How many people were convicted of assaulting a police officer on jan 6

Checked on January 15, 2026
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Executive summary

The available reporting does not provide a single, definitive tally of how many people were convicted specifically of assaulting a police officer on January 6; government and secondary sources instead report the number charged (roughly 590–600+) and describe hundreds of convictions for Jan. 6-related crimes with many—though not all—being assault counts [1] [2] [3]. Public statements by lawmakers and nonprofit trackers emphasize that hundreds were charged with assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers, and that a substantial subset pleaded guilty or were convicted of those assault offenses, but the precise aggregate of convictions for that single statutory crime is not spelled out in the documents provided [4] [5].

1. The official charging picture: hundreds charged with assaulting or impeding officers

Department of Justice public releases and summaries in the reporting indicate that more than 1,500 people were charged in connection with the Capitol breach and that “more than 600” or “more than 590” defendants have been charged with assaulting, resisting, or impeding law enforcement—figures that frame the scope of assault-related prosecutions even though they do not equate directly to convictions [1] [2] [6].

2. Convictions exist across a wide range of assault conduct but no single consolidated figure in sources

Multiple high-profile cases and DOJ press releases document individual and group convictions for assaulting officers—ranging from pepper-spray and hands-on assaults to attacks with flagpoles and wooden planks—and sentencing announcements regularly identify defendants as “convicted of assaulting law enforcement” [7] [1] [3] [8]. However, the materials provided do not include a single DOJ or court-issued cumulative count that isolates the total number of people actually convicted of the statutory assault offense distinct from those merely charged or convicted of related offenses [1] [2].

3. Sampling, plea patterns and pardons complicate a straightforward tally

Analyses and advocacy summaries show that many defendants pleaded guilty to assault or assault-related counts in plea deals (for example, the Proud Boys subset where 24 convictions for assault were counted among that group), while others were convicted at trial; at the same time, a later mass pardon affected many who had been charged or convicted, prompting political summaries to highlight numbers of pardoned people who “pled guilty to assaulting police officers,” such as the 169 figure cited by Senate press releases—again showing a mix of charged, pleaded, convicted and pardoned cases that clouds a single cumulative conviction total in the provided sources [5] [9] [4].

4. Why the exact number is elusive in the reporting provided

The public statements and press releases supplied report totals in different categories—charged vs. charged-with-assault vs. convicted-of-assault—and some reports emphasize subsets (e.g., Proud Boys, high-profile sentencings) rather than producing a running aggregate of convictions for the statutory assault counts; none of the sources in the packet publishes a definitive, up-to-date aggregate of convictions solely for assaulting a police officer on January 6 [1] [5] [8].

5. Political and legal context matters for interpreting the counts

Senators and advocacy groups frame headline numbers to make policy points about pardons and accountability—Durbin and Duckworth’s resolution cites “169 people who pled guilty to assaulting police officers” as a figure relevant to condemning pardons, while DOJ materials emphasize numbers charged and notable sentences to illustrate prosecutorial outcomes; these differing aims (advocacy vs. prosecutorial record-keeping) influence which numbers are highlighted and can create apparent inconsistencies in public discourse [9] [4] [1].

6. Bottom line

Based on the provided reporting: roughly 590–600+ people were charged with assaulting, resisting, or impeding law enforcement in Jan. 6 cases (showing the scale of assault allegations) and numerous individual defendants have been convicted and sentenced for assaulting officers—yet the exact cumulative number of people formally convicted of the specific statutory offense “assaulting a police officer” is not given in these sources, so a precise single-number answer cannot be supported from the documents supplied [1] [2] [3].

Want to dive deeper?
How many Jan. 6 defendants pleaded guilty to assaulting, resisting, or impeding officers, according to DOJ case-by-case records?
Which high-profile Jan. 6 defendants were convicted of assault with a dangerous weapon and what sentences did they receive?
How did the January 2025 mass pardons change the legal status of defendants previously convicted of assaulting police on January 6?