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Germany To Compensate Gay Men Convicted Under Nazi-Era Ban On Homosexuality

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Plan Will Appropriate 30 Million Euros For Those Punished Under Paragraph 175; Other Countries Also Consider Apologies and Pardons

In a plan announced Oct. 9 by Justice Minister Heiko Maas, Germany will appropriate 30 million Euros (about $37 million) to compensate homosexuals who were convicted under a notorious law that criminalized consensual homosexual acts.

The law, known as Paragraph 175, was in effect from 1871 until 1994, though it ceased being enforced in the late 1960s. It was a cornerstone of the Nazi persecution of homosexuals, but survived to continue to inflict misery on gay men after World War II.

From its inception to its repeal in 1994, almost 150,000 men were convicted under Paragraph 175. About 50,000 were convicted after World War II, which is the period covered by the plan announced on Oct. 9. The law ceased being enforced in East Germany in 1957 and in West Germany in 1969.

It is believed that at least 5,000 living individuals are eligible for personal compensation under the proposal. Justice Minister Maas said that the amount of compensation would “depend on concrete individual cases,” and would take into consideration the length of sentences imposed and served.

The proposal will also void the criminal records of all 50,000 men convicted under Paragraph 175 after World War II. (Those who were convicted under the law during the Nazi era were pardoned in 2002.)

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PXRhlV3rCmA

The proposal to compensate homosexuals convicted under Paragraph 175 was prompted by a study commissioned by Germany’s Anti-Discrimination Authority. When the study was released in May 2016, the head of the Authority, Christine Lüders, said that those who had been convicted under the law suffered a violation of “the very core of their human dignity” and, therefore, deserved compensation.

In response to the study, Justice Minister Maas promised that his ministry would draft legislation to quash convictions and provide compensatory arrangements. He added that “the German state has burdened itself with guilt because it had made difficult the lives of so many people.”

In August, the opposition Greens Party prodded the government to act quickly to implement the recommendations of the study commissioned by the Anti-Discriminatory Authority. Bundestag Deputies Katja Keul and Volker Beck drafted their own compensation plan. In the preamble, they said, “An end must be put to the continuing scandal that men in the Federal Republic of Germany have to live with the stigma of having been convicted because they were homosexual.”

Paragraph 175

Paragraph 175 was incorporated into the German penal code in 1871, when Wilhelm I, King of Prussia, united the disparate German kingdoms into the federal state of Germany. He incorporated Prussia’s prohibition of homosexual acts into the new German penal code as Paragraph 175. The law criminalized “An unnatural sex act committed between persons of the male sex or by humans with animals.” Violation of Paragraph 175 was punishable by up to four years in prison.

During the Weimar Republic (1919-1933), Berlin emerged as a homosexual mecca, with a very visible LGBT culture and a new homosexual emancipation movement. During this brief respite Paragraph 175 was seldom enforced and activists mounted a concerted but unsuccessful attempt to repeal the law.

In 1933, when Adolf Hitler was sworn in as chancellor of Germany, his new government moved quickly to stamp out the “vice” of male homosexuality and to reverse the gains made by homosexual emancipation activists during the Weimar period.

Soon after coming to power, the Nazis plundered Magnus Hirschfeld‘s Institute for Sexual Science, which had been founded in 1919 and served as the intellectual center of the homosexual emancipation movement. The Nazis destroyed the Institute’s extensive library and archives.

Early efforts toward eradicating an openly homosexual culture from Germany included closing bars and clubs where gay men and lesbians gathered, banning homophile publications such as Die Freundschaft (Friendship), and encouraging citizens to denounce homosexuals as “asocial parasites.”

On June 30, 1934, the “Night of the Long Knives,” Hitler ordered the assassination of the leaders of the SA, the Nazi paramilitary group headed by Ernst Röhm, who was widely known as a homosexual. In justifying this purge, which helped Hitler consolidate his control of the military, the Nazi leader specifically evoked Paragraph 175 to explain the massacre as a cleansing of the party of degenerates.

In 1935 the Ministry of Justice revised Paragraph 175, expanding the law to punish a broad range of “lewd and lascivious” behavior between men. The revisions provided a legal basis for extending Nazi persecution of homosexuals.

