Tag: J6

  • DC Jails not Releasing Pardonees

    DC Jails not Releasing Pardonees

    This irritates me. There are 22 J6 pardonees being held in pre-trial detention at the Wahington DC department of corrections jail. They are being held there because there is not a federal detention center in the DC area.

    They were all subjects of the pardons issued by President Trump yesterday. Unlike those held by the Federal Bureau of Prisons – who released all of their pardonees by midnight last night – the ones held at the DC jail have not been released yet.

    According to Bill Shipley, a former federal prosecutor turned defense attorney who repped several dozen J6 defendants this is illegal. From his Twitter:

    I’m just now getting up to speed on the problems at DOC in the District.

    This is UNBELIEVABLE.

    These defendants now have a civil rights suit against DC.

    The pardon’s were dated yesterday – 1/20. Any lawful authority to keep a defendant in custody ended at 11:59 pm.

    Beyond that it was an “unlawful seizure” in violation of the 4th Amendment.

    Defendants are housed at DOC under a contract with the U.S. Marshal’s Service because there is not U.S. Govt holding facility in DC.

    The U.S. Marshal for the District of Columbia is a Presidential Appointee, and the USMS is part of the Justice Department. So, what is apparently happening now is the Trump DOJ has directed the USMS to go into the DOC and physically remove those J6 defendants still being held.

    If I was giving the instructions, I would have DOC officials removed in handcuffs and taken across the river to EDVA to be held pending a investigation into Sec. 242 violations.

    As Sen. Lee posted yesterday — maybe it is time for Congress to revisit “Home Rule” in DC.

    The DC jail has been known for terrible conditions and extremely poor treatment of J6 defendants. I do not understand what the DC DOC stands to gain by this intransigence. All they’re doing now is stacking civil rights lawsuits and payouts for all those being illegally held.

  • House Refers Dizzy Lizzie For Prosecution

    House Refers Dizzy Lizzie For Prosecution

    The House Oversight committee released its interim report on all things J6 and it’s not good news for Liz Cheney.

    Among other things, including the fact that the whole incident could have been prevented, the report said Cheney tampered with witnesses. Witness tampering is a felony and can carry a sentence of up to 10 years in federal prison.

    The report specifically mentioned Cassidy Hutchinson, the former aide to Mark Meadows. Cheney repeatedly had communications with Hutchinson via an encrypted app while the investigation was in full swing. You probably remember that Hutchinson was the one who testified that Trump tried to grab the wheel of the Beast while the riot was going on.

    “The Federal Bureau of Investigation must also investigate Representative Cheney for violating 18 U.S.C. 1622, which prohibits any person from procuring another person to commit perjury,” the report said. ”Based on the evidence obtained by this Subcommittee, Hutchinson committed perjury when she lied under oath to the Select Committee.”

  • A letter from J6 Political…

    A letter from J6 Political…

    The Persecuted Patriot- A letter from J6 Political Prisoners

    by Guest Contributor Jan. 5, 2024 7:20 pm

    j6-crowd.jpg

    Guest post by J6 Political Prisoners

    As the third anniversary of January 6th approaches, Christopher Joseph Quaglin and a collection of other J6ers wrote to The Gateway Pundit:

    January 6th was a mostly peaceful protest that, at times, got out of hand. This happened due to an overaggressive police force. Lack of planning on the Capitol Police’s part didn’t help matters. However, the real reason January 6th got out of hand was FBI preplanning. This included but was not limited to FBI confidential informants, paid instigators, and a bunch of undercover feds in the crowd. The FBI knew January 6th was a powder keg ready to explode. They were given plenty of information prior to January 6th to prove this.

    The FBI had confidential informants in high-ranking positions of every organization they are now prosecuting. These organizations include but are not limited to Proud Boys, Oath Keepers, 3%ers, and Antifa. The FBI could have stopped the January 6th riot. They chose not to. Instead, they went to great lengths to make sure a riot did happen on January 6th.

