The $40 million network training activists to lie their way onto juries
A jury pool that decides guilt by zip code isn’t dispensing justice. Attorney’s Office faces right now, and it’s bigger than one sandwich.Sean Dunn threw a sub sandwich at a Customs and Border Protection officer in August 2025. I threw the sandwich.” A federal grand jury still refused to indict him on the felony charge.
- ▪A jury pool that decides guilt by zip code isn’t dispensing justice.
- ▪Attorney’s Office faces right now, and it’s bigger than one sandwich.Sean Dunn threw a sub sandwich at a Customs and Border Protection officer in August 2025.
- ▪I threw the sandwich.” A federal grand jury still refused to indict him on the felony charge.
Opening excerpt (first ~120 words) tap to expand
A jury pool that decides guilt by zip code isn’t dispensing justice. It’s picking a side. That’s the problem Washington’s U.S. Attorney’s Office faces right now, and it’s bigger than one sandwich.Sean Dunn threw a sub sandwich at a Customs and Border Protection officer in August 2025. It’s on video. He confessed at the scene: “I did it. I threw the sandwich.” A federal grand jury still refused to indict him on the felony charge. Prosecutors dropped it to a misdemeanor, and a trial jury last November acquitted him anyway. Jurors dismissed from that same panel told CNN they doubted any D.C. jury would convict him, sandwich or no sandwich.
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Excerpt limited to ~120 words for fair-use compliance. The full article is at Washington Examiner.