
Put Us In The Frying Pan
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News — Nearly 2-hour meeting with Acting AG Todd Blanche and Senate Republicans was incredibly hostile, per multiple attendees. As many as 25 GOP senators spoke (this is very rare for these meetings), all in opposition to weaponization fund. R’s pitched specific ideas such as dictating how the 5 commissioners are chosen & not allowing people convicted of violence against cops to be eligible for a payout.










Myself and Harry Dunn have filled a lawsuit to stop Trump's slush fund payouts to January 6th insurrectionists.







FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE Ryan Nichols Announces $35 Million Anti-Weaponization Fund Claim Ryan Taylor Nichols, a United States Marine Corps veteran, Search and Rescue specialist, founder of Wholesale Universe, Inc., father, and pardoned January 6 defendant, is preparing a $35,000,000 claim to the Anti-Weaponization Fund. The claim is based on a documented record of federal prosecution, pretrial detention, due-process violations, denied discovery, broken grievance procedures, medical and mental-health neglect, family destruction, business destruction, and suppressed or undisclosed federal-source evidence connected to Marcus DiPaola and 1% Watchdog. Nichols spent approximately 1,463 days in federal custody and was moved through 10 facilities. His public case archive now contains more than 1,000 indexed records, 34 grievance categories, 37 timeline events, 78 named people, and 22 January 6 detainees who corroborate overlapping conditions and institutional failures. Nichols says the strongest proof point in the case is the December 2021 bond hearing before Judge Thomas F. Hogan, where Judge Hogan acknowledged on the record that Nichols’ due-process rights were violated. Nichols also says the government failed to disclose or properly address evidence concerning Marcus DiPaola and 1% Watchdog before his guilty plea. According to Nichols, his defense asked whether DiPaola and 1% Watchdog were connected to the government, FBI, or federal authorities. The government denied federal ties. Later, while Nichols was in prison, public-record information surfaced indicating that DiPaola had publicly claimed FBI Chicago Field Office involvement from 2016 to 2019, the same years DiPaola was connected to Nichols through hurricane-rescue work. Nichols argues that this evidence was material to Brady, Roviaro, informant disclosure, entrapment, trial preparation, and plea voluntariness. “This is not just about January 6,” Nichols said. “This is about what the government did after it took me. They had the power to charge me. They did not have the power to punish me before trial, cripple my defense, suppress exculpatory leads, deny mental-health treatment, destroy my family, destroy my business, and then pretend none of it mattered.” Nichols’ damages model includes loss of liberty, punitive pretrial confinement, constitutional injury, denied discovery, suppressed informant evidence, business destruction, family destruction, mental-health injury, medical injury, legal costs, reputational harm, and the cost of rebuilding after a full presidential pardon. The opening claim amount is $35,000,000, with the evidentiary record expected to support a higher damages model as additional documents, transcript excerpts, expert reports, business records, and medical records are added. The public case archive is available at: realryannichols.com/case













