An Arizona Republican congressional candidate alleges that he has been blackmailed into dropping out of the race in exchange for having Jan. 6, 2021, charges against his son dropped.
Jeff Zink, a Republican candidate in Arizona running for U.S. Congress, is challenging incumbent Rep. Ruben Gallego (D-Ariz.), who is running for reelection.
The district they run in includes much of Phoenix and is a Democrat stronghold. Zink said he has been campaigning in Phoenix, reaching out to Democrats and focusing on grassroots people.
Blackmail Attempts
Zink recounted that he once received a strange phone call that wasn’t displayed on his phone, but a voice on the other end told him that if he dropped out of the congressional race, the Jan. 6 charges against his son would be dropped.He said he has received several similar phone calls over the past year and a half. All of them attempted to pressure him to drop out of the race, but Zink said he wouldn’t do it.
“They picked a fight with my son. If you pick a fight with my family, I’m going to come fighting back, and then when I get into Congress, that’s exactly what I’m going to do,” Zink said.
Zink actively participated in the 2020 election audit in Arizona. “I was the only congressional candidate that worked 14 hours on the floor, and another six hours vetting other people to get them on the floor so that they could observe what happened in the audit.”
Jan. 6, 2021, Protest
Zink said he and his son both participated in the Jan. 6, 2021, protest but never entered the Capitol building.
His son has been accused of entering the Capitol and having an interaction with the police, Zink said. Initially, his son was also charged with “trespassing on federal grounds” and “unlawfully interrupting a congressional and Senate hearing,” Zink said.
Some of those charges were later dropped, and now his son is only accused of interrupting a congressional hearing and Senate hearing, Zink said.
His son now faces “22 years [in prison] for entering into the Capitol,” Zink said. He claims that his son has never entered the Capitol and had stood next to him 100 percent of the time.
Zink recounted that on Jan. 6, 2021, both he and his son stood on the porch on the east side of the Capitol, the Senate side. “We’re away from the door.”
Then the door opened from the inside because there is no way that the door can be opened by pulling it, Zink said, adding that they recorded a video of it, which is used in his son’s case.
“We were completely opposite and away from that door at the corner on the Senate side on that porch and that’s how we got the video.”
Zink said he was interrogated by the FBI for an hour and a half in regard to his presence on the Capitol grounds on Jan. 6, 2021, and “was completely cleared.”
“If I didn’t enter, he didn’t enter.”
Zink also denied the accusation that his son “was fighting with the Capitol Police.” “I’ve got evidence, on the contrary, of what he actually did.”
How the Candidate’s Son Was Treated
Zink described how his son was treated by authorities even though he “didn’t go into the Capitol and had nothing going on with the Capitol Police.”“Then basically kidnapped him, took him to the gulag there in Washington, D.C. He spent six weeks there in prisoner of war conditions.”
Since then, Zink’s son has been summoned several times for hearings, Zink said. The authorities keep saying that they have evidence that the candidate’s son was inside the Capitol, but the evidence hasn’t been presented so far, Zink explained, adding that he knows his son wasn’t inside the Capitol.
“Now, my son will go for the 11th time for his stay hearing for them to just present evidence that they’re going to use against him,” Zink said.
“In America, we’re supposed to be innocent until proven guilty. Today, we’re guilty until proven Democrat.”
Double Standard
Zink compared the treatment of his son, who, according to his father’s account, didn’t enter the Capitol and didn’t engage in any unlawful activity, with the treatment of Ehmke.Ehmke, then 20 years old, climbed onto a Capitol windowsill adjacent to the giant Columbus Doors and shattered several panes of the window by kicking and punching them.
Police tackled Ehmke while he was shattering the window and handcuffed him but later took his driver’s license and ordered him to leave Capitol property. Ehmke was arrested in California on Jan. 13, 2021, and was indicted on four charges two weeks later.
“Though Ehmke did not enter the Capitol and did leave when directed to do so by police, his destructive acts at the front of the mob contributed to the overall violence and events of Jan. 6,” U.S. Department of Justice attorney Anne Veldhuis wrote in a 21-page sentencing memorandum.
Zink emphasized that Ehmke, with unsurmountable evidence documenting the crime he committed, was released shortly after being apprehended by police and received only a light slap, while Zink’s son was arrested after his home was raided by the FBI, spent six weeks in a harsh prison, and now faces 22 years in prison without any evidence of wrongdoing.
Zink said that he presented all pictures and videos he took on that day to the FBI.
The FBI didn’t respond to a request for comment by press time.