| Why the Absurd Alito Flag Controversy is a Good Sign 
 Democrats  and the media fear two SCOTUS rulings will rescue Donald Trump and gut  the J6 prosecution. Their howling at the wind demonstrates frustration  at not being able to do a damn thing about it.
 
 
  
 Julie Kelly
 
 May 28, 2024
 
 
 
  
 
 
 Take heart, dear reader.
 
 Declassified  with Julie Kelly is a reader-supported publication. To receive new  posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
 
 While  it is excruciating to endure the latest political crisis manufactured  by Democrats and the leftwing news media, I advise a different approach.
 
 Smile. Laugh. Cackle like Kamala.
 
 Why?  The absurd flag-flying scandal, undoubtedly annoying to Justice Samuel  Alito and his family, is all the proof we need that decisions pending at  the U.S. Supreme Court will not go the Democrats’ way.
 
 And it is killing them to the point of debasement and emotional immolation.
 
 Yay!
 
 Two  critical questions before the court will determine whether Donald Trump  faces trial in Washington, D.C. this year on Special Counsel Jack  Smith’s indictment related to the events of January 6. In April, the  court heard arguments as to whether a former president is immune from  criminal prosecution for his conduct in office and whether the  Department of Justice unlawfully applied 18 U.S. Code § 1512(c)(2),  obstruction of an official proceeding, against roughly 350 January 6  defendants.
 
 That count also represents half of Smith’s indictment in Washington.
 
 During  the separate proceedings, a majority of justices appeared poised to  deliver a defeat to the DOJ on both questions. Alito specifically cited  January 6 in one exchange with U.S. Solicitor General Elizabeth  Prelogar, who represented the DOJ in Fischer v USA, the 1512(c)(2) case, on April 16.
 
 In  an attempt to clarify which sort of political protests would be covered  under the obstruction statute and which would not, Alito  proposed a hypothetical to Prelogar:
 
 
 “So  we've had a number of protests in the courtroom. Let's say that today,  while you're arguing…five people get up, one after the other, and they  shout either ‘Keep the January 6th insurrectionists in jail’ or ‘Free  the January 6th patriots.’ And as a result of this, our police officers  have to remove them forcibly from the courtroom and let's say we have to  -- it delays the proceeding for five minutes. So would that be a  violation of 1512(c)(2)?”When Prelogar answered no,  Alito pressed further, noting that the statute’s language sweeps in  attempts to “impede” an official proceeding, not just obstruct. He also  pointed to the government’s double-standard in applying the law. ‘[For]  all the protests that have occurred in this Court, the Justice  Department has not charged any serious offenses, and I don't think any  one of those protestors has been sentenced to even one day in prison,”  Alito told her.
 
 
 Chalk up one against the DOJ.
 
 Permanent Reputational Damage to the DOJ and D.C. Federal Court
 
 It  is impossible to overstate how devastating a reversal of the DOJ’s use  of 1512(c)(2) will be to the unprecedented and ongoing criminal  investigation into the events of January 6. If the high court decides  the law does not apply to congressional business or it requires the  destruction of a record or document—recall this law was passed in the  aftermath of the Enron/Arthur Anderson accounting scandal—the heart of  the J6 prosecution will be ripped from the heartless body of the DOJ,  specifically U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Matthew Graves’  office.
 
 The most common felony charge in J6 cases will be  eliminated with more than 100 convictions for 1512(c)(2) vacated. The  docket of the D.C. federal court will be flooded with motions to dismiss  the count, release incarcerated individuals from prison, and resentence  those with additional charges.
 
 A reversal will bring sharper  attention to the reckless, retaliatory, and destructive prosecution of  J6ers at a time when Trump and some Republicans continue to describe  J6ers as “political prisoners”—and at the same time Joe Biden and the  Democrats continue to use the January 6 “insurrection” as a key campaign  issue.
 
 Even conservative media outlets that have ignored the  abuses by the DOJ related to the prosecution of more than 1,400 J6ers  and counting will have to cover the ruling. And Jack Smith will be  forced to figure out how to keep the two 1512 charges against Trump in  the J6 indictment.
 
 So, Democrats and the media are desperate to  portray both Alito and Clarence Thomas as insurrection sympathizers in  an effort to designate their votes, particularly in a close opinion,  illegitimate. “Well without the support of insurrectionists Alito and  Thomas, the 1512(c)(2) count would have held!” Laurence Tribe will wail.
 
 Boo hoo.
 
 Their  crusade to effectively cancel the votes of Alito and Thomas in the  public eye includes demands by Senate Democrats to meet with Chief  Justice John Roberts, an invitation Roberts presumably will decline.  (He, too, appeared amenable to a reversal of 1512(c)(2))
 
 Alito Skeptical of DOJ Arguments on Immunity
 
 Things didn’t go much better for the government during  arguments  on April 25 over presidential immunity, which originated out of Smith’s  J6 indictment. Alito specifically took aim at U.S. Circuit Court Judge  Florence Pan’s gotcha hypothetical about Seal Team Six during appellate  hearing. (I explained  here.)
 
 Calling  Seal Team Six “honorable,” Alito disputed Pan’s suggestion that a  president could order the special forces to assassinate a political  rival and not face criminal charges. “They are bound by the Uniform Code  of Military Justice not to obey unlawful orders,” Alito noted.
 
 Alito  also appeared to reject the argument presented by Michael Dreeben, who  represented the DOJ, that attorneys general and other officials and  legal mechanisms will act as stopgaps to prevent a perpetual cycle of  incumbent presidents investigating and indicting their predecessor. For  several minutes, Alito questioned Dreeben about the vagueness of the  statutes in Smith’s indictment and the ease in which prosecutors can  obtain a grand jury indictment against any defendant:
 
 Alito:  I mean, you -- you have a lot of experience in the Justice Department.  Do you come across a lot of cases where the -- the -- the U.S. attorney  or another federal prosecutor really wanted to indict a case and the  grand jury refused to do so?
 
 Dreeben: There are such cases.
 
 Alito: Are there? Yeah?
 
 Dreeben: Yes. But I think that the other --
 
 Alito: Every once in a while there's an eclipse too.
 
 Ouch.
 
 Alito, echoing concerns voiced by other justices including Neil Gorsuch, reminded Dreeben their decision in Trump v. USA would  have permanent consequences. “[Whatever] we decide is going to apply to  all future presidents. This case will have effects that go far beyond  this particular prosecution.”
 
 SCOTUS’ term ends in June so  both opinions should be announced soon. The political world is bracing  for impact—which is why Democrats and the media are attempting to soften  the blow with false flag operations and more vain calls for recusals.
 
 Enjoy!
 
 PS  - I asked a defense attorney who has represented several January 6  protesters including high-profile defendants if he has ever seen an  upside-down American flag in any of the videos or photos from that day.  “Never,” he said.
 |