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Notes -
Jury finds defendants guilty of terrorism-related charges in attack on Prairieland ICE detention center
Description of the event from Wikipedia:
Only one person (Benjamin Song, a former Marine reservist) in the group fired shots, nonfatally hitting an officer. The defense argued that the other members of the group intended only to peacefully protest and not to bait out officers for Song. This, of course, brings us back to the classic, airplane-on-a-treadmill style "Does Antifa exist" debate.
https://www.keranews.org/criminal-justice/2026-03-13/prairieland-detention-center-ice-antifa-shooting-terrorism-trial-verdict-texas
All these articles are light on evidence, so let's go to the DOJ press release.
From the texts released, it doesn't seem like there's firm evidence that they knew what Song was planning. Of course, many of the messages were deleted, so it's hardly exonerating.
Or the RECAP docket.
It's incredible to me the sheer fucking amount of paperwork required just to put somebody away for committing a crime that everybody knows they did. Of course, it helps having pro-bono activist lawyers from the NLG with unlimited resources to spam the court with procedural issues, but god damn. It actually disheartens me to see how difficult or even impossible it would be for the legal system alone to actually make any sort of dent in the extremist left.
Indeed. Every time I read even a probable cause affidavit I'm both impressed by how clear they are--they're good writing--but also disheartened at how expensive they must be. This is a limited resource!
Not trying to argue that they're PhD level documents or anything, but I'm surprised that every salty ragged looking detective has to be able to write one at that level.
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