    The FBI kept certain facts from the Capitol Police. They limited security and stirred up patriotic Americans, causing a riot. In short, they lit the fuse. All they had to do was tell the Capitol Police about known numbers and possible threats. That would have caused the Capitol Police to increase their numbers or set up no-scale fencing around the Capitol Building. Nancy Pelosi and Mayor Bowser could have accepted Trump’s offer of 10,000 National Guardsmen. The powers that run both the FBI and the DC Police alike. They wanted January 6th to turn into a riot.

    The Left used the law-abiding Trump supporters who have never been in a riot to act on emotions due to a stolen election. They put the lives of Trump supporters and Police alike in jeopardy. We all became pawns in a political chess game.

    January 6th was a false flag event, much like the Governor Whitmer kidnapping in Michigan. (The very same FBI agent was actually transferred to DC after the Michigan FBI plot was discovered.) The same tactics used in Michigan were used in the January 6th riot.

    Using a biased mainstream media, the left would exaggerate the events of the January 6th protest as an “insurrection.” They would use this to try to stop Trump from running again in 2024. Needless to say, it didn’t have the outcome they were hoping for.

    January 6th was a “mostly peaceful protest” that, at times, got out of hand. There were four deaths that occurred at the Capitol on January 6th. Despite what the media tells you, NO cops died that day. Even though the Capitol Riot was a setup that backfired, January 6th did its job. It sent a message across the nation and the world that the people’s voices had been stolen and that the American people’s freedom wasn’t to be taken away without a fight. It opened up the eyes of every American and the world. It showed everyone what it looks like when “the right” is pushed to its breaking point.

    Let me enlighten you on why the Capitol Protest really took place. I invite you to do your own research, but I ask you to refrain from using biased search engines like Google. Use DuckduckGo.com instead. You can start by watching the documentaries 2,000 Mules, The Real Story of January 6th, Police State, and Capitol Punishment.

    For starters, I’d like to begin by saying that in America, overthrowing a tyrannical government is not a crime. In fact, it is a patriot’s duty to overthrow such a government should it arise. Written by our forefathers, the Declaration of Independence is very specific when it comes to this. With that being said, the “mostly peaceful protest” at the Capitol Building on January 6th, 2021, was not an insurrection.

    For me, the decision to march on the Capitol was an easy one to make. I love my country and I saw an unforgivable wrong that needed to be immediately addressed. The FBI was hoping for a bloodbath. Instead, they got a modern-day Boston Tea Party. Both acts of protest were carried out by a small number of Patriots who believed immediate action must be taken for the good of the country. Not everyone stands behind the march on the Capitol Building on January 6th. Not everyone stood behind the Boston Tea Party in 1773 either. However, I believe in time, our history books will show that January 6th, in fact, was a forced, justifiable action and a turning point in our nation’s history. One could even argue that, despite being an FBI black flag operation, the January 6th “mostly peaceful protest” stopped, or at least postponed, a true insurrection from happening in America.

    Using the Covid pandemic as a cover, I saw a huge injustice take place with “mail-in ballot mismanagement” and blatant voter fraud in the 2020 Presidential Election. Worse, I saw half the country and most of the media turn a blind eye and ignore any injustice or fraud because they believed the propaganda or liked the outcome. In reality, Democrat or Republican voter fraud should infuriate everyone who calls themselves an American. Any and every sign of fraud should have been seriously investigated and not overlooked. This doesn’t just mean a recount. There is nothing worse than a false election because it leads to oligarchy or dictatorship. This is America, the land of the free. America isn’t some Communist country. We don’t hold false elections here. If you purposely mismanage the people’s vote, you take away the people’s voice. That’s exactly what voter fraud is. It’s taking the voice away from Americans. It’s taking away our freedom.

    I promise you as long as patriots have air in their lungs and blood in their veins America will always be free. I strongly believe, as our forefathers did, that the American government was created of the people, for the people and by the people. If anyone forgets this then it’s the people’s obligation and duty to remind those individuals. Thomas Jefferson once said: “What country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not reminded from time to time that their people preserve the spirit of resistance.”

