It appears justice has finally caught up with our little princess Riley June Williams AKA Dancing Nazi Girl. She was found guilty of at least two felonies and several misdemeanors:
After a six-day trial and three days of jury deliberations, Riley June Williams, 23, of Harrisburg, Penn., was convicted Monday of two felonies: interfering with law enforcement officers during a civil disorder and resisting or impeding law enforcement officers. She was also convicted of four misdemeanors relating to trespassing and disorderly conduct.
What made Nazi Girl stand out was two things. The first was that she allegedly stole Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s laptop (she was found not guilty on that charge). The second was her video of her dancing to music and making what appears to be a Nazi salute. And there is a third thing IMHO: she broke just about every restriction placed on her for home arrest while awaiting trial.
It appears that once she was found guilty that the judge decided Williams could not be trusted with home detention any more, so she is back in lockup waiting on her sentencing.
In July, U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson had denied Williams’ request to remove the ankle monitor she was required to wear as part of her pretrial release conditions. In August, however, Jackson appears to have softened her stance: she granted Williams’ request for permission to attend a Renaissance Faire.
The judge was decidedly less lenient following Williams’ conviction on Monday. According to an NBC News report, Jackson, a Barack Obama appointee, said she had “no confidence whatsoever” that Williams had respect for the rule of law and ordered that she be detained pending sentencing.
Jackson set Williams’ sentencing for Feb. 22, 2023.
Oh boo hoo hoo. Our little white princess will get a few years at least from what I can tell. And it appears her prior bad acts while on home detention will be held against her.
The obstruction charge — of which Williams has not yet been convicted — is the most serious, carrying a potential 20-year prison sentence. She currently faces a maximum eight years behind bars for the resisting or impeding law enforcement charge, five years for the charge of interfering with law enforcement during a civil disorder, and a combined three years for the misdemeanor charges.
Couldn’t happen to a nicer Nazi.