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erronis

(23,307 posts)
Wed Feb 18, 2026, 10:53 AM Yesterday

The Justice Department is not acting like it used to, criminal defense lawyers note -- NPR

https://www.npr.org/2026/02/18/g-s1-110397/justice-department-tracker-abnormal-criminal-charges
Carrie Johnson

Some of the nation's leading defense lawyers have been trying to wrap their heads around what they consider abnormal behavior by the U.S. Department of Justice over the past year.

Now, they're debuting a tool to help track criminal cases that appear to involve irregular charging practices, including aggressive legal theories and possible political retribution against President Trump's foes.

"We created the Case Tracker because you cannot defend against an enemy you cannot see," said Steven Salky, a lawyer in the Washington, D.C., area who oversees the project. "The Tracker is intended to spotlight for the next several years the unusual cases being prosecuted by the Department of Justice."

The new database includes the federal cases against Sean Charles Dunn, who threw a sub sandwich at a federal immigration officer, and Jacob Samuel Winkler, a homeless man accused of directing a laser pointer toward the Marine One presidential helicopter. Juries in Washington, D.C., acquitted both men.

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The Justice Department is not acting like it used to, criminal defense lawyers note -- NPR (Original Post) erronis Yesterday OP
Duh. What is being done about it? travelingthrulife Yesterday #1
The answer is in the article. intheflow Yesterday #2
Deadline Legal Blog-Trump DOJ goes into its Don Lemon case without a key tool: the courts' trust LetMyPeopleVote Yesterday #3

intheflow

(30,107 posts)
2. The answer is in the article.
Wed Feb 18, 2026, 12:34 PM
Yesterday

Lawyers outside the DOJ have created this tracker to identify and document the irregularities the DOJ is engaging in.

Apart from this article, we also have yesterday’s (or was it the day before?) judicial ruling stating that courts cannot proceed with the presumption of regularity when dealing with this DOJ because 99.5% of what they’re putting before judges is poorly reasoned, against 250 years of legal precedent, and driven by petty personal attacks against public and private citizens, to defend indefensible federal overreach.

LetMyPeopleVote

(177,544 posts)
3. Deadline Legal Blog-Trump DOJ goes into its Don Lemon case without a key tool: the courts' trust
Wed Feb 18, 2026, 06:09 PM
Yesterday

A motion from Don Lemon and Georgia Fort in Minnesota is the latest legal action questioning the “presumption of regularity” historically granted to the government.

Trump DOJ goes into its Don Lemon case without a key tool: The courts’ trust - MS NOW

apple.news/AuiMKRZdLS_C...

(@oc88.bsky.social) 2026-02-17T21:45:47.083Z

https://www.ms.now/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/don-lemon-georgia-fort-charges-minnesota-doj-trump

A motion from Lemon and Fort raises that bold claim in seeking disclosure of the secret grand jury proceedings against them. Their court filing underscores that there’s no good reason to presume good faith on the government’s part in President Donald Trump’s second term — and that there’s good reason to presume the opposite.

“The extraordinary set of events that led to this indictment reveals a significant risk that the government misstated key facts or elements of the offenses charged during its presentation to the grand jury, as it has already done so publicly, calling into question the validity of the indictment,” the motion argued. It said Lemon and Fort were indicted after attending a church protest “solely in their capacities as members of the press” and that they were charged only after courts rejected warrants for their arrest, Trump pressured the Justice Department and career prosecutors refused to be involved.

Maintaining that their concerns about government misconduct aren’t “abstract or speculative,” the defendants pointed to what they called “a small but growing body of caselaw involving the precise situation we see here — the government engaging in highly unusual conduct simultaneous to political pressure to bring charges, and misstatements of law at the highest levels of government.”....

More broadly, they argued that the administration isn’t entitled to the “presumption of regularity,” a legal concept that assumes government officials act properly. It’s worth questioning the presumption as a general matter but especially in this administration, whose atypical actions have drawn atypical scrutiny from judges, including in other recent cases in Minnesota.

“In light of the foregoing, the grand jury process in question here is not entitled to any presumption of regularity by the Court. Likewise, it should not be afforded the traditional secrecy that accompanies grand juries operating in the normal course,” Lemon and Fort argued in their motion, filed Friday.

They were charged with conspiring against the right of religious freedom at a place of worship and with injuring, intimidating and interfering with the exercise of the right of religious freedom at a place of worship. They have pleaded not guilty.

The DOJ will have an opportunity to respond to the motion. But due to the Trump government’s behavior over the past year, it may be going into this case with a disadvantage — or, perhaps more precisely, without the advantage it would have in normal times. Although if we were in normal times, this case might not exist.
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