Judge Tim Kelly’s Court of Contempt – The D.C. District Court Judge is anything but impartial in the J6 cases coming before his court.

Loading

By Julie Kelly

Following an armed FBI raid with SWAT vehicles that terrorized his neighborhood and pregnant wife, