Hey, there! Log in / Register

Former Faulkner doc turned y'all-quedaist gets nine months for attacking cop during failed Jan. 6 coup

Jacquelyn Starer in full attack mode in the Capitol

Starer in the Capitol: Probably not the mien she wore during counseling and gyn sessions back home.

A federal judge yesterday sentenced Jacquelyn Starer, who once practiced at Jamaica Plain's Faulkner Hospital, to nine months in prison for not just storming into the Capitol back on Jan. 6, 2021 but for punching a DC cop in the head, cursing her and riling up other putschists in the Rotunda.

Starer, 70, of Ashland, and formerly on staff as an addiction-recovery specialist and ob/gyn at Faulkner and Brigham and Women's hospitals, was also sentenced to two years of probation.

Starer pleaded guilty in April to six misdemeanor charges: Entering and remaining in a restricted building or grounds, disorderly and disruptive conduct in a restricted building or grounds, engaging in physical violence in a restricted building or grounds, disorderly conduct in a Capitol building, act of physical violence in the Capitol grounds or buildings, and parading, demonstrating, or picketing in a Capitol building.

Federal prosecutors had asked US District Court Judge Timothy Kelly to send Starer away for 27 months.

In her sentencing memorandum, prosecutor Sarah Rocha provided this account of what Starer - who she wrote had boasted to a friend before she went down to DC that she'd be wearing a knife-resistant top and carrying pepper spray - did at the Capitol:

Starer, a physician, entered the Capitol through the Rotunda Doors approximately fifteen minutes after they had been breached. She proceeded with rioters to the Rotunda and joined a crowd of shouting rioters attempting to move past police guarding a passageway to Speaker Pelosi’s office. Starer shoved rioters to get to the front of the crowd and pushed away a rioter attempting to hold her back. She then struck Officer M.B. with her closed fist. Starer retreated but then returned to the line and moved her hands toward Officer M.B. while yelling "Fucking bitch!" Her assault riled up the hostile crowd and contributed to the dangerousness of the situation. Starer posted a video and message on Parler forewarning future violence, commenting that rioters were being dispersed "For now."

Rocha continued:

The crowd became more agitated, and rioters pushed back against the police line. Officers attempted to hold the line and restrict the rioters from passing through the archway entrance to the area behind them. However, because of the push from the rioters, including Starer, the officers were backed up against the Western Rotunda staircase that led down to the Upper West Terrace Doors. Another rioter grabbed Officer M.B.'s baton, causing her to lose her balance and fall down the stairs. Starer was affected by the chemical irritant that was deployed during the altercation.

The cop did manage to land one punch on Starer before she fell down the stairs, however, according to an affidavit by an FBI agent on the case.

Rocha said 27 months in federal prison was warranted because Starer went beyond simply wandering around the Capitol during an attempt to overthrow the government to actively attacking a cop and whipping other putschists up:

Starer's actions on January 6 demonstrate the need for specific deterrence for this defendant. She ignored obvious red flags and signs of chaos, forced her way to the front of the crowd, and resisted efforts to calm the situation. Even after she struck Officer M.B. with her closed fist, she returned to the police line and assaulted her again while yelling an expletive and joined the crowd's push against the officers. Starer's lack of care for the safety of the officers and her fellow rioters is even more troubling because her conduct was entirely incongruent with her sworn oath as a physician to do no harm. She could have been expected to render aid, not be the person causing harm. In addition, in a message posted to Parler, she hinted at future violence, commenting that rioters were dispersed with tear gas "[f]or now."

Starer has yet to express remorse, and the Court should thus view any remorse she expresses at sentencing with skepticism.

Aw, come on, she wasn't that bad, her attorney, Robert Sheketoff of Boston, argued, suggesting Starer never intended to punch the cop, that she simply got caught up as a "fairly calm" situation inside the Rotunda turned chaotic through no fault of hers and that while Starer illegally entered the Rotunda and called the cop "a fucking bitch," she only punched her in the arm, not the head, and besides, the cop made contact first, by trying to push her away:

She got into a heated discussion with another protester pushing his arm down away from her as she felt he was invading her space. During this heated encounter with the other protester, Dr. Starer turned away from the line of officers and Officer M.B. was no longer in her field of vision. Officer M.B. pushed Dr. Starer in the back away from the line of officers. Dr. Starer reacted by turning and striking Officer M.B. in the arm and engaging in a brief confrontation with her during which she referred to M.B. as a "fucking bitch." Shortly after this situation in the Rotunda became more chaotic with pepper spray being deployed.

