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QAnon follower Douglas Jensen, who chased officer on January 6, sentenced to five years in jail

An Iowa construction worker and QAnon follower has been sentenced to five years in prison for his role in the January 6, 2021, insurrection at the US Capitol, when he led a crowd chasing a police officer who diverted rioters away from politicians.

Wearing a T-shirt celebrating the conspiracy theory with his arms spread, Douglas Jensen became part of one of the most memorable images from the riot.

As he handed down the sentence, Judge Timothy Kelly said he wasn't sure Jensen understood the seriousness of a violent attack in which he played a "big role".

"It snapped our previously unbroken tradition of peaceful transfer of power. We can't get that back," Judge Kelly said.

"I wish I could say I had evidence you understood this cannot be repeated."

Jensen was convicted at trial of seven counts, including felony charges that he obstructed Congress from certifying the Electoral College vote and that he assaulted or interfered with police officers during the siege.

His sentence also includes three years of supervised release and a $US2,000 ($2,978) fine.

He gave a brief statement to the judge, saying that he wanted to return to "being a family man and my normal life before I got involved with politics".

New footage details the moments Officer Eugene Goodman led the mob away from the chamber.

Jensen scaled a retaining wall and entered through a broken window so he could be one of the first people to storm the Capitol that day, Judge Kelly said.

He led a group that chased Capitol Police Officer Eugene Goodman up a staircase.

He would later re-enter the building and scuffle with police.

"Doug Jensen wanted to be the poster boy of the insurrection," prosecutor Emily Allen said.

Jensen wore a T-shirt with a large "Q" on it because he wanted the conspiracy theory to get credit for what happened that day, his defence attorney Christopher Davis said.

Mr Davis said Jensen's own "childhood of horrors" influenced his later faith in the baseless belief that former president Donald Trump was secretly fighting against enemies in the "deep state" and a child sex trafficking ring run by satanic paedophiles and cannibals.

It also includes the apocalyptic prophesy that "The Storm" was coming and would usher in mass arrests and executions of Mr Trump's foes, including then-vice president Mike Pence, who Mr Trump would deride that day as lacking courage.

Mr Davis has argued Jensen was dressed as a "walking advertisement for QAnon" and not intending to attack the Capitol.

He did not physically hurt people or damage anything inside the Capitol, Mr Davis said, and many friends and family members wrote letters to the judge on his behalf.

Officer Goodman's quick thinking that day — to divert the rioters away from the Senate and then find backup — avoided "tremendous bloodshed," Capitol Police Inspector Thomas Lloyd said on Friday.

Mr Pence was presiding over the Senate on January 6 as a joint session of Congress was convened to certify US President Joe Biden's 2020 electoral victory.

Before the riot, Mr Trump and his allies spread the falsehood that Mr Pence somehow could have overturned the election results.

Approximately 900 people have been charged with federal crimes for their conduct on January 6.

More than 400 of them have pleaded guilty, mostly to misdemeanour offences.

Sentences for the rioters have ranged from probation for low-level misdemeanour offences to 10 years in prison for a man who used a metal flagpole to assault an officer.

AP

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