    January 6th was that reminder.

    Communist countries like Russia, China, and Venezuela are what happens when the people give up their freedoms because they believe that the government knows best. Communist and Marxist countries, under the false promise of becoming a utopia, have been robbing people of God-given rights for 100 years all over the world. People never seem to realize that Socialism, Communism, and Marxism just don’t work. America is a Constitutional Republic that’s based on a Capitalist Society. We fought wars against Communist countries where elections were fraudulent and government-controlled media only covered or push stories that fit a certain narrative.

    That isn’t America, or is it?

    Unfortunately, that’s exactly what I see happening in our once-free country, and it makes me sick to my stomach.

    Honestly, the March on the Capitol was long overdue. This dam was ready to burst for years. The 2020 election fraud was only the breaking point. The truth is that D.C. has more in common with a Marxist government than any American should be comfortable with. D.C. is in its own little bubble where politics rule, and if you aren’t part of “the club,” the “powers that be” will bury you. Forget about Trump being President for a minute (which was never supposed to happen and scared the Hell out of the career politicians). Just look at how they are treating American Patriots involved in the 6th. We have been denied bail, locked up in solitary confinement for months, denied lawyer visits, and now are given prison sentences of 10 and 20 years.

    Yet when “the left “protests, they get no punishment at all, no matter how much destruction they cause. The media won’t cover any of this injustice. Instead, the media and the government glorify how many protesters they have arrested for January 6th. This is to be expected in a Communist country, not in America. This is not what our nation’s forefathers had in mind when they created America’s Constitutional Republic 250 years ago.

    The Swamp, Deep State, the 1%, and these “Progressives” who are nothing but Communists in Democrat’s clothing are exactly why I marched up the Capitol steps. I marched because it is the People’s House. These career politicians holding on to the same seat for over 30 years and getting paid four times the national average complain they need a raise while having unexplained millions in the bank, which is why I marched. These politicians thought they were untouchable. Not anymore. I marched because our forefathers intended for those seats to be modestly compensated for, which was a burden only a true Patriot would take on for love of country. Being a politician was never meant to be a career position. It was never intended to make anyone wealthy. It was supposed to be a public service that was passed along after a few years.

    I see the exact opposite happening today. I see politicians who are drunk on power, refusing to give up their seats, taking millions in bribes, and acting more like kings and queens rather than elected officials. The last thing our forefathers wanted was another king. That’s why term limits were later created for the president, yet good men like George Washington and others passed the torch after two terms. 250 years later, this is exactly why term limits for the House, Senate, and even judges need to happen. This is the only way to stop or at least keep the corruption under some sort of control. We need this to happen to save our country.

    In years to come, when young patriots ask why I marched on the Capitol, I will tell them that I did it because some things can’t be overlooked and that previous generations had let enough slide in the past. This was the breaking point. I see the slippery slope my country is on, and I don’t like where it is headed. I don’t want America’s future generations to grow up in a Communist country. I want them to live in a land that is free, like America’s forefathers intended. Just like dealing with a bully in grade school, sometimes you have to stand up to them and punch them square in the nose or they will never stop. January 6th was that punch in the nose.

    Hundreds of thousands of patriots marched on the Capitol; tens of millions marched in spirit. There were nurses, firefighters, police, teachers, tradesmen, and veterans’ voices that demanded to be heard. These patriots include Ashli Babbitt, Rosanne Boyland, Kevin Greeson, and Benjamin Phillips, who were killed in cold blood during the January 6th protest. We the People had to warn these officials and anyone else in this voting scam that this was still America. A fraudulent election was unacceptable here and it would never be repeated. January 6th was that warning.

    I guess it’s only a “mostly peaceful protest” when the left does it. Why or how the left can be upset with what happened at the Capitol on January 6th while they praised what happened throughout America in prior months is beyond me. In fact. I’ll go one step further and say that the left caused the riot to happen in more than one way.

