Tag: sandwich guy
Glimmers Of Light In The Fight Against Authoritarianism

Glimmers Of Light In The Fight Against Authoritarianism

These are dark days for American lovers of liberty, so any glimmers of light are especially welcome.

Let's start with "Sandwich Man." The world knows him as the pink-shirted guy who shouted at federal agents patrolling the streets of Washington, D.C. After some aggressive language and pungent invitations to get lost, Sean C. Dunn then tossed a sandwich, hitting one of the officers (who seemed to be wearing body armor!) in the chest. Dunn ran (demonstrating impressive athleticism if I may say so). Weighed down by gear, the agents lumbered after him, eventually catching him a few blocks away and placing him under arrest. "I did it," he confessed. "I threw a sandwich." He was later released.

End of story? Not at all. Jeanine Pirro, the U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, sent more than a dozen FBI and U.S. Marshals agents in full tactical gear to Dunn's house to arrest him again the next day. Pirro then starred in a video of her own, declaring, "Assault a law enforcement officer, and you'll be prosecuted. This guy thought it was funny — well, he doesn't think it's funny today, because we charged him with a felony." Attorney General Pam Bondi chimed in to say that she had just learned that Dunn had been employed by the Department of Justice, but no longer. She fired him, she said, and charged him with a felony because he represented the "Deep State" they were fighting.

It was an absurd overcharge, lampooned as an "assault with a breadly weapon." A misdemeanor? Sure. You shouldn't throw things at people. But a felony, carrying a penalty of years in prison and thousands in fines? Please. Across Washington, D.C., posters and street art featuring the likeness of Sandwich Man proliferated — the flowering of popular protest. And then an interesting thing happened: The grand jury declined to return an indictment.

Grand juries hear evidence only from the prosecution, not from the defense, and the standard for bringing an indictment is only probable cause, not preponderance of the evidence or proof beyond a reasonable doubt. That's why they say a prosecutor can get a grand jury to indict a ham sandwich — but not, it seems, Sandwich Man.

Nor was this a lone example. Just a few days earlier, the Justice Department was obliged to reduce the charges against Sidney Lori Reid, who had been involved in a protest against federal agents attempting to transfer two people the government characterized as "gang members" into custody. Reid filmed them and placed her body between the officers and the men, resulting in some pushing and shoving in which an FBI officer's hand scraped against a brick wall, resulting in injury. The government charged Reid with forcibly "assaulting, impeding, or interfering with federal agents," a felony that could carry an eight-year sentence upon conviction. Three grand juries declined to indict.

These Washingtonians continued a long and venerable tradition of using the power of juries to stymie government overreach. In 1735, a jury declined to convict John Peter Zenger of seditious libel for criticizing the colonial governor, establishing a key precedent about press freedom. In the antebellum North, juries often refused to convict defendants who violated the Fugitive Slave Law, an expression of contempt for legislation that dishonored the nation.

Sandwich Man has allies in his resistance to injustice.

Lisa Cook is also supplying some welcome fight. Instead of retreating quietly after Trump attempted to fire her from the Federal Reserve Board, she declared her intention to sue on the grounds that Trump lacks the authority to fire her. "President Trump purported to fire me 'for cause' when no cause exists under the law, and he has no authority to do so. I will not resign. I will continue to carry out my duties to help the American economy as I have been doing since 2022."

Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-CA) is mocking Trump, which may have no immediate payoff but raises the spirits of those in need of it.

Gov. J.B. Pritzker (D-IL), less showy but not less effective than Newsom, delivered a forceful, intelligent and carefully reasoned repudiation of Trump's threat to deploy troops to Chicago. He began by saying, "If it sounds to you that I'm being alarmist, that's because I am ringing an alarm."

Pritzker made the point that crime is down, not up in Chicago and emphasized that Trump's approach neglects successful crime-fighting techniques. But more importantly, he excoriated Trump's threat as a transgression against American law, tradition and decency. He further urged all who might resist to do so peacefully, reminding them that the National Guard troops dragooned into this duty could very well be doing so unwillingly, subject to court martial if they disobeyed. It was the kind of message Americans need to be reminded of as Trump attempts to push us into civil conflict, which he could then use as cover for even more despotic power grabs.

Hats off to the good citizens of the District of Columbia and the others who are meeting this moment with signs of fight and the recognition of what we're facing.

Mona Charen is policy editor of The Bulwark and host of the "Beg to Differ" podcast. Her latest book is Hard Right: The GOP's Drift Toward Extremism.

Reprinted with permission from Creators.


Appointment Of Jeanine Pirro Is Backfiring Loudly In Washington

Appointment Of Jeanine Pirro Is Backfiring Loudly In Washington

In an article for Salon published Sunday, writer Sophia Tesfaye argued that the appointment of Jeanine Pirro as U.S. Attorney for Washington, D.C., the "face of President Donald Trump’s new law‑and‑order regime," is backfiring.

The article noted that so far, her time in office has been marked by grandstanding and symbolic arrests — tactics that courts have repeatedly dismantled.

Tesfaye asserted that the federal takeover of the capital's law enforcement apparatus "is little more than theater with essentially no legal foundation." She added that Pirro, plucked from Fox News for her loyalty and ratings, has prioritized aggressive messaging over prosecutorial substance.

The article further highlighted that Pirro’s team “whiffed on three cases alleging defendants assaulted federal agents," and the New York Times has pointed to her office’s struggle to match her bombastic rhetoric given the exodus of career-level prosecutors and staff.

Tefaye also noted that Pirro resorted to enlisting military lawyers to backfill massive staffing shortages, with 90 prosecutors and 60 support staff reportedly missing. This has overwhelmed the D.C. federal courts, used to six new cases per week, now inundated with six or more per day, pushing trial dates into 2027 and forcing judges to hasten hearings under pressure.

Tesfaye also spotlighted the infamous “Subway sandwich slinger” case: Sean Charles Dunn, who threw a sandwich at an agent during a protest, became the target of a felony assault charge. Pirro’s office clearly aimed for dramatic impact—but the grand jury refused to indict not once, but four times in a single month, reducing the case to a misdemeanor.

"The sandwich case was meant to be a show of strength; instead, it is serving as a symbol of the administration’s superficial posturing," Tesfaye wrote.

She added: "With Trump’s installation of shock troops like Pirro to carry out his ideological retribution under the banner of justice, judges and juries are now functioning as the final guardrails in the near-total absence of resistance from the Republican-led legislative branch. Thankfully, over 200 court orders have blocked Trump’s policies, including at least 120 rulings within the first 100 days alone."

Reprinted with permission from Alternet.

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