BREAKING: Emergency Motion Filed for Release of Cancer Patient Who Contracted COVID While Being Held in Jail Over Capitol Protest — Life Seriously at Risk

The attorney for Capitol protester Christopher Worrell has filed another emergency motion with the D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals seeking the release of his client, who has cancer, after he contracted COVID-19 in the jail where he is being detained.

Worrell has been held for over two months after firing pepper spray during the chaos on January 6, which he says was aimed at people who he believed to be Antifa that were targeting police.

Worrell has been denied bail since March 12 — and has been shipped around from Florida, to Oklahoma, to Virginia, and now finally DC. He has been subjected to horrific conditions including a lack of water for sometimes up to seven hours and contracted COVID on top of his non-Hodgkin’s Lymphoma cancer. 

The proud and patriotic American is now severely at risk of dying from COVID or metastasizing cancer advancing while being denied bail.

On Wednesday, Worrell’s lawyer John Pierce filed a second Emergency Motion for Reconsideration of Order of Detention/Reopening Detention Hearing Due to Changed Circumstances after the first one was denied by another judge.

“Mr. Worrell is currently held in pretrial detainment without access to his prescribed cancer medication, or the regular examination and treatment necessary for someone with non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. He is experiencing a rapidly deteriorating condition as he develops lymphomas on the skin of his face, neck, back, arms, and legs putting him at great risk for further complications and COVID-19 exposure. Mr. Worrell is allegedly one of the thousands of individuals who went to the grounds of the U.S. Capitol Complex on January 6, 2021 to exercise his First Amendment rights,” the motion states.

The motion continues on to say that “COVID, combined with the lack of treatment for his cancer, has caused him severe psychological and emotional distress. Mr. Worrell is currently in fear for his life and not sure if he will live to see his son grow up… or even live to see his own trial.”

His doctor, Dr. Bino Rucker, M.D., signed an affidavit that was included with the motion saying that “[c]ontinuing confinement at the federal detention center presents a substantial risk of serious infection to Mr. Worrell and his transfer to home confinement would significantly decrease the risk to his health in connection with the ongoing COVID-19 pandemic.”

The jail has been denying Worrell the medications prescribed by Dr. Rucker.

“Mr. Worrell has suffered aggravating symptoms of his cancer, including lymphomas of the skin on his face. The lesions are often itchy, scaly, and red to purple – appearing in different parts of the skin and increase Mr. Worrell’s COVID infection risk,” the motion says.

Pierce also noted that there are currently 114 federal inmates and 173 Federal Bureau of Prisons (BOP) staff who have confirmed positive test results for COVID-19 nationwide, and there have been 234 inmate deaths and 4 staff deaths as a result of COVID-19. In total 46,131 inmates and 6,751 staff have recovered from COVID-19 nationwide demonstrating its startling presence in federal facilities.

Worrell had travelled to DC with his girlfriend on January 6 to hear then-President Donald Trump speak and exercise their right to protest the 2020 presidential election.

Due to the violence from the left that has been inflicted upon Trump supporters in public since 2016, Worrell wore a protective vest lined with plastic and legally carried a small bottle of pepper spray for protection.

Following the Stop the Steal rally, Worrell followed the crowd of thousands of people to Capitol Hill to protest. The situation was peaceful at first, but escalated when people began to push against the police barriers to get into the Capitol building.

Worrell never entered the building.

In videos he recorded on the scene, Worrell can repeatedly be heard calling for peace. One of the clips from his phone captures him telling an officer that he was “not coming through,” when he accidentally bumped into a barricade trying to back away from the situation.

During the chaos, Worrell saw people that he believed to be Antifa pushing towards the police. He maintains that he discharged his pepper spray towards the people he believed to be leftist agitators, to protect the officers. The government claims that he was trying to spray the police, but have not offered any evidence to back this up. Eventually, they conceded that the government “do[es] not currently know with certainty the target at which Worrell was spraying.”

The government has not offered any victim who was harmed or sustained injuries by the pepper spray.

When a large portion of the crowd broke through the police line and entered the building, Worrell left.

A warrant was issued for Worrell on March 12 and the FBI raided his home, but he was away on a camping trip. The FBI had his girlfriend call him and direct him to turn himself in. He immediately ended his trip and drove home, calling the FBI every 30 minutes during the ride to check in as instructed.

When he got home, he was arrested and his cell phone was seized. Worrell was fully cooperative, even providing the agents with his password.

Since then, Worrell has been denied bail while others who actually went inside have been granted it, despite his fragile medical condition.

On March 20, Worrell began developing new nodes, lesions, and itchy patches across his body, likely symptoms of his Non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma.  He has not received his cancer treatment or any other medications since his detention on March 12.

When his lawyers expressed their concern to the judge about his treatment on April 6, Chief Judge Howell argued that Worrell’s concerns about COVID are “disingenuous” because there were no photos submitted of him wearing a mask.

In an emergency filing last month, Worrell’s lawyer John Pierce argued that the Fifth Amendment protects the right of pretrial detainees to receive adequate medical care and to be free from pre-conviction punishment.

Pierce noted that the Due Process Clause mandates release because the pandemic presents a grave harm outweighing the government’s interest in confinement.

“This Court should release him immediately, subject to certain conditions. Confinement of a high-risk cancer patient in a high-risk setting during a pandemic amounts to impermissible pretrial punishment, as it is not reasonably related to the Government’s interest in confinement,” the filing states.

Pierce also noted that the government claims that they are holding him to make sure there is a trial and he doesn’t flee — but if he dies, there will be no trial. The filing says that the prosecution’s position boils down to “we want him in custody, dead or alive.” 

Worrell voluntarily and immediately turned his passport in upon a Florida federal magistrate judge’s order issued on March 12.

In addition to the other Constitutional concerns raised in the filing, Pierce noted that the Bail Reform Act shows that Worrell is neither a serious flight risk nor a danger to the community, and the Court should grant at least temporary release until the pandemic ends.

**Those who wish to contribute to his legal defense can send it to his best friend Dave Chester, who has been paying much of his legal fees while he is detained, Worrell’s lawyer confirmed.

His CashApp handle is $kazumdgc.

 

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