Thank you, President Trump, for pardoning the 1500 J6 victims of the weaponized Justice Department. One of those victims is my friend Captain Mark Sahady, who briefly entered the Capitol while protesting the obviously stolen election. For that he was subjected to a corrupt and vindictive prosecution.
For four years Mark stood his ground and refused to take a plea deal despite facing decades in prison. At first, he was charged with misdemeanor disorderly conduct and unlawful entry. Then the FBI ransacked his home for 12 hours. Shortly afterward he was put on the terrorist watch list. Federal agents went to his job and got him fired. Mark’s bank account and credit cards were canceled. His reputation was smeared by the always vicious corporate media.
When Mark refused to take a plea deal, he was illegally charged with additional crimes, including a felony with a maximum sentence of 20 years. The US Supreme Court thew out that preposterous charge. Mark was denied access to his discovery for years and later learned that federal agents were using secret informants to spy on him.
The US Army canceled Mark’s security clearance, labeled him a threat to national security, and tried but failed to give him an Other than Honorable discharge. Despicable treatment for a combat veteran. The DOJ filed an absurd sentencing memorandum stating that his sentence should be doubled because he is a veteran, gave a high five, and had no criminal record. Yes, you read that correctly.
ALL OF THIS OVER A 20 MINUTE WALK IN THE CAPITOL
We would like to thank President Donald J. Trump for righting this wrong.
John Hugo
President Super Happy Fun Aerica
https://superhappyfunamerica.org
We would like to thank President Trump for ending the lawfare against those who protested the stolen election on January 6th. As Director of Operations for SHFA, Sue Ianni organized several buses of patriots from New England to support the President. Therefore she became one of the more prominent targets of the federal investigation.
Sue was arrested by the FBI and put in shackles a few weeks after the event in an early morning raid. She was hounded by the media who camped outside of her house, harassed her family, and defamed her in the news. Due to the publicity, Sue was denied from renting multiple apartments and several of her credit cards were canceled.
Natick Town Meeting, of which she was an elected member, condemned her as an “insurrectionist” before they had any of the facts. Anonymous death threats were mailed to the Ianni home. Hysterical residents of the town claimed she was trying to infect them with COVID because she traveled out of state. They convinced the board of health to issue an order for her to quarantine and not leave her residence.
Sue refused to sit down for an interview with the FBI. She also refused to give them carte blanche to her private text messages in order to prevent them from opening additional investigations against her friends and associates. It later came out that the FBI office in Washington DC was looking to charge everyone that rode on the buses.
During her sentencing, Sue declined to apologize because she believed she had done nothing wrong. Due to this and her refusal to cooperate with the investigation, the judge sentenced her to 15 days in prison. Rather than being assigned to a low security facility, the Bureau of Prisons put her in medium security in Philadelphia, one of the most violent prisons in the nation.
Sue was a victim of political persecution and we are grateful that she has received a pardon