'This is injustice': how leftist zines were used to sentence anti-ICE protesters to decades in prison
Source: The Guardian
Last year on the Fourth of July, a small group from Dallas-Fort Worth held a night-time noise demonstration, setting off fireworks outside the Prairieland Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) detention facility south of the cities, in solidarity with the detainees. A few protesters broke away and spray-painted graffiti on employees cars and a security post, slashed the tires on a government van and broke a security camera. The facilitys guards ordered the protesters to disperse, and most of them did. When a police officer arrived at the scene, drawing his gun, an armed protester shot her rifle, hitting the officer in the shoulder. The officer survived.
After a three-week trial, a jury found eight of nine protesters guilty of providing material support to terrorists, among other crimes. For the Sotos, this material support included owning a printing press used to print anarchist zines and being part of a leftist book club, the federal government argued. The couple had already left the scene by the time guns were drawn. All eight of the defendants sentenced so far have received unusually harsh sentences 30 to 100 years essentially life in prison.
...
The Prairieland case was the first tried and convicted under the Trump Department of Justices counter-terrorism initiatives targeting antifa short for antifascist a decentralized movement the administration has officially categorized as a domestic terrorist organization. The federal government argued the Prairieland defendants, what they called a North Texas Antifa cell, had planned the demonstration as an assassination attempt against a law enforcement officer. The government alleged this conspiracy even though the defendants were loosely connected, and some who attended the protest did not even know each other.
...
But after the Prairieland conviction, federal prosecutors have had at least one other success: in Spokane, Washington, three people were convicted last month of conspiring to impede a federal officer over a protest to block an ICE vehicle attempting to transport two migrants. And the justice department shows no signs of stopping. Last week, 15 people in Minneapolis, Minnesota, were hit with the same charges of conspiracy to obstruct ICE operations, and were accused of being a part of antifa groups that violently oppose immigration law enforcement.
Read more: https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2026/jun/24/prairieland-texas-ice-protests-zines
Were you waiting to get to peak tyranny?
Congratulations, we're there.
You may not read this.
You may not wear that.
You may be arrested for the sticker on your purse.
You may not have private online chats or emails.
You may be arrested for belonging to a book club.
You may go to jail for the rest of your life for making a zine.
You may get sentanced to decades in prison for having the wrong friends.
You may get brutalized in jail for being LGBTQ.
You may not protest.
Sit down and shut up and take whatever the [Redacted] Regime chooses to dish out to you - grifting your hard-earned money, telling you thousands of lies and daring you not to act as though you believed them, killing your neighbors in the streets, disappearing "enemies of the regime", destroying the rule of law.
We're there.
ominously,
Bright
walkingman
(11,285 posts)PSPS
(15,415 posts)SpankMe
(3,803 posts)MarineCombatEngineer
(18,250 posts)and, hopefully, acted on toot sweet.
Faux pas
(16,593 posts)SpankMe
(3,803 posts)This was clearly first amendment protected speech with a few cases of vandalism. This is not terrorism. The judge should have thrown most of this out on first reading. But then a jury didn't see through the BS? And sentencing of a decade?
I hope this gets appealed and higher courts invalidate this BS.