German criminal courts had traditionally interpreted the word “unnatural” (“widernatürlich”) in the original Paragraph 175 to mean that the prohibited offense was anal intercourse. Hence, prosecutions required proof of penetration. But with the changes introduced in the new Paragraph 175, Nazi-era courts ruled that the offense no longer required such proof, and that any sexual act fulfilled the requirements of the statute.

This revision of Paragraph 175 also opened the door to prosecution for even relatively insignificant forms of erotic interaction between males, including kissing, holding hands, and mutual masturbation. By 1938, German courts ruled that any contact between men deemed to have sexual intent, even “simple looking” or “simple touching,” could be grounds for arrest and conviction.

Enforcement of the criminal law fell to the Criminal Police and the Gestapo, under the leadership of Heinrich Himmler. The Criminal Police and the Gestapo worked in tandem, occasionally in massive sweeps but more often as a follow-up to individual denunciations.

The Gestapo instructed local police forces to keep lists of all men suspected of engaging in homosexual activities. The Nazis used these so-called “pink lists” to hunt down individual homosexuals during police actions.

According to Nazi documents, from 1935 to 1945, approximately 100,000 men were arrested for homosexuality under Paragraph 175. Of these, nearly 78,000 were arrested between 1936 and the outbreak of World War II in 1939.

After Germany annexed Austria in 1938, homosexuals there endured a similar reign of terror.

Just as arrests rose precipitously after the 1935 revisions of Paragraph 175, so, too, did conviction rates, reaching more than ten times those of the last years of the Weimar Republic. Around 50,000 men were sentenced by Nazi-era courts to regular prisons. Additionally, as many as 15,000 men who were convicted under Paragraph 175 were sent directly to concentration camps.

Once in the camps, homosexual men suffered high death rates from overwork, starvation, physical brutality, or outright murder.

Some of the homosexual concentration camp inmates were subjected to medical experiments designed to “cure” homosexuality. These experiments caused illness, entailed mutilation (including castration), and often resulted in death, yet yielded no scientific knowledge.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kSdId1PqV1M

After the war, homosexual survivors of the concentration camps were not seen as political prisoners but rather as criminals under Paragraph 175, which remained in effect even after liberation.

Under the Allied Military Government of Germany, some homosexuals were forced to serve out their terms of imprisonment, regardless of the time already spent in concentration camps. All were excluded from reparations by the German and Austrian governments.

When the international community sought justice for the victims of Hitler’s Germany at the Nuremberg Trials of 1946, neither the atrocities committed against homosexuals nor Paragraph 175 was mentioned.

After World War II, Paragraph 175 remained in the legal codes of  East and West Germany, as well as of Austria. East Germany ceased prosecuting individuals for consensual homosexual acts in 1957 and repealed the Nazi version of Paragraph 175 in 1967.  West Germany repealed the Nazi version of Paragraph 175 in 1969 and ceased prosecuting consensual homosexual activity the same year. (Austria repealed its version of Paragraph 175 in 1971.)

However, the original Paragraph 175 was not repealed until 1994, four years after the reunification of Germany.

For many years after the war, Holocaust researchers largely ignored the persecution of homosexuals by the Nazis, but in the 1980s the histories of the gay men imprisoned under Paragraph 175 by the Nazi government began to be documented and placed in the larger context of the Holocaust.

The first public commemoration of the homosexuals murdered by the Nazis came in a May 8, 1985 speech by West German President Richard von Weizsäcker marking the fortieth anniversary of the end of World War II.

In 1999, the documentary film by Rob Epstein and Jeffrey Friedman, Paragraph 175, was released. The film used new and archival film, family photographs, and accounts of a half-dozen elderly survivors of the concentration camps to tell the history of gay men under Nazi rule.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1-EjfBmp9c

In the same year, Germany held its first official memorial service for the homosexual victims of the Holocaust at the former Sachsenhausen concentration camp.

In December 2000, the government issued an apology for the prosecution of homosexuals in Germany after 1949 and agreed to recognize gay men as victims of the Third Reich.

The increased interest in the persecutions of homosexuals during the Nazi era led to the voiding of the criminal records of those convicted under Paragraph 175 by the Nazis in 2002.