    Politicians and left-wing media glorified the riots in the “summer of love” months before that cost billions of dollars in damages, ruining hundreds of thousands of lives while destroying cities all across America. The media and politicians alike called them “mostly peaceful protests.” Some Congress members said that “the protests had to continue” and “The cause was greater than a few broken windows.”

    In reality, letting the country burn for months, saying it’s because of George Floyd when you’re really promoting and funding nationwide anarchy just to end Trump’s presidency, was quite possibly the most selfish decision ever made in American history. You should be ashamed of yourselves. The “tolerant left” elected officials should have put politics aside and stopped the burning and looting in the streets of America a long time ago. They could have and chose not to.

    Now, again, for political gain, they call the January 6th “mostly political protest” “The Insurrection” and compare it to the 9-11 terror attacks that took 3,000 American lives. Now those same political figures want to search the country and lock up people who were involved in a protest? Why? The left set up “Go Fund Me” accounts for anarchists and Marxist groups like Antifa and BLM to pay for nationwide bail in case members got arrested. These organizations cost taxpayers billions in damages as they looted and burned businesses, firebombed multiple state and federal government buildings, and even took over a section of Portland. Police were told to stand down. Judges and District Attorneys refused to prosecute members of Antifa and BLM who were arrested. Why the double standard? Why now? The government did a 180. Why are the same police officers the left called “the enemy” that “needed to be defunded” now “victims”?

    In the sham called the January 6th Investigation Committee, we saw police turned into actors spewing prewritten speeches with words they couldn’t pronounce and blubbering about how the January 6th protest turned riot was worse than a battle in Afghanistan. Yet now that the footage is being released, we see their lies are starting to catch up with them.

    January 6th proved that although it has been 250 years since our founding fathers wrote the Constitution and Declaration of Independence there are still patriots ready to fight for their freedom. I marched on the Capitol because it’s exactly what our forefathers would have done if they were alive today and experienced this unprecedented voter fraud that undermined the ideals that the very core of our American existence is based upon. Asked to attend by our Commander in Chief Donald J. Trump, one million patriots showed up who had enough of the political swamp we now call D.C. We marched in our Capitol against voter fraud and a stolen election. Hundreds of thousands took it one step further and marched on the Capital Building and brought the protest to the politicians’ front doors. We did it unarmed. We did it to prove a point and we did it peacefully until the police used excessive force. WE marched to remind those forgetful politicians that they work for the people. We did it to let them know they would be voted out soon enough but that some things needed to be immediately addressed.

    Despite what the media tells you the January 6th protest was NOT an insurrection. Being that the “right” owns more firearms than the military ten times over, if the January 6th “mostly peaceful protest” was an “insurrection,” you would have known it. January 6th was a mostly peaceful reminder. January 6th was a much-needed punch in the nose. In short, January 6th was a warning.

  • SCOTUS Considering a…

    SCOTUS Considering a…

    Supreme Court Considering a Case That Might Upend Hundreds of January 6 Prosecutions

    Rick Moran for PJMedia.com

    Image: Jacqueline Martin

    Prosecutorial overreach is not uncommon in high-profile cases. The prosecutors pile on the charges to frighten defendants with the prospect of long prison terms so they plead out. The state also hopes to throw enough charges against the wall to see what sticks.

    But the danger of overreach is that a judge may want to smack a prosecutor down for bringing unnecessary charges. Such is the case in the January 6 prosecutions.

    One of the rioters, Edward Lang, is facing 11 charges and pleaded not guilty to all of them. But a district court judge threw out the charges relating to “obstruction of an official proceeding” concerning Lang and two others accused of violence at the Capitol.

    The law in question sentences a guilty party to up to 20 years in prison for anyone who “corruptly alters, destroys, mutilates, or conceals a record, document,” or “otherwise obstructs, influences, or impedes any official proceeding, or attempts to do so.” Lang is questioning whether the Sarbanes-Oxley statute fits the behavior of hundreds of rioters.

