Zip Tie Guy, his mom to be sentenced for Capitol riot roles

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (WKRN) — The Nashville man called “Zip Tie Guy” and his mother are scheduled to be sentenced Friday for their roles in the deadly riots at the U.S. Capitol.

Lisa Eisenhart and her son, Eric Munchel, were both seen inside the Capitol on January 2021 and found guilty of several charges earlier this year. Prosecutors shared photos in documents filed this week showing the mom and son at the Capitol. Munchel was photographed carrying flexible plastic handcuffs in the Senate chamber while armed with a stun gun.

Munchel was found guilty of five felonies and three misdemeanors. Eisenhart was guilty of two felonies and five misdemeanors, including conspiracy to commit obstruction.

‘Zip Tie Guy’, mother found guilty on all charges related to Capitol insurrection

  • Image 1: CCTV still photograph showing Munchel and Eisenhart at their hotel, both wearing tactical vests (Exhibit 102)
    Image 1: CCTV still photograph showing Munchel and Eisenhart at their hotel, both wearing tactical vests (Exhibit 102)
  • Image 2: photo showing Munchel and Eisenhart wearing tactical vests on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol, with Munchel’s Taser circled in yellow (Exhibit 401)
    Image 2: photo showing Munchel and Eisenhart wearing tactical vests on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol, with Munchel’s Taser circled in yellow (Exhibit 401)
  • Image 3: Still from Munchel’s cell phone camera video (Exhibit 301 at 11:36) showing Munchel and Eisenhart walking, in stack formation, through the crowd on the west lawn towards the Capitol
    Image 3: Still from Munchel’s cell phone camera video (Exhibit 301 at 11:36) showing Munchel and Eisenhart walking, in stack formation, through the crowd on the west lawn towards the Capitol
  • Images 4 and 5: Side-by-side stills from Munchel’s cell phone camera video (Exhibit 301 at 12:00 and 12:02, respectively) capturing the Oath Keepers’ interactions with Eisenhart and Munchel’s fist bump with one of them
    Images 4 and 5: Side-by-side stills from Munchel’s cell phone camera video (Exhibit 301 at 12:00 and 12:02, respectively) capturing the Oath Keepers’ interactions with Eisenhart and Munchel’s fist bump with one of them
  • Images 4 and 5: Side-by-side stills from Munchel’s cell phone camera video (Exhibit 301 at 12:00 and 12:02, respectively) capturing the Oath Keepers’ interactions with Eisenhart and Munchel’s fist bump with one of them
    Images 4 and 5: Side-by-side stills from Munchel’s cell phone camera video (Exhibit 301 at 12:00 and 12:02, respectively) capturing the Oath Keepers’ interactions with Eisenhart and Munchel’s fist bump with one of them
  • Image 5: Still from Munchel’s cell phone camera video (Exhibit 301 at 21:45) showing the packed northwest lawn and stage
    Image 5: Still from Munchel’s cell phone camera video (Exhibit 301 at 21:45) showing the packed northwest lawn and stage
  • Image 6: Still from CCTV (Exhibit 501.2) showing Munchel and Eisenhart (yellow square) entering the Capitol at 2:37:38 p.m.
    Image 6: Still from CCTV (Exhibit 501.2) showing Munchel and Eisenhart (yellow square) entering the Capitol at 2:37:38 p.m.
  • Image 7: Still from CCTV showing Munchel and Eisenhart (yellow square) in the Rotunda (Exhibit 503.2)
    Image 7: Still from CCTV showing Munchel and Eisenhart (yellow square) in the Rotunda (Exhibit 503.2)
  • Image 8: Still from CCTV showing Munchel and Eisenhart walking the third-floor hallways with the zip ties in hand (Exhibit 506.2)
    Image 8: Still from CCTV showing Munchel and Eisenhart walking the third-floor hallways with the zip ties in hand (Exhibit 506.2)
  • Image 9: Still from CSPAN showing Munchel and Eisenhart in the Senate gallery at 2:45:55 p.m. (Exhibit 507.3)
    Image 9: Still from CSPAN showing Munchel and Eisenhart in the Senate gallery at 2:45:55 p.m. (Exhibit 507.3)
  • Image 10: Iconic photograph (Exhibit 402) of Munchel climbing over a banister in the Senate Gallery.
    Image 10: Iconic photograph (Exhibit 402) of Munchel climbing over a banister in the Senate Gallery.
  • Image 11: Still from CCTV capturing Munchel and Eisenhart’s exit via the Senate Carriage doors (Exhibit 510.2)
    Image 11: Still from CCTV capturing Munchel and Eisenhart’s exit via the Senate Carriage doors (Exhibit 510.2)
  • Image 12: Photo found on Munchel’s cell phone capturing riot gear-clad USCP officers standing on the Lower West Terrace with what appears to be blood on the ground (Exhibit 302)
    Image 12: Photo found on Munchel’s cell phone capturing riot gear-clad USCP officers standing on the Lower West Terrace with what appears to be blood on the ground (Exhibit 302)
  • Image 13: Photo found on Munchel’s cell phone showing a fake newspaper front page suggesting that the certification of Biden as the winner of the 2020 presidential election had been prevented (Exhibit 304)
    Image 13: Photo found on Munchel’s cell phone showing a fake newspaper front page suggesting that the certification of Biden as the winner of the 2020 presidential election had been prevented (Exhibit 304)
  • Image 14: Photograph of zip tie handcuffs found within Munchel’s residence (Exhibit 701)
    Image 14: Photograph of zip tie handcuffs found within Munchel’s residence (Exhibit 701)

