Roger Stone jury foreperson's anti-Trump social media posts surface after she defends DOJ prosecutors
Former
Memphis City Schools Board President Tomeka Hart revealed Wednesday
that she was the foreperson of the jury that convicted former Trump
adviser Roger Stone on obstruction charges last year -- and soon
afterward, her history of Democratic activism and a string of her
anti-Trump, left-wing social media posts came to light. Hart even posted specifically about the Stone case before she voted to convict, as she retweeted an argument mocking those who considered Stone's dramatic arrest in a predawn raid by
a federal tactical team to be excessive force. She also suggested
President Trump and his supporters are racist and praised the
investigation conducted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller, which
ultimately led to Stone's prosecution. Meanwhile, it emerged
that U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson had denied a defense
request to strike a potential juror who was Obama-era press official
with admitted anti-Trump views -- and whose husband worked at the same Justice Department division that handled the probe leading to Stone's arrest. And, another Stone juror, Seth Cousins, donated to former Democratic presidential candidate Beto O'Rourke and other progressive causes, federal election records reviewed by Fox News show. The revelations came as Trump has called the handling of Stone's prosecution "ridiculous" and a demonstrably unfair "insult
to our country." They raised the prospect that Stone's team could again
seek a new trial, especially if Hart provided inaccurate responses
under oath on her pretrial questionnaires concerning social media
activity. The drama began when Hart confirmed to CNN and other
media organizations Wednesday that she had written a Facebook post
supporting the Justice Department prosecutors in the Stone case who abruptly stepped down from their posts on Tuesday,
saying she "can't keep quiet any longer." The prosecutors apparently
objected after senior DOJ officials overrode their recommendation to
Jackson that Stone face up to 9 years in prison. "I
want to stand up for Aaron Zelinsky, Adam Jed, Michael Marando, and
Jonathan Kravis -- the prosecutors on the Roger Stone trial," Hart wrote
in the post. "It pains me to see the DOJ now interfere with the hard
work of the prosecutors. They acted with the utmost intelligence,
integrity, and respect for our system of justice."
FILE - In this Nov. 12, 2019 file photo, Roger Stone, a longtime
Republican provocateur and former confidant of President Donald Trump,
waits in line at the federal court in Washington. A Justice Department
official tells the AP that the agency is backing away from its
sentencing recommendation of between seven to nine years in prison for
Trump confidant Roger Stone. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta)
Hart added: "As foreperson [of the jury], I made sure
we went through every element, of every charge, matching the evidence
presented in the case that led us to return a conviction of guilty on
all 7 counts." Independent journalist Mike Cernovich, not CNN, then first reported
that a slew of Hart's other publicly available Twitter and Facebook
posts readily suggested a strong political bias. Some of Hart's posts
were written as Stone's trial was in progress. Hart, who unsuccessfully ran for Congress as a Democrat in 2012, quoted someone in an August 2017 tweet referring to Trump as a member of the KKK. In January 2019, she retweeted a post by
pundit Bakari Sellers, who noted that "Roger Stone has y'all talking
about reviewing use of force guidelines," before suggesting that racism
was the reason for all the attention Stone's arrest had received from
conservatives. In August 2019, Hart called all Trump supporters "racist." "Gotta love it!" Hart wrote on Jan. 13, 2018, in response to a news report that a vulgarity had been projected onto the Trump International Hotel in Washington, D.C. A week later, on Jan. 21, 2018, she shared an opinion piece entitled, "What’s so extremely, uniquely wrong about Trump’s presidency." On March 24, 2019, Hart shared a Facebook post
saying that Republicans who complained about Mueller's probe were
deliberately "ignoring the numerous indictments, guilty pleas, and
convictions of people in 45’s inner-circle," referring to Trump. And,
on Nov. 15, 2019 -- the day she voted to convict Stone on seven counts
of obstruction, witness tampering and making false statements to
Congress -- Hart tweeted two "heart" emojis,
followed by two pump-fist emojis. (None of Stone's charges accused him
of engaging in a criminal conspiracy with Russia or any other actors
concerning election interference; instead, his offenses related to his
statements concerning his contacts with WikiLeaks and others.) Hart's tweet linked to a Facebook post that has since been taken down from public view. If
Hart have provided misleading answers on her jury form concerning her
political or social media activity, her views on Trump and the Russia
probe, or other related matters, there could be grounds for Stone's team
