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AWOL lawyer leaves at least 17 suspected Trump-loving terrorists without counsel

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A attorney for more than a dozen defendants charged in the Jan. 6 coup d’état attempt at the U.S. Capitol has failed to appear in court for more than a week due to his , throwing some cases into disarray.

Attorney John Pierce, a MAGA-minded lawyer and outspoken anti-vaxxer, has been sending an associate — who is not licensed to practice law — to appear before judges in his absence. Pierce’s illness has left some clients without counsel for the time being and is putting the cases at a “standstill,” prosecutors said in court papers this week.

Pierce, currently represents more defendants charged in the riot than any other defense lawyer.

Among the Trump-loving terrorists that Pierce represents are Kenneth Harrelson, William Pepe, Nathanial DeGrave, Peter Schwartz, Leo Bozell IV, Christopher Worrell, Jeremiah Caplinger, Paul Rae, Kevin Tuck, Nathanial Tuck, James McGrew, David Lesperance, Casey Cusick, James Cusick, Jr., Stephanie Baez, Victoria White and Deborah Lee.

Deborah Lynn Lee became the third Jan. 6 defendant to fire John Pierce, who has vanished in bizarre circumstances.

At an August 25, 2021, hearing before the Judge Amit P. Mehta in United States v. Shane Jenkins, Ryan Marshall, an associate at Pierce’s law firm, stated that his boss represents Jenkins, but that a notice of appearance had not yet been filed.

In one of Pierce’s cases in federal court in Washington, a judge said he would appoint an attorney who could advise the client in Pierce’s absence. That was after the associate at Pierce’s law firm, who is not licensed as a lawyer and faces criminal charges himself in another matter, was unable to say when Pierce might be able to return.

At a hearing later Thursday for Pierce’s newest client, Pierce’s associate was joined by a licensed attorney he said he had found to step in until Pierce returns.

Known for formerly representing Kenosha shooter Kyle Rittenhouse in his homicide case, Pierce kept picking up clients fighting federal charges associated with the Jan. 6th siege of the U.S. Capitol. Rittenhouse’s family fired Pierce after questioning what he did with the millions he raised for the accused murderer. Now, Pierce’s relationship with some 17 other clients stands in limbo for health reasons.

Prosecutors repeatedly raised concerns this week that Pierce’s absence and the actions of his associate, Ryan Marshall, on the attorney’s behalf could cause problems in his cases, saying that Marshall had already done things he wasn’t allowed to do.

“Although Mr. Marshall has now appeared several times in Mr. Pierce’s place, he is not a licensed attorney and thus cannot appear in this Court, represent Mr. Pierce’s clients, or provide them with legal advice or services,” they wrote in one filing.

They also said it’s “unclear if and when Mr. Marshall will be able to obtain a bar license” since he is facing felony criminal charges including fraud in Pennsylvania state court.

Marshall, 31, is “currently faces felony criminal charges in two cases in the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County, Pennsylvania,” where he stands accused of defrauding a widow and her late husband when he clerked for a judge.

Phone numbers for Pierce’s law firm did not appear to be working Thursday and it was not immediately clear how to reach Marshall.

Marshall told a judge Thursday in the case against a Kentucky man, Peter Schwartz, that Pierce remains hospitalized but is starting to feel better and expects to be released within a week.

He didn’t elaborate on Pierce’s illness, but Marshall told a prosecutor last week that one of Pierce’s friends informed him that the attorney was sick with the coronavirus while another friend told him he was not, according to court documents.

“We’re in a difficult position here,” U.S. District Judge Amit Mehta told Schwartz. “You are entitled to counsel and you have retained Mr. Pierce. Mr. Pierce clearly is not available today and it is not clear to me when he is going to be available.”

Among Pierce’s other clients is Kenneth Harrelson, who is charged alongside other members and associates of the far-right Oath Keepers extremist group in perhaps the most high-profile case brought so far in the Jan. 6 attack. Harrelson and the other Oath Keepers are accused of conspiring to block the certification of President Joe Biden’s victory.

Pierce has also been hired by several members of the Proud Boys charged in the Jan. 6 riot.

In 2018, Pierce, who lost a previous job for physically assaulting a coworker, called his now-defunct firm “the fastest-growing law firm in the history of the world.” Three years later, the firm is shuttered and saddled with accusations of financial irregularities and a debt load exceeding $70 million.

Nearly 600 people have been charged with crimes in connection with the Jan. 6 breach of the US Capitol, when supporters of President Donald Trump stormed past police barriers and sent lawmakers running as they were meeting to certify Biden’s Electoral College win.

Fifty defendants have pleaded guilty so far but FBI sources have indicated that Trump and others who incited the seditious rioting will not be held accountable.

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