Did the U.S. Solicitor General Mislead SCOTUS?. 1/2
Elizabeth Prelogar, Joe Biden's appointed solicitor general, attempted to downplay prison sentences associated with J6ers convicted of 1512(c)(2) during oral arguments. But did she tell the truth?
JULIE KELLY APRIL 18, 2024
The U.S. Supreme Court acted as a bit of a party crasher this week just as Democrats and the corporate media were celebrating the start of Donald Trump’s first criminal trial in New York City.
While jury selection got underway in Judge Juan Merchan’s Manhattan courtroom, oral arguments began Tuesday morning at SCOTUS in Joseph Fischer vs. USA related to the Department of Justice’s use of 18 U.S.C. § 1512(c)(2)—obstruction of an official proceeding—in its ongoing criminal prosecution of January 6 protesters. Fischer is one of roughly 350 J6 defendants charged with the post-Enron records-destroying statute weaponized by Joe Biden’s DOJ to punish Americans who protested Biden’s election that day.
The law also represents half of Special Counsel Jack Smith’s four-count indictment against the former president related to the events of January 6.
Some of the same commentators popping champagne corks at the thought of Trump being sent to Rikers Island openly fretted that J6ers could go free after a majority of justices expressed skeptism at the government’s position during the hearing. Wondering aloud how Fischer even made it to the Supreme Court—never a Constitution handy on the CNN set when you need one—Dana Bash fearfully asked one legal expert about J6ers ensnared in 1512(c)(2) convictions, “could they be let out of jail?”
After more than three years, the DOJ’s unprecedented use of the corporate fraud statute to prosecute political protesters received overdue scrutiny by the highest court. The April 16 hearing got off to a somewhat rocky start for Jeffrey Green, the attorney representing Fischer, as justices peppered him with questions about the connection between two subsections of the statute.
U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth Prelogar, who represented the government, didn’t fare much better. Aformer law clerkfor both Attorney General Merrick Garland and Supreme Court Justice Elena KaganPrelogar did little to ease concerns over the government’s broad interpretation of 1512(c)(2)while admitting the statute has been and will continue to be selectively used against Jan 6 protesters and not other demonstrators who engage in similar conduct—particularly those aligned with Democratic Party interests.
But in her zeal to downplay harsh prison sentencesoften associated with a 1512(c)(2) conviction in Jan 6 cases—a few justices questioned her about the severity of a 20-year maximum sentence for interrupting a government function—Prelogar might have fatally damaged the credibility of her case; she misrepresented, or at the very least misstated, the government’s handling of prison sentences for J6ers convicted of 1512(c)(2).
Covering DOJ’s Tracks
Noting that Fischer was charged with six other offenses including assault of a police officer, Justice Brett Kavanaugh asked Prelogar if 1512(c)(2) would represent the count with the longest possible prison time compared to the other charges.
You can hear the exchange here:
According to current DOJ data, 1512(c)(2) represents the only felony in 55 J6 cases; other counts commonly include nonviolent misdemeanors such as parading in the Capitol or disorderly conduct.My analysisshows that theaverage sentence for those 55 defendants is 26 months, so Prelogar is correct.
But Prelogar failed to tell the whole story. Based on further analysis of the DOJ's J6 sentencing chart, prosecutors have asked for an average of 40 months in prison in those same 55 cases. For a handful of defendants, prosecutors recommended prison terms as long as 78 months.
Without judges who, for the most part, refused to acquiesce to the government’s excessive prison recommendations,a defendant convicted of 1512(c)(2) and other misdemeanors would be behind bars for over a year longer than what Prelogar represented.
So that rendersher statementthat “there's no reasonable argument to be made that the statutory maximum here is driving anything with respect to sentencing”demonstrably false. In fact, the DOJ routinely mentions in sentencing memos how “the Defendant faces a maximum sentence of 20 years’ imprisonment.”
https://www.declassified.live/p/did-the-us-solicitor-general-mislead