[Not loaded yet]
Yes I know that…I’m just going off what we know so far based in what’s reported.
So far it shows ICE had a warrant and the judge obstructed
Obstructed how? Cite case law supporting your contention.
And you’re lucky I’m even responding to this given your AI “citation.”
The ai researches sources online in real time.
Also whether you respond to me or not that has nothing to do with luck just your ego I guess. I don’t care either way.
Also there was a pretty similar case that occurred in 2019.
Prosecution cut them a deal. This judge wasn’t exonerated
1. The AI searches case reporters? Really?? I promise it does not…
2. In that case, the judge escorted them to a private exit that was not publicly-accessible. In this case, THERE WAS A DEA ARRESTING AGENT ON THE PUBLIC ELEVATOR WITH THE PERSON, WHO THEN EXITED THE BUILDING FROM A PUBLIC EXIT.
Apr 25, 2025 19:33…dude it literally just cited that exact 2019 case and provided the source below to which I showed you the screens shots
how did you not know that?
Also no, in this current case the report says she moved them to a jury room….an administrative warrant won’t let ICE in jury rooms, hence not public
The courtroom is public, right? The officers agreed not to enter the courtroom, right?
How is the jury room issue even relevant when he eventually ended up in the public hallway outside the courtroom, rode the public elevator, and then left through a public exit? That’s why I said “cite case law.”
No the courthouse itself is public but specific rooms in a courthouse are not public.
But regardless of wether one room is public or not, if you are a judge and you are ushering an illegal immigrant away from ICE knowingly with a warrant for their arrest then you are obstructing arrest