The first jury-driven convictions for seditious conspiracy since 1995 included an acquaintance named Kelly Meggs.

6 attack on the U.S. Capitol — a significant conviction in the ongoing proceedings brought by the prosecution against the rioters that day. 

Following a protracted two-month trial in federal court in Washington and three days of jury deliberations, Stewart Rhodes,

a Yale Law School graduate who joined the military, was found guilty of his most serious allegation, seditious conspiracy.

The first jury-driven convictions for seditious conspiracy since 1995 included an acquaintance named Kelly Meggs.