Starer, he said, was not part of any organized coup organization and simply traveled to DC to hear still President Trump make his case for why the election had been stolen - even if it hadn't.

And, he continued, Starer should be excused from striking a person who had just shoved her, or, at the least, not have her potential sentence increased for striking an "official" doing her job, because that's not why Starer hit the cop:

Dr. Starer had an immediate instinctive reaction to being pushed from behind by striking the person who pushed her. That person's status as a police officer was merely incidental; indeed Dr. Starer had just responded to an unwanted intrusion into her personal space by another protestor by physically grabbing his arms and pushing them down. Certainly she was inclined to react to unwanted physical contact with physical contact of her own regardless of the status of the other person involved. Moreover, during the ensuing confrontation with Officer M.B. Dr. Starer referred to her as a fucking bitch - a personal insult, not political or related to her status as a police officer.

And that, Sheketoff continued, makes all the difference: Had his client called the cop "traitor" or used a derogatory term for police officer, that might have been proof she hit the officer because she was an officer doing her job, rather than simply physically and verbally striking out against somebody who had shoved her.

Sheketoff asked for a sentence of 36 months probation, with the first part of that be served in home confinement, in part so Starer could care for her ailing husband - and continue with her own medical care and counseling for substance abuse, with which she helped rebuild her life and turn earlier struggles into a successful career helping women, at first with obstetric and gynecological issues, later with substance abuse.

He said Starer deeply regrets what she does and would apologize to the specific officers and others in the Capitol.

Dr. Starer recognizes that her actions that day were gravely serious, well beyond what she understood as the events unfolded, and she is determined to take responsibility and move forward with her life in a productive and positive way.

Government sentencing recommendation (1.3M PDF).
Defense sentencing recommendation (7.3M PDF).

Neighborhoods: 
Topics: 


Ad:


Like the job UHub is doing? Consider a contribution. Thanks!

Comments

Nine whole months, huh.

up
Voting closed 38

Seems fair compared to the Quincy resident who used his car to twice ram a Vietnamese man and push him into a ditch while yelling at him to go back to China and gets 18 months.

up
Voting closed 37

My takeaway from these cases is that, if you're going to commit an unprovoked assault, try if possible to be elderly and white.

Also I looked up which President appointed the judge in this case and was not surprised by the result.

up
Voting closed 32

9 months for breaking into the capital, punching a federal police officer in the face and trying to stop the transfer of power after an election?

Seems like in MA if your old and white you get off extra easy. A woman in Texas was sentenced to 5 years prison for casting a provisional ballot when she wasnt eligible to vote. She was not white though so that is a big difference in the USA.

Republicans say they want people who attack police to serve hard time and to severely punish people who commit election fraud/interference. Yet I doubt Fox and Friends will be hihglighting this light sentence.

up
Voting closed 79

A federal judge yesterday sentenced Jacquelyn Starer...

Try to keep up.

Ditto for the racist old guy and his car - federal case.

up
Voting closed 41

Was the old guy triggered by racial presentation, or by bad, boorish behaviour (or dementia?) “Go back to China” may be the equivalent to “love it, or leave it,” which is not racist; the former is simply more specific (if ethnologically wrong.)

up
Voting closed 12

How many racists do you intend to whitewash tomorrow?

up
Voting closed 26

It's "ethnologically wrong" and therefore, tra la la, not an issue.

up
Voting closed 18

Did you miss the first words of the post that say, "A federal judge?

Massachusetts laws & sentencing has nothing to do with this.

up
Voting closed 44

but is the sentiment wrong? generally in the united states being old and white is the trump card everyone wishes they had

up
Voting closed 31

Fallacies - where the conclusions do not follow from the evidence presented to support the claim... are always wrong. Yes, the sentiment is wrong.

You didn't support your claim and supporting your claim is your work, and nobody else's.

up
Voting closed 14

It would save me money having to order manure.

up
Voting closed 38

Otherwise, it looks like they couldn’t find a noodle more wet than the one they used on her.

Days like this, I wish they still used stocks and pillory.

up
Voting closed 54

I hope she loses her patients. I wish she could lose her medical license for this but alas.

I hope her patients look at this photo and realize that this is not a face or expression you want to see when you're in sturrups getting a pap smear.

up
Voting closed 41

But I think the only thing that face could cure is constipation.

up
Voting closed 27

She's agreed not to practice medicine in MA.

up
Voting closed 24

Serious issues with drugs, including alcohol, usually means supervision and scant extra chances. I would bet good money that her ceasing her OB/GYN practice was a concession to keep her license, while losing her prescribing rights. Shifting to rehab work and public health research isn't an uncommon career path for docs who got bailed up with their substances, either - and it is often a great move for all involved because addicts know addicts and how to detangle them from their own bullshit. Good rehab docs are very much in demand right now.