    Sarbanes-Oxley was passed in response to financial malfeasance in the 2002 bankruptcies of telecom giant Worldcom and Enron, an energy company based in Houston. Lang argues that the obstruction defined in Sarbanes-Oxley bears no relationship to the violence that occurred on January 6, 2021.

    The New York Sun:

    The panel of the United States Appeals Court for the District of Columbia, though, by a 2-to-1 margin, upheld the use of the obstruction charge, deciding that Judge Nichols’s reading was too cramped. Judge Pan, writing for the majority, ruled that the “broad interpretation of the statute — encompassing all forms of obstructive acts — is unambiguous and natural.”

    The request for a hearing before the Nine asks whether the statute, intended to clamp down on financial malfeasance, “can be used to prosecute acts of violence against police officers in the context of a public demonstration that turned into a riot.” Mr. Lang argues that a “statute intended to combat financial fraud has been transformed into a blatant political instrument to crush dissent.”

    Lang’s petition before the high court warns that a “revolution is underway, with ambitious federal prosecutors reworking the penal code to make it do work never intended to be done, work that threatens to chill, and does chill, ordinary Americans in their First Amendment rights.” The petition says there’s no need to “create a new and novel application of a statute to capture the violence that took place that day.”

    Lang argues that the obstruction must be done “corruptly,” which doesn’t appear to be the case in his prosecution. And finally, Lang warns that this prosecutorial strategy “will serve to chill political speech and expression on the eve of one of the most consequential events in American life — the election of the next President of the United States.” He says it “falls to this Court to rein in the Department of Justice.”

    It’s easy to argue that there is a certain amount of vindictiveness in many of these prosecutions. The question facing the court will be, did prosecutors go too far in fashioning a legal argument to prosecute based on a loose interpretation of a statute that was never meant to cover violence during a riot?

    Courts are reluctant to reign in prosecutors, but in this case, there’s a chance the Supreme Court might look to cut the DoJ’s misused freedom of action and bring them down a peg.

    For some rioters, it could mean the difference between prison and freedom. For others, taking a 20-year sentence off the table will be, if nothing else, a relief.

    This should make next Court session very interesting! It is past time DOJ receives a wake up call for their activities in this matter.

  • January 6 Defendant Being Illegally Detained – Locked up More Than 80 Days With No Indictment

    January 6 Defendant Being Illegally Detained – Locked up More Than 80 Days With No Indictment

    Editors note: This is a long-ish read but well worth your time.

    By Leslie McAdoo Gordon | RedState

    You don’t see this very often in federal court, but one of the January 6 (J6) Defendants, Lucas Denney, is being held illegally. He was arrested in Texas on December 13, 2021, and brought before a federal magistrate, who ordered him detained without bond on a criminal Complaint. It then took six weeks to transfer him to DC, where he is currently being held. He has not appeared before a federal judge in DC since his arrival, although that will change Monday afternoon as a result of his lawyer seeking his release.

    Denney’s case involves two distinct, major screwups. The first is that he was not afforded a Preliminary Hearing, to which he is entitled under the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure and the Constitution. The second is that he has not been indicted by a grand jury within 30 days of his arrest, as required by the federal Speedy Trial Act. Consequently, Denney’s detention has been unlawful since at least late January 2022.

    The Department of Justice (DOJ) alleges that Denney participated in the riot on January 6, 2021, in Washington D.C. at the United States Capitol. It charged Denney with five felonies: assaults, civil disorder, and obstructions of an official proceeding, and with seven trespassing misdemeanors. An arrest warrant was issued for him in December 2021 based on a criminal Complaint sworn out by a law enforcement officer, not on an indictment returned by a grand jury.

    Denney was arrested on December 13, 2021, in Texas, where he lives, and taken before a federal magistrate there. According to the docket of his case, he appeared before the federal magistrate on December 14, 2021, for what the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure call an “Initial Appearance.” That is just what it sounds like: it’s the first time a judicial officer sees a person after they are arrested.  Its purpose is to make sure the person has been legally arrested. The Constitution requires that the Initial Appearance be held promptly, generally within 48 hours.