At the end of 2003, the Bundestag appropriated money to build a monument commemorating homosexual victims of Nazi persecution. The Memorial, located in Berlin’s Tiergarten, near the Memorial to the Murdered Jews of Europe, was opened in 2008 by Mayor Klaus Wowereit, who had come out as gay before his election as mayor in 2001 with the statement, “Ich bin schwul, und das ist auch gut so” (I’m gay, and that’s that”). Sometimes known as the “Gays Kissing Memorial” because of its video of two men kissing, it also  features a history of the persecution of gay men under Paragraph 175.

Other public memorials commemorating the suffering of glbtq people in the Holocaust include monuments in Amsterdam, Frankfurt, San Francisco, Sydney, Barcelona, and Tel Aviv.

In 2003, the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum presented a major traveling exhibit entitled “The Nazi Persecution of Homosexuals, 1933-1945.” A version of the exhibit is on-line at the museum’s website.

The Schwules Museum in Berlin has also commemorated the victims of Nazism.

Other Countries

Germany was not the only nation to expunge the criminal records of LGBT individuals convicted under unjust laws in 2002.

That honor is shared with Spain, which in 2002 wiped clean the criminal records of gay men and lesbians who were persecuted by the government of dictator Francisco Franco, who ruled Spain from 1939 until his death in 1975. Under Franco’s murderous regime, thousands of homosexuals (mostly men, but some lesbians as well) were jailed, sent to re-education camps, or locked up in mental institutions, where some were subjected to aversion therapy. Laws prohibiting “public scandal” or “social danger” gave cover to the persecution.

Although the law passed in 2002 by Spain’s Parliament was supposed to include compensation, reparations were not appropriated until 2007, when the Law of Historical Memory, which recognized all the victims of the Franco regime, was passed.Â

During the twentieth century, states and territories in Australia began repealing their sodomy laws, some of which prescribed truly draconian penalties for consensual homosexual activity. The first jurisdiction to repeal its law was the Australian Capital Territory in 1973, the last was Tasmania in 1997.

There is currently a movement underway to expunge the criminal records of those convicted under sodomy and related laws in Australia. So far, four of Australia’s nine jurisdictions (South Australia, New South Wales, Victoria, and the Australian Capital Territory) have passed laws permitting those convicted of consensual adult same-sex activity to apply for their convictions to be expunged. Others are expected to follow soon.

New Zealand, which repealed its prohibition of consensual homosexual acts in 1986, allows those who were convicted under the old laws to petition individually for the expungement of their criminal records.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of Canada recently announced that he plans to apologize on behalf of all Canadians to those who were imprisoned, fired from their jobs, or otherwise persecuted for their homosexuality. As part of this apology, Trudeau is expected to submit a plan by which convictions under laws criminalizing same-sex activity will be expunged or pardoned. Those who were dismissed from public service or the military because of their homosexuality will also receive an apology. In addition, it is expected that a compensation program will be proposed.

Trudeau is also expected to recommend a posthumous pardon for Everett Klippert (1926-1996), the last Canadian to be arrested, tried, convicted, and sentenced to prison for homosexuality before its legalization in 1969, a reform led by Justin Trudeau’s father, Pierre Eliot Trudeau. Klippert’s case, especially the fact that he was sentenced to life in prison as a “dangerous sex offender” for no reason other than he was a homosexual, led directly to the legalization of homosexuality in Canada, though he was not released from prison until two years after the reform.

On Dec. 23, 2013, Queen Elizabeth II, at the urging of the government of the United Kingdom, officially pardoned Alan Turing, one of the greatest mathematical thinkers in history and the father of modern computing, whose work on cracking the German Enigma code is said to have shortened World War II.

Turing was awarded an OBE (Officer of the British Empire) in 1945 and elected to the Royal Society at an unusually young age in 1951. But in 1952, when he was deputy director of the Royal Society Computing Laboratory at the University of Manchester, his life was turned upside down.

When he reported the burglary of his home by a working-class young man with whom he was involved, he was arrested and prosecuted for what was then known under British law as “Gross Indecency,” a section of the Criminal Law Amendment Act of 1885 (also known as the Labouchère Amendment), under which Oscar Wilde had also been charged in 1895.

Turing was offered a stark choice: go to prison or submit to the administration of the hormone estrogen. This procedure was known as “organo-therapy,” a form of aversion therapy designed to destroy his sex drive. It was a type of chemical castration.

