Salt Lake City man accepts plea deal in burning of police car in May 2020

Rioters set upon an overturned Salt Lake City police cruiser during a May 30, 2020 demonstration in reaction to the murder of George Floyd by Minneapolis police officers. Photo: Gephardt Daily/Patrick Benedict

SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, Sept. 16, 2021 (Gephardt Daily) — A Salt Lake City man has pleaded guilty to reduced charges for his role in burning a Salt Lake City Police car after what started as a peaceful protest of the Minneapolis Police killing of George Floyd.

Christopher Isidro Rojas, 29, pleaded guilty to one felony count of civil disorder for his role in the civil unrest which occurred in Salt Lake City on May 30, 2020.

In the plea agreement, Rojas admitted that, on the date in question, he was protesting the killing of Floyd when protesters turned violent and overturned a Salt Lake City Police Department patrol car.

Photo Gephardt DailyPatrick Benedict

“Rojas admitted that he participated in the burning of the overturned patrol car with the intent and purpose of interfering with law enforcement officers and that he used a cigarette lighter to ignite a piece of cloth that a co-defendant threw into the interior of the overturned patrol car,” says a statement released by the Department of Justice, District of Utah.

Christopher I Rojas Photo Salt Lake County Jail

During a previous hearing, prosecutors alleged that Rojas helped others rip a bumper from the overturned police car and then used a cigarette lighter to ignite a large piece of white cloth that was thrown into the police car by a co-defendant, the statement says.

Later that same afternoon, prosecutors alleged that Rojas was captured on video appearing to celebrate and bragging to others that he “put the cop car on fire.”

Rojas remains on home confinement until the date of his sentencing, which is currently set for Nov. 24. Rojas faces a maximum term of five years in prison, a payment of $2,500.000 in agreed-upon restitution, and a term of supervised release of three years.

Co-defendant Lateesha Richards has previously been sentenced to 20 months in federal
prison along with co-defendant Jackson Patton, who has been sentenced to 24 months in federal prison, for their respective roles in the burning of the patrol car. Co-defendants Latroi Devon Newbins and Larry Raynold Williams Jr. have entered pleas of guilty and now await sentencing.

Assistant U.S. Attorneys from the Utah U.S. Attorney’s Office prosecuted the case.
Special Agents from the ATF and the FBI, and detectives from the Salt Lake City Police
Department, conducted the investigation.

Photo Gephardt DailyPatrick Benedict

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