A florist accused of storming the U.S. Capitol last month had a problem. She planned and paid for a trip to Mexico before the historic riot took place, and despite being charged with two offenses, she still wanted to go.
Jenny Cudd’s international vacation was ultimately saved by the U.S. criminal justice system this week. A magistrate judge for a federal court in Washington, D.C., granted Cudd’s request Monday, court records show. She’ll be allowed to travel to Mexico on February 18 and return to the U.S. three days later in what her attorneys described as a “work-related bonding retreat for employees and their spouses” on the Riviera Maya.
Cudd, who in Midland, Texas, was with entering and remaining in a restricted building, as well as violent entry or disorderly conduct, according to the . She is currently on pretrial release.
The court’s decision to allow her to travel triggered outrage from some advocates and criminal justice reformers. Eliza Orlins, a public defender and candidate for Manhattan district attorney, wrote on Twitter that she once had to beg a judge to allow a 16-year-old to attend his father’s funeral while handcuffed.
“I know I sound like a broken record, but I’m not going to stop: Two. Systems. Of. Justice,”
Cudd’s attorneys emphasized in a “motion to travel” Monday that she has no criminal history, has kept in contact with her attorney and pretrial probation, and appeared at her court date. Her pretrial services officer didn’t object to her desire to travel, according to that filing, and prosecutors took “no position on Ms. Cudd’s request.”
During the deadly siege on the U.S. Capitol that has led to dozens of arrests, Cudd was photographed inside the building while draped in a Trump flag, according to aShe’s accused of entering the Capitol about 15 minutes after legislators and former Vice President Mike Pence were forced to evacuate its chambers for their own safety.
In a Facebook livestream taken the day of the riot, Cudd said that people who stormed the Capitol did not vandalize anything. She then added, “We did break down … Nancy Pelosi’s office door, and somebody stole her gavel and took a picture sitting in the chair flipping off the camera. And that was on Fox News.”
“I am proud of my actions,” she said in the livestream, according to court documents. “I fucking charged the Capitol today with patriots today. Hell, yes I am proud of my actions.”
Later, in an interview with , an NBC affiliate in Odessa, Texas, on January 8, Cudd said that she personally did not “tear down anything, destroy anything, go in any offices, desecrate anything, or commit any acts of violence.”
Cudd added that she was experiencing “cancel culture,” and that her business had received hundreds of one-star reviews and death threats since the insurrection. She added, though, that she would “do it again in a heartbeat.”