    The Preliminary Hearing Defect

    Once a person is arrested a number of REQUIRED procedures kick in that are set forth in the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure or the Speedy Trial Act. At the Initial Appearance, the magistrate must advise the Defendant of certain things and take certain actions. To make sure people see a magistrate promptly as required by the Constitution, the Rules address WHERE the Initial Appearance has to take place.

    If the person is arrested in the federal district where the offense took place (which is where the trial will be), the person must be taken to a magistrate in THAT district. We don’t want the government taking defendants someplace else to appear before a magistrate, because that would create an opportunity for abusive treatment.

    But if the person is arrested in a federal district OTHER than where the offense took place, the person must be taken to a magistrate in the district where the arrest was made. This is again to preclude procedural gamesmanship, for example: to keep people from being transported for however long “the system” takes to move them before they actually see a judge.

    The only exception to this rule is that the person can be taken to “an adjacent” district instead IF that will be faster or if the trial will be in that adjacent district AND the person can be taken there the same day.

    So, to return to Denney’s case: He is charged with J6 offenses, so his trial will be in DC. But, like many J6 Defendants, he was arrested where he lives – Texas – so he was taken upon his arrest before a federal magistrate in the Western District of Texas. So far, so good.

    At the Initial Appearance, the Texas magistrate reviewed the papers and set a Detention Hearing for three days later – December 17, 2021 – along with a Removal Hearing. The DOJ wanted Denney detained pending trial, and the Detention Hearing is to ensure that there is a lawful basis for doing so.  “Removal” is the term for transferring a person from one federal district to another, in this case from the Western District of Texas to DC. A Removal Hearing ensures that there is a lawful basis for the transfer.

    The Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure that deals with these requirements is, “Rule 5. Initial Appearance.”

    On December 17, 2021, the Texas magistrate held the Detention and Removal Hearings. He detained Denney on the usual grounds of dangerousness & flight risk, and he denied Denney bond. He confirmed that the DC criminal Complaint existed and pertained to Denney, so he also ordered Denney transferred to DC.

    Those steps take care of most of what a magistrate has to do at an Initial Appearance. But Rule 5(c)(3)(C) also says that the magistrate MUST hold a Preliminary Hearing, which is a different proceeding from a Detention Hearing or a Removal Hearing.

    A Preliminary Hearing tests whether the government has probable cause to support the criminal charge against the person in the first place. It is a procedural requirement to prevent the government from arresting and holding people based on insufficient evidence or on no charge at all. It generally applies to all cases where the defendant hasn’t yet been indicted by a grand jury. Rule 5.1 lists the exceptions where a Preliminary hearing is not required, and none of those exceptions applies to Denney.

    Rule 5 requires that when a person has an Initial Appearance in a district other than where the offense was allegedly committed, the Preliminary Hearing – if one is required – must also be held in that district – where their Initial Appearance is, NOT in the district where the trial will be. That means that Denny should have had his Preliminary Hearing in Texas, but none was ever scheduled there.

    Rule 5.1 also dictates WHEN a Preliminary Hearing must take place – within 14 days of the Initial Appearance. That meant the Preliminary Hearing for Denney had to take place (in Texas) no later than December 29, 2021. The 14-day deadline can be extended under certain circumstances, but the Government didn’t ask for an extension.

    The Texas magistrate did not purport to hold a Preliminary Hearing. Indeed, in his Order of Removal & Detention, he says he’s “anticipating” that the Rule 5.1 Preliminary Hearing will be conducted in DC. Why he would think that when the Rules clearly say it should be conducted in Texas is unclear.

    The Texas magistrate’s Order also says he’s anticipating the Preliminary Hearing will be held within the required 14 days, but he was apparently none too sure of that because he made a finding of probable cause as to one charge anyway, based on testimony given by the FBI agent at the Detention and Removal Hearing. It appears that the Texas magistrate was concerned Denney would end up being held without any judicial officer making a finding of probable cause within the required 14 days.

