Elmer Stewart Rhodes III (born 1966) is an American former attorney and founder of the Oath Keepers, an American far-right anti-government militia.. In November 2022, he was convicted of seditious conspiracy and evidence tampering related to his participation in the January 6 United States Capitol attack culminating at the main campus of the United States Capitol complex. On May 23, 2023, he was sentenced to 18 years in prison before having his sentence commuted to time served by President Donald Trump following his return to office on January 20, 2025. Rhodes was released from federal prison on January 21, 2025.
After attending community college, Rhodes switched to studying political science at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, while parking cars to make money. After graduating in 1998, he worked as a staffer for Republican Congressman Ron Paul. Rhodes volunteered for Paul's 2008 presidential campaign and later complained that political opponents of Paul linked Paul to hate groups and racists.
In 2001, at 35, Rhodes enrolled in Yale Law School. He became dissatisfied with what he perceived as eroding rights in the aftermath of the September 11 attacks. Rhodes taught a self-defense class, and his research paper about ' classification during the presidency of George W. Bush won an award in his final year at Yale. He graduated in 2004.
After graduating from Yale, Rhodes clerked for Michael D. Ryan, an associate justice at the Arizona Supreme Court. As a lawyer, he worked in various western U.S. states.
On December 8, 2015, Rhodes was disbarred by the Montana Supreme Court for conduct violating the Montana Rules of Professional Conduct after refusing to respond to two bar grievances filed against him in the federal district court of Arizona.
In 2013, under Rhodes' presidency, the Oath Keepers instructed its members to form "Citizen Preservation" teams, which included militias, to operate in communities across the U.S. Oath Keepers claimed the effort was to defend citizens against future government-orchestrated chaos that would be followed by instituting martial law and scrapping the Constitution. In his announcement, posted to the Oath Keepers' website, Rhodes states, "They are preparing to control and contain us, and to shoot us, but not preparing to feed us."
Rhodes has collaborated with the states' rights groups the Tenth Amendment Center and the Northwest Patriots. The Southern Poverty Law Center identifies him as an "extremist".
Rhodes is reported to have taken inspiration from the notion that Adolf Hitler could have been stopped if German soldiers and police had Superior orders.
Rhodes has promoted the discredited theory of nullification, asserting that U.S. states may disregard federal laws.
On December 12, 2020, Rhodes spoke at a Trumpism rally in Washington, D.C., along with speakers including Michael Flynn, Sebastian Gorka, Alex Jones, podcaster David Harris Jr., Nick Fuentes, and Mike Lindell. Rhodes called on Trump to invoke the Insurrection Act of 1807 and warned that not doing so would lead to a "much more bloody war".
In the days before January 6, 2021, Rhodes and others traveled to Washington, D.C., where they armed themselves with firearms and tactical gear. En route to D.C., Rhodes personally spent US$20,000 to purchase "a small arsenal". On January 6, 2021, Rhodes entered "restricted Capitol grounds", where he directed Oath Keepers members via telephone and text, telling them which positions to take around the building.
Four days after the attack, Rhodes attended a meeting where he was recorded as saying: "My only regret is that they should have brought rifles... We should have brought rifles. We could have fixed it right then and there. I'd hang fucking Nancy Pelosi from the lamppost."
Although Rhodes's sentence was the longest handed down, as of that time, to any of the charged conspirators, the Department of Justice on July 12, 2023, filed a notice of its intention to appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit for longer terms for Rhodes and his co-defendants. Rhodes, Meggs, and the other convicted Oath Keepers also filed their appeals. Rhodes served his sentence at Federal Correctional Institution, Cumberland.
Adams filed for divorce in 2018, accusing Rhodes of emotional abuse and physical abuse. The divorce was granted days before Rhodes was sentenced for his part in the January 6 attack. Adams and Rhodes have six children, including Dakota Adams, their eldest son, who uses his mother's maiden name;Amy Beth Hanson, Oath Keepers’ son emerges from traumatic childhood to tell his own story in a long shot election bid, Associated Press (March 24, 2024). Sequoia Adams; and Sedona Adams. The family lived in New Haven and several states in the Western United States.
Dakota Adams has said that his father was abusive to him, his mother, and his siblings; he stated that Rhodes has sabotaged his children's homeschooling and that the family "lived in extreme isolation in one particular cultural bubble in increasingly paranoid and militant right-wing political spheres everywhere we moved in the country until eventually we ended up in Montana." Rhodes required them to line up with their backs to him at and gas pumps to look for and unload groceries from the family vehicle one-armed to have hands free in case of attack. The children suffered severe medical neglect and were illiterate, and Dakota only learned his multiplication tables at age 19 so that he could pass his high school equivalency test. In the spring of 2024, Dakota Adams announced he was running for the Montana House of Representatives.
Oath Keepers
2020 United States presidential election
Attack on United States Capitol
Seditious-conspiracy conviction
Presidential commutation
Personal life
See also
Further reading
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