But then she went off the rails, again. Qanon soaked up dry drunks like a sponge in the rain.

Doctors will "voluntarily" give up licenses when they know they won't possibly win a suspension hearing. This saves everyone a lot of trouble - and they are very unlikely to regain licensure unless something massive changes. Starer's agreement stipulates that she won't seek reinstatement.

up
Voting closed 39

It's surprisingly rare for doctors to lose their medical licenses, at least partly because the decisions are made by other doctors, not by patients, judges, or civil servants.

up
Voting closed 25

Hard for doctors and judges to separate their own fears of failure and not getting a pass.

up
Voting closed 23

If drivers licenses were subject to the same system that MA has for medical licensing we would be a lot better off because the oversight would be vastly more strict and have far better resources for hearings and suspensions.

We would also have to complete continuing education courses to renew. I'm all for that!

The RMV didn't even have an administrative system to cope with the reports from other states.

up
Voting closed 23

Medical licensing board has doctors, but also public health and other professions. They also have rules, guidelines, and hearings. I used to sit next to their prosecutors - lawyers who were full time staff working to resolve cases where licenses were likely to be yanked.

up
Voting closed 25

...they had better keep her in there for the full nine-month term.

up
Voting closed 24

…for anything to pop out at the end.

up
Voting closed 17

She is an ob/gyn doc who supports Trump? Does she hate the women she treats?
She got off easy.

up
Voting closed 18

The law takes the hysteria of “mob psychology” into account.

up
Voting closed 13

The writing that 1/6 would happen was on the wall for months and months (as it was for the 2nd intifada if one had beed reading the NYT daily at the time) why did Speaker Pelosi give Trump enough rope to hang himself with? Did I just answer my own question? Everybody is caught up in posturing and gaining profit and advantage that our language is partisan and brutish rather than enlightened, instructive and healing. From time to time we hear the long, boring, objective, dispassionate and reasoned analysis about our moment in history in terrestrial airwaves and on cable (CSPAN, and others,) but mostly we here the audience-pandering and ego-boosting echo-chamber rot.

Domestic big money (I’d say domestic oligarchs, but we’re not there yet-there is still hope and power to the people,) big money including foreign state actors are playing a zero sum game and using our political system and media to arrive at an optimal equilibrium for power and profit -until such time as the equilibrium can be upended and someone comes out on top. Racism, ignorance and division (and media consolidation) is curable- we need to fight the bigger fight and define the better language and thesis. Personally, capitalism twinned with / rooted in the morality of our Constitution and values (which are evolving in good ways to embrace our differences: we have come a long way baby, we are overcoming and ever forward from Stonewall- the recognition and emergence of these freedoms -to be who we are as individuals- flow from the victories of reason in the West. Values and spirit that happen to be co-localized with Judeo-Christian and Western culture and the kindred ideas and peoples around the globe who didn’t quite get full purchase on and ownership of the brass ring of law, democracy and freedom. Best not to throw out the baby with the bathwater.

Far, we’ve been traveling far

Without a home, but not without a star

Free, only want to be free

We huddle close, hang on to a dream

- The ‘Sweet Caroline’ singer Neil Diamond, The Jazz Singer

16:58, 09072024, Listened to Diamond’s ‘The Jazz Singer’ for the first time after replying initially and walked my dog with a lump in my throat much of the album and after Wikipediaing some background everything made me cry.

Tracks: Kol Nidre and America(reprise). Which brings me full circle on the notion of healing our divisions rather than profiting from them.

The contributor to Wikipedia said it well, “This invitation to outcasts is not specifically for Kol Nidre but for the whole of Yom Kippur, it being obvious that when even sinners join in repenting, the occasion is worthy of Divine clemency.”

The powerful ending in ‘Born in East L.A.’ always comes to mind when I hear ‘America,’ and challenges my hardness about the border.

up
Voting closed 23

you should give it a try with all that time and energy

up
Voting closed 20

It didn’t take that long. But, yeah, I should volunteer more somewhere.

up
Voting closed 15

I should volunteer more somewhere.

Try a food bank or a soup kitchen. They need more people who show up on a regular basis and not just for a few hours on Thanksgiving morning.

up
Voting closed 19