    The magistrate was wise to be concerned because Denney spent the next 46 days in the federal prison system being “transported” to DC by the Marshal’s Service. On January 31, 2022, federal prosecutors handling the DC cases were notified that Denney had arrived in the DC federal district, after spending six weeks “in transport” from Texas.

    Instead of being promptly taken before a federal DC judge, however, or scheduled for a Preliminary Hearing, his case was scheduled on the docket for an “Initial Appearance.” That is absurd, because he had already had his Initial Appearance in Texas, and by January 31, 2022, he had been in federal custody for 50 days.

    To make things worse, this “Initial Appearance” was set for March 10th, which would be almost 90 days after his arrest, even though Rule 5 says an Initial Appearance has to be held promptly upon arrest, preferably the same day. Indeed, the Speedy Trial Act says a defendant’s TRIAL has to commence within 100 days of his arrest.

    On March 2, Denney’s lawyer filed a motion demanding Denny’s release. He argued that there was a clear violation in Denny’s case of Rule 5.1 – the requirement to conduct a Preliminary Hearing – which meant no judge had ever found probable cause to support the charges. He also pointed out that Denney had not yet been indicted.

    This motion triggered an immediate response by the DC federal court. The DC magistrate issued a Minute Order before noon the next day, directing the US Attorney’s Office in DC to respond to the motion by 5 PM that same day (Thursday).

    The Government’s response points to the Texas magistrate’s finding of probable cause. They don’t expressly argue that he conducted a Preliminary Hearing under Rule 5.1, (probably because even the magistrate didn’t claim that’s what he was doing), they just mention it. But, they probably will argue at a hearing on the motion that the Texas magistrate’s finding of probable cause satisfied the purpose of a Preliminary Hearing, even if not labeled as such.

    Incredibly, however, the Government’s response also argues that because Denney hasn’t had his “Initial Appearance” in DC yet, and since that appearance isn’t scheduled until March 10th, he will get his Preliminary Hearing within 14 days after that. This argument contravenes both the Rules of Criminal Procedure and the Constitution. It is an unbelievable argument for a federal prosecutor to make.

    Boiled down, the government argues both that: “He already had his Preliminary Hearing” and “He’s going to get his Preliminary Hearing later this month. Don’t worry about it.” Plus, according to DOJ, Denney gets two “Initial Appearances,” which according to them, conveniently also gives DOJ a do-over on the deadline for conducting a Preliminary Hearing.

    Denney’s counsel filed a Reply on Friday morning, insisting that there was no Preliminary Hearing in Texas, which is true because the docket doesn’t show one and the Texas magistrate didn’t call what he did a Preliminary Hearing either. He completely took apart the Government’s arguments. Even on their theory, he points out, since Denney showed up in DC on January 31, it will be 38 days until his “Initial Appearance” on March 10, which Rule 5 says is supposed to happen “without unnecessary delay.”

    The DC magistrate, toward the end of the day on Friday, ordered that the Initial Appearance be moved up to the afternoon of Monday, March 7. I suspect the DC magistrate will say at that hearing that the Texas Magistrate’s actions constituted a Preliminary Hearing – in the district where it should have taken place – even if the Texas Magistrate did not call it a Preliminary Hearing or designate it as such on the docket. The Texas magistrate did, in fact, make a probable cause decision. If the DC magistrate concludes there was no Preliminary Hearing in Texas, then he has to decide what to do about that and there are not any easy answers to that question.

    The Speedy Trial Act Defect

    However, the Government has an even more significant problem in this case, which Denney’s lawyer raised in another motion he filed on Saturday. Under the Speedy Trial Act, 18 USC 3161, the Government must indict anyone that it arrests within 30 days and that deadline has been blatantly violated in Denney’s case.

    The sanction for failing to file an indictment within 30 days of arrest is clear. Section 3162 of the code states that the case must be dismissed. The dismissal is mandatory.

