On January 6, 2021, Joseph W. Fischer attended the
Stop the Steal rally at
the Ellipse in
Washington, D.C. Prosecutors said that Fischer had a physical encounter with police at the Capitol, urged on rioters during the Capitol attack, and said that he wanted to go "to war" and take "democratic Congress to the gallows". Fischer's attorneys said that Fischer entered the
Capitol building at around 3:25 p.m., after it had already been breached and Congress had already recessed, and exited the building about four minutes later. The felony charge of
obstructing an official proceeding has been used to charge more than 300 individuals in connection with the January 6 Capitol attack, and has resulted in more than 150 convictions and guilty pleas. Among those charged with the provision include former
President Donald Trump. The criminal statute covering "whoever corruptly alters, destroys, mutilates or conceals a record, document or other object ... or otherwise obstructs, influences or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so" had been created by the 2002
Sarbanes–Oxley Act in response to the
Enron scandal, when accountants shredding crucial documents did so without being in violation of any laws.
District court Fischer was prosecuted for obstructing an official proceeding of Congress, as well as assaulting a police officer and disorderly conduct in the Capitol. Fischer and other January 6 defendants have argued that prosecution under the Sarbanes–Oxley Act should not apply to their circumstances, as they did not engage in actions in a manner similar to the Enron scandal which spawned the act's creation. In March 2022, District Judge
Carl J. Nichols dismissed obstruction charges against three January 6 defendants, including Fischer, ruling that prosecutors had improperly separated the portion of the law forbidding obstruction of an official proceeding from the aforementioned evidence-tampering provision regarding actions against a "document, record, or other object". Nichols's ruling was not binding on other judges, and several other defendants have attempted to similarly argue that Sarbanes–Oxley does not apply to them before other judges without success. Nichols's rulings were subsequently appealed to the
D.C. Circuit Court of Appeals. holding that "corruptly" in this context means acting with criminal intent, without an additional requirement of personal gain. ==Supreme Court==