A day after President Trump issued pardons or sentence commutations for all January 6 defendants (Promise Kept: With the Stroke of a Pen, President Trump Issues Mass Pardons for J6 Defendants – RedState), a large number of them remained confined in the DC jail.
The authority to hold these prisoners expired at midnight on Monday. The Fourteenth Amendment clearly states that the government can't "deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law." Instead, they were subject to unlawful detention that is nearly indistinguishable from kidnapping or abduction. This is from RedState columnist and former contributor Bill Shipley, who represented several dozen January 6 defendants and who is not given to hyperbole:
The last of the J6 prisoners held in the DC jail were released late last night, but the fact they were released cannot remove the fact that they were the victims of a criminal conspiracy to keep them in custody when they should have been freed. Nothing can give them that day of lost freedom back. While the actions in DC virtually scream of a conspiracy to drag out the punishment of men and women entitled to release, the problem seems to have been widespread within the Federal Bureau of Prisons. Don Hazard was released late Tuesday afternoon. There were dozens of similar cases from around the country where Federal prison officials unlawfully imprisoned American citizens on a whim or out of some petty revenge-seeking exercise. At this point, the only J6 prisoners still in custody seem to be those with outstanding warrants or unrelated convictions in other jurisdictions. That's nice, but when the President directs a federal prisoner to be released, the correct response isn't, "Well, that's nice, Scooter, but I'll get to it when I get to it." Every case of a J6 prisoner being held past their legal release should result in terminations and criminal prosecution as they are sued into oblivion by the people they imprisoned. |
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