to seek a new trial, legal experts told Fox News. Hart did not immediately respond to Fox News' request for comment. The Memphis Commercial Appeal noted that she was a native of the city and had served a term as the president of its school board. Hart's posts surfaced the same day that Jackson, who oversaw the Stone case, unsealed her order from earlier this month denying Stone's request for a new trial. Stone's
team argued that an unnamed juror had misled the court concerning his
or her exposure to the media during the case, and also had some
potential bias because of his or her work with the IRS, which sometimes
has interfaced with the DOJ on criminal matters. But, Jackson shot
down the motion for a new trial, saying the juror's potential bias was
not demonstrated -- and even if it were, it wasn't significant enough to
warrant the drastic step of calling for a new trial. Courts allow
for a new trial, Jackson noted, when "a serious miscarriage of justice
may have occured." Bias is a permissible reason to remove a juror or
call for a new trial only in "extreme situations where the relationship
between a prospective juror and some aspect of the litigation is such
that it is highly unlikely that the average person could remain
impartial in his deliberations under the circumstances." Jackson,
who was appointed to the bench by President Barack Obama, also took a
shot at Stone's team for failing to uncover the information sooner. "The
defense could have easily conducted the same Internet search included
in the instant motion and could have raised concerns at that time,"
Jackson wrote. Fox News reported earlier Tuesday that top brass at the DOJ were "shocked" that prosecutors handling the Stone case had recommended Monday night that Jackson sentence the 67-year-old Stone to between 87 and 108 months in prison. The prosecutors asserted in the Monday filing that
Stone's conduct post-indictment -- including violating the judge's
social media gag orders -- merited a sentence much longer than the 15 to
21 months that the defense said was actually advisable under the
federal sentencing guidelines. In a new, amended filing Tuesday afternoon,
the DOJ told Jackson that the government "respectfully submits that a
sentence of incarceration far less than 87 to 108 months' imprisonment
would be reasonable under the circumstances," but that the government
"ultimately defers to the court as to the specific sentence to be
imposed." Government officials wrote in the amended filing that
while it was "technically" possible to argue that Stone deserved the
severe federal sentencing enhancement for threatening physical harm to a
witness, such a move would violate the spirit of the federal
guidelines. It would place Stone in a category of the guidelines
that "typically applies in cases involving violent offenses, such as
armed robbery, not obstruction cases," the government argued, noting
that Stone's "advanced age, health, personal circumstances, and lack of
criminal history" also counseled against the harsh penalty. Specifically,
prosecutors said that although Stone allegedly had threatened witness
Randy Credico's therapy dog, Bianca -- saying he was "going to take that
dog away from you" -- it was important to recognize that Credico, a New
York radio host, has acknowledged that he "never in any way felt that
Stone himself posed a direct physical threat to me or my dog." The
government continued, "If the court were not to apply the eight-level
enhancement for threatening a witness with physical injury, it would
result in the defendant receiving an advisory guidelines range of 37 to
46 months, which as explained below is more in line with the typical
sentences imposed in obstruction cases." A
senior DOJ official confirmed to Fox News that senior leadership
officials there made the call to reverse the initial sentencing
recommendation, saying the filing on Monday evening was not only
extreme, but also substantially inconsistent with how the prosecutors
had briefed DOJ leadership they would proceed on the case. The "general
communication" between the U.S. Attorney's Office and the main DOJ had
led senior officials to expect a more moderate sentence, the official
told Fox News. “It's surprising that would be the line in the sand
-- an amended filing," a senior DOJ official told Fox News, adding that
the problem with the original sentencing recommendation was it told the
judge that the only way to serve justice was a lengthy sentence. “We're
backing off from, 'It has to be this,'" the DOJ source told Fox
News. “The amended filing says it's a serious crime, and prison time is
appropriate; we're just saying it doesn't have to be 87 to 108 months." Speaking
to reporters on Tuesday, Trump said he stayed out of internal DOJ
deliberations, but strongly opposed their initial sentencing
recommendation. "I stay out of things to a degree that people
wouldn't believe," Trump said. He added that the initial recommendation
was "ridiculous" and called it "an insult to our country." Later,
Trump took a shot at Jackson, writing on Twitter: "Is this the Judge
that put Paul Manafort in SOLITARY CONFINEMENT, something that not even
mobster Al Capone had to endure? How did she treat Crooked Hillary
Clinton? Just asking!" Fox News' Jake Gibson and Alex Pfeiffer contributed to this report.
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