overall crime, and help put other criminals away, and of course, you re under no obligation to cooperate, you re under no obligation to agree to plead guilty and cooperate with prosecutors in their efforts, if you re innocent there is no way that shoe plead guilty, you go to trial, youth fight the charg, you get acquitted, because you didn t do it. but if you are guilty, and you not going to plead guilty and cooperate, you re instead going to go to trial and yourself convicted, well, this new decision to seek a terrorism enhancement, this new decision by justice department prosecutors shows what you re going to face in that instance, it could be something very much like what this guy, guy reffitt is now up against, the terrorism enhancement, their a asking for 15 years in prison, which is no joke. that could change everything for, you know, every other defendant who rightyt now is weighing their options, weighing the risks of going to trial, versus pleading guilty, asking for mercy, an
0 , so his son was 18, his daughter is 16. and on christmas eve, 2020, so that s like a month and a half after the like a month and a haf after th christmas eve 2020, his 18-year-old son went online to the fbi website to tips.fbi.gov and he submitted a tip to the fbi about his dad. he told them that his dad was planning to do some things violent, that his dad was not only calling for there to be violence against government officials, the son told the fbi when he submitted that online tip that he believed his plan, his dad was actually planning to do something violent himself he told the fbi his father was planning to quot that was christmas eve 2020. when that young man submitted that tip to0. the fbi. i didn t hear back initially. it took a couple of weeks. it took until after the january 6th 2021 attack on the u.s. capitol building, then the fbi decided.s that maybe that tip deserved some follow-up. by the time the fbi got in touch with the son, the son s father had not only trav