    Some time periods can be “excluded” (not counted) for purposes of the 30-day requirement. The allowable reasons for that are identified in Section 3161(h) and can include time for “transport” under section (h)(1)(F). But, under that section, any period of time longer than 10 days for transport is “presumed” unreasonable and therefore not excludable. (This is because we don’t want transport to be used punitively or as part of gamesmanship.)

    So, even adding 10 days for the allowable transport time, Denney had to be indicted by January 22, 2022, but he wasn’t. (None of the other reasons for excluding time applies in Denney’s case),

    Which means that Denney will have been illegally detained for 44 days as of Monday’s hearing date.

    Based on the violation of the Speedy Trial Act, Denney’s counsel has demanded that Denney be released and that his case be outright dismissed. So far, the Government has not filed a response to this motion. Late on Sunday, the Chief Judge of the DC federal court issued an order directing a magistrate to prepare a report and make a recommendation to her concerning the Speedy Trial Act violation.

    It is overwhelmingly likely that the courts will agree both to release Denney and that his case must be dismissed.

    The DC court will have to decide whether to dismiss Denney’s case with prejudice (meaning it cannot be re-filed) or without prejudice (meaning it can be re-filed), which is more likely. There is a multi-factored test that the magistrate has to apply to figure out which kind of dismissal to enter. Denney’s counsel asks the judge to order his release on Monday and not delay that while the magistrate figures out what kind of dismissal to enter. He correctly points out that the kind of dismissal can be decided later as that decision is not a necessary condition for Denney’s release.

    To refile the case, the Government would have to re-charge Denney on a new complaint or bring an actual indictment. But, if Denney is charged again, the Speedy Trial Act requires that the time between his original arrest in December & the day the original case was dismissed be counted toward the deadlines for the new case.

    For example, if the DC magistrate dismisses the case on Monday, then 84 days of the 100 under the Speedy Trial Act (30 to indict, plus 70 to trial), will already have run, or 74 if the judge excludes 10 days for the transport.

    That means that if – really when – Denney gets arrested again on either a new complaint or an indictment, the Government would have only 26 days until it must start his trial, unless time is extended for other, new reasons. It will be difficult to convince a judge that much more time should be excludable under the statute, so the Government will likely delay recharging Denney until they are better prepared to actually try his case.

    In terms of pre-trial detention for a new case, since there will have been a judicial finding that Denney was illegally detained for more than 40 days, the courts will tread lightly before detaining him again, particularly since if he gets arrested in Texas again, there will be the transport delay problem again and that could result in a violation of Denney’s right to a speedy trial date, which would require the case to be dismissed (probably for good this time) again. All in all, Denney is probably looking at more favorable pre-trial detention conditions if a new case is filed.

    Denney’s individual circumstances aside, this case constitutes an extremely troubling incident.  Transport with the federal criminal system is notoriously slow. While that is a problem even for convicted offenders, it is an outrage for pre-trial detainees who are presumed innocent. The transport system also hinders the formation of attorney-client relationships, which could address problems of this kind.

    And Denney’s case shows that apparently no one at DOJ, either at the U.S. Attorneys’ Office in D.C., at Main Justice, or in the U.S. Marshal’s Service, is paying attention to (or better yet tracking) these outside-of-D.C. pre-trial detention cases to ensure that the detainees are receiving all of the due process protections to which they are entitled and that the constitutional and statutory deadlines are met. Since it is the DOJ J6 prosecution team that is ordering arrests (instead of voluntary surrenders) and demanding detentions and transfers (instead of seeking reasonable conditions for pre-trial release), the failure to comply with the Constitution, the criminal code, and the Rules of Criminal Procedure rests entirely at the feet of the DOJ.

    The operative principles and rules for these early proceedings in criminal cases are not obscure, complex, or ambiguous. Competent prosecutors have no excuse for not knowing that Rule 5 requires that the Preliminary Hearing take place in the district where the Initial Appearance occurs, that it must be held within 14 days of that Initial Appearance, that there is no such thing as two “Initial Appearances,” and that the Speedy Trial Act requires an indictment to be filed within 30 days of arrest.

    The entire episode is an unmitigated disgrace.

    Original Here