A House Democrat outspoken about his disdain for former President Donald Trump and desire to see him face criminal prosecution is giving his own legally troubled sibling a pass.
Rep. Brendan Boyle, D-Pa., a Philadelphia-area congressman who boldly declared in Jan. 2021 that “Donald Trump belongs in prison,” has avoided calling for his younger brother, Democratic state Rep. Kevin Boyle, to also face criminal prosecution despite a warrant being issued for his arrest and a drunken tirade at a local bar that was caught on video.
“In the days following the unprecedented attack on the U.S. Capitol on January 6th, I was one of the first members of Congress to publicly call for Donald Trump to be criminally held responsible. It is reassuring to see that now, at long last, justice is being served. This sends a clear message that nobody, not even the former President of the United States, is above the law,” the congressman’s office said in a statement on Trump’s Washington, D.C. indictment last August.
From left to right: Rep. Brendan Boyle, D-Pa., former President Donald Trump and Democrat Pennsylvania state Rep. Kevin Doyle. (Getty Images/Office of the Governor of Pennsylvania)
The statement noted the congressman’s 2021 social media posts calling for Trump’s arrest, which used the hashtag “#ArrestTrump.”
In September 2021, a few months after making those posts, the younger Boyle was arrested for harassment and violating a protection from abuse order his estranged wife had filed against him. And earlier this year, he was caught on video at Gaul & Malt House, a Philadelphia-area bar, berating the staff and threatening to use his position of power to close down the establishment in retaliation for being kicked out.
It’s unclear what prompted his drunken tirade, but bar staff could be heard in the video stating that Boyle started the altercation.
“Do you know who the f–k I am?” he asked at one point in the video as staff yelled at him to leave. “I’ll close your f—–g bar. This bar is done. Do you know who the f–k I am? This bar is done tomorrow.”
Kevin Boyle ultimately left the bar and faced no charges related to the altercation, but he was subsequently removed by the Pennsylvania state House from his committee chairmanship and barred from entering the Capitol building because of it. Since then, he has been unable to cast votes, and other members have…
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