Prosecutors are requesting Munchel be sentenced to four years and nine months in prison along with three years of supervised release. They said his mother should be sentenced to three years and 10 months incarceration with three years supervised release.

Vanderbilt University Distinguished Professor of Law and Political Science Dr. Edward Rubin explained one thought a judge might weigh in their sentencing.

“This was planned activity,” said Dr. Rubin. “Everybody in Nashville knows what’s involved in traveling from Nashville to Washington, DC, you don’t just do that casually. And it was planned and coordinated, coming from superior forces of various kinds, and instructing them what to do and what they did. And this is also important, has tried to intervene in one of those ceremonial events of democracy.”

This week a federal judge sentenced former Proud Boys leader Enrique Tarrio to 22 years in prison for the assault on the U.S. Capitol. Despite the fact that Tarrio wasn’t present in Washington the day of the attack, prosecutors said he used his influence over hundreds of followers to orchestrate an assault on democracy.

Court Document: 15 firearms, tactical gear found in home of ‘Zip Tie Guy’

Prosecutors stated in court documents that this was a “a violent attack that forced an interruption of the certification of the 2020 Electoral College vote count, threatened the peaceful transfer of power after the 2020 Presidential election, injured more than one hundred police officers, and resulted in more than 2.9 million dollars in losses.”

Munchel was a 32 year-old then-bartender from the Nashville area. His mother, Lisa Eisenhart, was 59-year-old nurse from Woodstock, Georgia, which is a suburb of Atlanta.

According to their defense the riot has been cast as a threat to democracy and other descriptions they call fearmongering .

“To speak of those events in this manner particularly when discussing an individual defendant is unjust and misleading,” stated Munchel’s defense attorney Joseph W. Allen in the sentencing memorandum. “From 1776 to the present, Americans have always undertaken to voice their freedom of self-rule in a boisterous manner.”

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Dr. Rubin explained why other legal experts feel differently.

“The revolution of 1776 was an effort to oppose oppression by a foreign power. What happened on January 6 was an effort to impose oppression by violence against the U.S. government,” said Dr. Rubin. “Those are two very different uses of violence. And I don’t even think the second one marriage the term revolution, certainly not as we use it in our history books.”

Munchel’s attorney says he’s remorseful and has accepted responsibility for his actions at the capitol and should therefore be sentenced to a year incarceration. The sentencing is scheduled for around midday Friday in federal court.

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