The administration of the female hormone did nothing to curb Turing’s homosexual desires, but it left him impotent. He also developed breasts. Two years after his arrest, and one year after this coerced and barbaric “therapy,” Alan Turing killed himself by biting into an apple laced with cyanide.

In 2009, Prime Minister Gordon Brown issued an apology on behalf of the government in which he described Turing’s treatment as “horrifying” and “utterly unfair.” But scientists and gay-rights advocates wanted the government to clear him completely of the gross indecency conviction.

A sustained campaign by scientists, including Stephen Hawking and Richard Dawkins, and a petition signed by more than 37,000 British citizens culminated in Queen Elizabeth’s royal pardon.

In announcing the pardon, Justice Secretary Chris Grayling said Turing deserved to be “remembered and recognised for his fantastic contribution to the war effort” and not for his later criminal conviction. “His later life was overshadowed by his conviction for homosexual activity, a sentence we would now consider unjust and discriminatory and which has now been repealed,” he said. “A pardon from the Queen is a fitting tribute to an exceptional man.”

But as Prime Minister Brown noted in his apology in 2009, Turing’s treatment was by no means unique: “Alan and the many thousands of other gay men who were convicted, as he was convicted, under homophobic laws, were treated terribly. Over the years, millions more lived in fear of conviction. I am proud that those days are gone and that in the past 12 years this Government has done so much to make life fairer and more equal for our LGBT community. This recognition of Alan’s status as one of Britain’s most famous victims of homophobia is another step towards equality, and long overdue.”

In a commentary at PinkNews, activist Chris Ward said that while the pardon was very good news, the government needed to go further and pardon everyone who was convicted under the unjust laws that led to Turing’s demise.

Ward argued that Turing should not have been pardoned because of his exceptional achievements, but because the law under which he was convicted was unjust: “the notion that Turing deserved his pardon for the things he did rather than because the conviction was wrong states plainly and clearly that if you were in love at that time with somebody of the same sex and didn’t happen to be a war hero or a mathematical genius, then you remain a criminal. The campaign for justice is far from over.”

Pressure to pardon all those who suffered under homophobic laws gained traction with the release in 2014 of the film based on Turing’s work on the Enigma code,  Morton Tyldum’s The Imitation Game. 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S5CjKEFb-sM

Turing’s family endorsed the efforts to pardon the other 49,000 men who had been convicted under the gross indecency statute. As Turing’s grand-nephew told The Independent, “Justice must be served to everyone, regardless of whether they cracked the Enigma Code or not. I cannot understand how our current Government could pardon one person who was so badly treated, and not the others.”

More than 600,000 people signed a petition to pardon all those who were convicted under anti-gay laws.Â

Finally, on Sept. 21, 2016, Prime Minister Theresa May announced her commitment to introducing an “Alan Turing law” that will pardon thousands of gay men convicted under historic gross indecency crimes. The legislation, a government spokesman said, will effectively “act as an apology” to those who suffered under homophobic laws.

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‘Repercussions’: Democrats and Republicans Stand Against ‘Pro-Putin’ House GOP Faction

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Some House Democrats and House Republicans are coming together toward a common opponent: far-right “pro-Putin” hardliners in the House Republican conference, who appear to be led by U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA).

Congresswoman Greene has been threatening to oust the Republican Speaker of the House, Mike Johnson. Last month she filed a “motion to vacate the chair.” If she chooses to call it up she could force a vote on the House floor to try to remove Speaker Johnson.

House Democrats say they are willing to vote against ousting Johnson, as long as the Speaker puts on the floor desperately needed and long-awaited legislation to fund aid to Ukraine and Israel. Johnson has refused to put the Ukraine aid bill on the floor for months, but after Iran attacked Israel Johnson switched gears. Almost all Democrats and a seemingly large number of Republicans want to pass the Ukraine and Israel aid packages.

RELATED: Marjorie Taylor Greene, ‘Putin’s Envoy’? Democrat’s Bills Mock Republican’s Actions

Forgoing the possibility of installing Democratic House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries as Speaker, which is conceivable given Johnson’s now one-vote majority, Democrats say if Johnson does the right thing, they will throw him their support.

“I think he’ll be in good shape,” to get Democrats to support him, if he puts the Ukraine aid bill on the floor, U.S. Rep. Raja Krishnamoorthi (D-IL) told CNN Thursday. “I would say that there’s a lot of support for the underlying bills. I think those are vital.”

“If these bills were delivered favorably, and the aid was favorably voted upon, and Marjorie Taylor Greene went up there with a motion to remove him, for instance, I think there’s gonna be a lot of Democrats that move to kill that motion,” Congressman Krishnamoorthi said. “They don’t want to see him getting punished for doing the right thing.”

“I think it is a very bad policy of the House to allow one individual such as Marjorie Taylor Greene, who is an arsonist to this House of Representatives,” U.S. Rep. Dan Goldman (D-NY) told CBS News’ Scott MacFarlane, when asked about intervening to save Johnson. He added he doesn’t want her “to have so much influence.”

U.S. Rep. Anthony D’Esposito, one of several Republicans who won their New York districts in 2022, districts that were previously held by Democrats, opposes Greene’s motion to vacate – although he praised the Georgia GOP congresswoman.

CNN’s Manu Raju reports Republicans “say it’s time to marginalize hardliners blocking [their] agenda.”

D’Esposito, speaking to Raju, called for “repercussions for those who completely alienate the will of the conference. The people gave us the majority because they wanted Republicans to govern.”

U.S. Rep. Mike Lawler, like D’Esposito is another New York Republican who won a previously Democratic seat in 2022. Lawler spoke out against the co-sponsor of Greene’s motion to vacate, U.S. Rep. Tim Massie (R-KY), along with two other House Republicans who are working to block the Ukraine aid bill via their powerful seats on the Rules Committee.

U.S. Rep. Mikie Sherrill (D-NJ), a former Navy pilot, blasted Congresswoman Greene.

RELATED: ‘They Want Russia to Win So Badly’: GOP Congressman Blasts Far-Right House Republicans

“Time is of the essence” for Ukraine, Rep. Sherrill told CNN Wednesday night. “The least we can do is support our Democratic allies, especially given what we know Putin to do. To watch a report and to think there are people like Marjorie Taylor Greene on the right that are pro-Putin? That are pro-Russia? It is really shocking.”

U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw (R-TX), as NCRM reported Thursday, had denounced Greene.

“I guess their reasoning is they want Russia to win so badly that they want to oust the Speaker over it,” he said, referring to the Ukraine aid bill Greene and her cohorts want to tank. “I mean that’s a strange position to take.”

The far-right hardliners are also causing chaos in the House.

“Things just got very heated on the House floor,” NBC News’ Julie Tsirkin reported earlier Thursday. “Group of hardliners were trying to pressure Johnson to only put Israel aid on the floor and hold Ukraine aid until the Senate passed HR2.”

HR2 is the House Republicans’ extremist anti-immigrant legislation that has n o chance of passage in the Senate nor would it be signed into law by President Biden.

“Johnson said he couldn’t do it, and [U.S. Rep. Derrick] Van Orden,” a far-right Republican from Wisconsin “called him ‘tubby’ and vowed to bring on the MTV [Motion to Vacate.]”

“No one in the group (Gaetz, Boebert, Burchett, Higgins, Donalds et al.) were threatening Johnson with an MTV,” Tsirkin added. “Van Orden seemed to escalate things dramatically…”

Despite Greene’s pro-Putin and anti-Ukraine positions, her falsehoods about “Ukrainian Nazis,” and Russians not slaughtering Ukrainian clergy, reporters continue to “swarm”:

Watch the videos above or at this link.

READ MORE: ‘Afraid and Intimidated’: Trump Trial Juror Targeted by Fox News Dismissed

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‘They Want Russia to Win So Badly’: GOP Congressman Blasts Far-Right House Republicans

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A sitting Republican Congressman is harshly criticizing far-right House Republicans over their apparent support of Russia.

“I guess their reasoning is they want Russia to win so badly that they want to oust the Speaker over it. I mean that’s a strange position to take,” U.S. Rep. Dan Crenshaw, a three-term Texas Republican rated a hard-core conservative told CNN’s Manu Raju, in video posted Thursday. “I think they want to be in the minority too. I think that’s an obvious reality.”

