DOJ plots path forward after Supreme Court setbacks – Washington Examiner
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Attorneys Bird Branca and Pippa Corbin, who are defending Sandlin, wrote in a filing that they believed the Supreme Court’s decisions in Fischer and Trump called into question the convictions of Watergate conspirators and led to the 1970s-era federal obstruction statutes’ broadly being read back then.
“With today’s opinion, the court has now specifically narrowed the statute to what we argue it covered in the first place,” Sandlin’s attorneys said, adding, “That it took to [sic] [41] years to get here, and we need to put our clients back on a level playing field.”
The DOJ said last week that it was going to ask the full bench of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit to review Judge Carl Nichols’ decision to overturn the conviction of Charles Donohoe, a Proud Boys leader involved in the Capitol breach. Nichols found that prosecutors did not have enough evidence to convict Donohoe of conspiracy and seditious conspiracy.
Meanwhile, prosecutors working on cases related to the QAnon conspiracy group are deciding how they might proceed post-Fischer in cases of five of its members accused of attacking police officers.
Experts expect that Fischer has the potential to affect more than just the handful of Jan. 6 cases that the DOJ is currently seeking to overcome.
“Based on the government’s previous conduct, it is now entirely unclear what prosecutors will argue are charges that are still permissible under Fischer and which are on shifting sands,” said attorney Jenna Clarke.
Clarke noted that the Supreme Court not only limited the obstruction charge in Fischer but also rejected the Justice Department’s “interpretation of the seditious conspiracy charge in Trump.”
“Prosecutors have essentially the same textbooks to turn in for their grades next semester because they no longer have the one that has all of the charges they used,” Clarke said.