Quaglin, once a skilled electrician running multimillion-dollar projects, now sleeps on a couch in the home of fellow pardoned January 6er Adam and Beth Villarreal in Washington, D.C’s Homeland House.
Without their generosity, he’d be on the streets, his truck and a few garbage bags of clothes his only possessions.
Quaglin has applied for dozens of jobs, but employers, spooked by a Google search painting him as an “insurrectionist,” won’t touch him.
His plan to fund a J6 tour—raising awareness about the political persecution he and over 1,500 others endured for protesting the 2020 election—has faltered, with recent merchandise sales netting just $500 of a $5,000 goal.