years they had been doing this
stuff so i looked at all that stuff and and i felt that trump was complicit in it did you not feel
that he had any complicity in this i never really looked at it like that. The way I looked at it is that
it was an unprecedented sort of thing in terms of the sheer scale of all of it. And when you look
at the timeline of it, I don't feel like there was any attempt. I think a lot of these policies
back then were really, from the top at least, I think it was kind of assembled piecemeal. That's the way I look at
it. You know, Band-Aid here, you know, I think that that's really what it was. I think, though,
that it just provided a great opportunity for massive civil rights violations, especially more
so by the governors, right? So, I mean, eventually, after a certain point, mean they were still doing covet lockdowns in dc a year after uh january 6
so i can't put that squarely on the shoulders of president trump i do think that you know i mean
look hindsight's 2020 um i don't i don't think it was malice i i do think though that there might
have been people promoting it like fauci and stuff like that who are in the administration.
I mean, look, here's the fact that he put Fauci in power and gave him a medal on his last day.
And the fact that he continued to push the vaccine after people were dropping dead.
I covered that for years and up until just a few months ago, Trump was still pushing that.
You don't see that in hindsight.
Well, you see it in hindsight.
But again, that's kind of what I'm saying,
is that at the time, I think it was reactionary. I think it was reactive, not proactive.
You know, again, in terms of like malice versus, you know, whatever, I think that,
I think the administration now is more deliberate than it was the first time.
I think that Trump came into office expecting that it was,
even though the government was corrupt and it was the swamp, I think he still thought that there
would be more of a meritocracy sort of thing going on where he could find the best of the best and
trust experts. I'm not saying that that's correct. I'm just saying that that's what I think it was
now versus that versus now where he's kind of pulling people in like RFK or whoever from across the aisle to put them in.
That's sort of a meritocracy.
That's the way I look at it.
That's the way I kind of looked at it back then.
I'm a pragmatist as well.
I think corruption is inherent in government.
I think people are corrupt.
And so I don't see everything that I dislike or even the corruption that I, that I,
uh,
can identify.
I don't think that it's always some massive thing.
I think that I don't know how to,
again,
I don't want to get into like Montesquieu and stuff like that.
I just think that,
I think that in government you have to take it for how it is,
not how you want it to be.
I'm not an idealist.
Um,
I just,
I think that power is something that needs to be
wielded with suspicion. And I think maybe President Trump wasn't always as suspicious of the right
people that he should have been. But I don't think it was malice so much as it is that
there's so much of our system that is just opportunistic and selfish and corrupt.
And, you know, I wouldn't want to be the one in charge.
I'll say that.
Yeah.
Well, I guess we disagree on Trump.
But I certainly, you know, I think that we all need to be concerned, regardless of what our political understanding of this is and what we believe.
I think we all need to understand that a fair trial
is essential to all of us and that any of us can be caught up in a weaponized government like this.
I've seen it time and again, and it's in so many different areas. Whenever the government gets its
sights put on you, if they see you in contradiction of the goals that they want to achieve, they
will do anything to destroy you.
They will throw the Constitution out, and they are not bound by any of that.
And I think that is something that all of us need to be concerned about.
It's one of the reasons why, when we talk about the justice system, we want to make
sure that even the guilty people, we don't have a lynch mob.
We go through due process because we all want to have that due process.
We all want to have a fair trial.
And it bothered me a great deal as much as I had divorced myself from anything to do with Trump or the Stop the Steal stuff or the Save America grifts.
I hated to see what happened with the people on January the 6th,
and I hate the fact that the government can get away with this.
And so I hope that Trump is going to do it,
and I hope it's going to be done in a way that is not just personal revenge,
but in a way that's going to be real reform.
I think people need to be, the people who, the really dangerous people,
the people who really committed the insurrection
were the Department of Justice and the FBI people who dedicated so many resources to
persecuting their political enemies.
And I think they need to pay a price for this as a warning to other people, because if they
don't go to jail, if they don't lose their jobs and go to jail, then these other people
are going to feel
that they have a free pass to do the same thing for those that they want to come after. And so
I think going to jail would be a good thing. I think even for, you know, when the next administration
comes around, that some of the, you know, the people who are there now would be concerned that
when another administration comes, that's a left-wing Democrat version, there now would be concerned that when another administration comes,
it's a left-wing Democrat version, that they would be going to jail if they were to violate the law.
So maybe they'll abide by it a little bit more carefully than the FBI has in the past
because the FBI has been all over the place since its creation from what I know about it.
So it's good that you're out. I'm glad that you're out.
I'm glad that this has been pulled back. I hope we see some real reform. I hope we see some people
who did this stuff punished. Tell us a little bit about your life now and what is ahead.
Well, right now it's just sort of rebuilding. You know, it's an unfortunate reality that you
can't just pick up where you left off. So, I mean, I lost my military career.
I lost my, you know, contracting job.
But, you know, I think that adversity is there to make us stronger.
And so now that the pardons are out and everybody's out of jail and prison, I actually have been reconnecting a lot with all the men that I was incarcerated with.
And so we're working together.
I've been actually interviewing the guys I was locked up with, and I've been uploading
these interviews and calling it January 6 Unfiltered.
And these are going to serve as primary sources.
But long story short, we're actually writing a history book about this, about the D.C.
gulag and about really everything.
Because again, what they did to me is just a fraction of it. this about the DC gulag and about really everything about because again
what they did to me is just a fraction of it like they there were dozens and
dozens of men who got framed like that and so you know we're gonna correct the
narratives we're gonna talk about what actually happened that day from our
perspectives and we're going to record you know years and years of government
abuses in those jails the civil rights violations due process
and all that so uh yeah i've been covering this for a long time going back to the ammon bundy trial
and uh all the bundys and and how they railroaded that uh even um uh even people who tried to help
expose medical kidnapping uh marty gottesfeld and they put him in a communications management unit
along with francis schaefer anything a, you know, look into that.
Get some of the people to talk about that.
I haven't heard them.
I don't think they put the January the 6th people in any CMUs, but that is another thing.
It's kind of like a domestic Gitmo that they are setting up for political prisoners, and that's the way they're using this stuff.
Well, I'm so glad that you're out.
Timothy Hale Cusinelli, I'm glad that you're free. I know
that you are glad. And let's hope that we can get this information out and that we can get some real
reform and that we can get this before the eyes and ears of the American public to understand
what their government is actually capable of. First time you see it, it truly is amazing.
And I guess you experienced it for the first time when, you know, you saw it when you experienced it for the first time.
So thank you for joining us.
I appreciate that.
I appreciate you.
Thank you for having me.
Thank you.
Thank you.