Congressman Crenshaw was referring to the movement led by U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-GA), now joined by U.S. Rep. Thomas Massie (R-KY), over the Republican Speaker of the House Mike Johnson’s decision to finally put legislation on the floor to provide funding to Ukraine to support that sovereign nation in its fight against Russia.

“I’m still trying to process all the b*llsh*t,” Crenshaw added.

Crenshaw on Thursday also commented on Speaker Johnson’s remarks, stating he will hold the Ukraine funding vote regardless of attempts to oust him over it.

“To be clear, he’s being threatened for even allowing a vote to come to the floor. For allowing the constitutional process to play out as intended by our Founders. That’s a wild thing to consider, especially when his enemies consider themselves ‘conservative.’ Not conserving the painstaking constitutional process our Founders created, that’s for sure. Conserving Putin’s gains on the battlefield, more like it.”

Journalist Brian Beutler, a former editor-in-chief at Crooked Media, called it, “darkly funny to me that a pincer movement of MAGAns and leftists mock liberals for claiming the GOP works hand in glove with Russia, and then multiple conservative Republican dissenters are like ‘no it’s true, we’re lousy with Russian influence.'”

Watch Crenshaw’s remarks below or at this link.

READ MORE: Marjorie Taylor Greene, ‘Putin’s Envoy’? Democrat’s Bills Mock Republican’s Actions

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‘Afraid and Intimidated’: Trump Trial Juror Targeted by Fox News Dismissed

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One of seven jurors selected to serve on the New York criminal trial of Donald Trump has been dismissed after telling the judge she became concerned about her ability to remain impartial. That concern came after too many identifying details about potential jurors this week were reported by the press, leading the judge to admonish the media Thursday morning.

“Although the jurors’ names are being kept confidential, the woman, a nurse, ‘conveyed that after sleeping on it overnight she had concerns about her ability to be fair and impartial in this case,’ New York Supreme Court Judge Juan Merchan said before calling her into the room for questioning,” the Associated Press reports. “The woman said her family members and friends were questioning her about being a juror.”

Judge Merchan, after he had questioned the juror, chastised the media, specifically directing reporters to “abide by common sense” and not report jurors’ identifying information, as some in the press had done as soon as jury selection began.

“As evidenced by what’s happened already, it’s become a problem,” Judge Merchan said.

“We just lost what probably would have been a very good juror,” he noted. “She said she was afraid and intimidated by the press, all the press.”

RELATED: ‘Big Journalism Fail’: Mainstream Media Blasted Over Coverage of Historic Trump Trial

Alexander Panetta of Canada’s CBC News adds, “Merchan wants changes in the juror info that gets out to the public. He says jurors’ employer name will be redacted from court records.”

But he also reports the now-excused juror “says family and friends [said] that she had been easy to identify, based on publicly available info about her from the court. She said she definitely has concerns now.”

Merchan also “lamented that media reported another juror has an Irish accent. He asked media in the room to be more careful.”

Responding to the loss of the juror, The Atlantic’s David Drum remarked, “[Trump] juror intimidation gets results.”

The dismissed juror had been targeted by Fox News’ Jesse Watters on Tuesday (video below).

“I’m not so sure about Juror No. 2,” Watters told Fox News views.

Trump on Wednesday, appearing to violate his gag order, had targeted the jurors.

READ MORE: ‘Stop Bringing Up Nazis and Hitler’: Marjorie Taylor Greene Smacked Down by Democrats

Former state and federal prosecutor Ron Filipkowski, the editor-in-chief of MeidasTouch Network, commented, “Fox & Trump are coordinating to intimidate jurors.”

Mediate reported, “Donald Trump appeared to violate the gag order set forth by Judge Juan Merchan.”

“On Wednesday, Trump took to Truth Social and quoted comments made about potential jurors by Fox News host Jesse Watters on The Five Wednesday night.”

Trump quoted Watters, posting: “They are catching undercover Liberal Activists lying to the Judge in order to get on the Trump Jury.”

“That post appears to be in direct violation of Merchan’s gag order, a reality highlighted by JustSecurity’s Ryan Goodman,” Mediate added.

On Wednesday Watters had gone even further and presented biographical and identifying details of all seven jurors. That video is currently at the top of a pinned post on the Fox News website.

READ MORE: Fox Personality’s Tweet Called ‘Jury Tampering’ by US Congressman

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