WASHINGTON – A Minnesota woman pleaded guilty to one felony charge Thursday over her part in the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection.
Victoria Charity White, 41, from Rochester was part of the mob of then-President Donald Trump's supporters who stormed the U.S. Capitol grounds and stopped lawmakers for hours from certifying the results of the 2020 presidential election Trump lost.
White pleaded guilty to "civil disorder and aiding and abetting." Her federal public defender said White didn't have any comment when asked by the Star Tribune moments after leaving federal court in Washington D.C. Thursday afternoon. She is set to be sentenced in November.
Several different attorneys have represented White since her case began in 2021, with court filings showing that White terminated some of them through text message and that she rejected a plea offer in February. Ahead of the latest hearing, White posted on social media last week: "I took the plea NO going back this time. If you only knew what these 2yrs have been like."
Prosecutors alleged in an earlier court filing that after making her way from Minnesota to D.C., White on Jan. 6 "joined a group of individuals who marched to the Capitol, made her way onto restricted Capitol grounds, and pushed her way to the Lower West Terrace tunnel."
Prosecutors also alleged in the April filing that while White "shoved through the crowd, she assisted other rioters into the tunnel and cheered as they attacked the police officers inside."
"She continued to push forward, and shortly after 4:00 p.m., she made it to the front of the tunnel, where she was confronted by multiple police officers who pushed her back," prosecutors alleged.
White had been indicted earlier on four charges in the case, including the civil disorder count as well as for allegedly being in a restricted area along with a count involving "disorderly and disruptive conduct." She pleaded not guilty last year.