Subway Sandwich Thrower Found Not Guilty in D.C. Jury Rebuke
- On Thursday, a Washington, D.C. jury found Sean Dunn, former Department of Justice paralegal, not guilty of misdemeanor assault after he threw a Subway sandwich at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent on Aug. 10.
- U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro's office initially sought felony charges but a Washington, D.C. grand jury refused to indict, so prosecutors pursued a misdemeanor instead amid President Donald Trump's deployment of federal agents to Washington, D.C.
- Defense lawyers emphasized gag gifts and visual evidence to argue that a Subway sandwich still in its wrapping and the `Felony Footlong` patch showed the throw could not cause harm.
- Jurors deliberated for roughly 7 hours before returning the not guilty verdict, and Sean Dunn hugged his lawyers, saying he was relieved and looking forward to moving on.
- The acquittal is another setback for prosecutors in Washington, reflecting backlash over law-enforcement surge cases and a pattern of grand juries in Washington, D.C. refusing to indict.
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202 Articles
Sean Charles Dunn, the man who threw a subway sandwich at a federal agent in Washington, D.C., was found not guilty of crimes by a jury.
Sean C. Dunn, D.C. 'Sandwich Guy,' Found Not Guilty
Source: kasia2003 / Getty Sean C. Dunn, dubbed “Sandwich Guy” on social media, was acquitted on Thursday of misdemeanor assault after being tried for chucking a sub sandwich at a Customs and Border Protection officer in Washington, D.C.. This means the federal government arrested Dunn for throwing the sandwich, but then failed to get a grand jury to indict the defendant, so the government arrested him on virtually arbitrary misdemeanor charges, …
Sean Dunn, who had thrown a sandwich on a federal agent, was a judge for assault. Donald Trump's Department of Justice wanted to make an example.
Man who threw sandwich at federal agents acquitted in assault trial
A federal jury found the man who threw a sandwich at Border Patrol agents in Washington, D.C. not guilty of misdemeanor assault, The Associated Press reported. The verdict closed out a trial that was once for a felony and marked by an agent’s testimony of events. Sean C. Dunn, a former Justice Department employee, approached a group of federal agents in mid-August, called them fascists and questioned their purpose in his city. Shortly after, he…
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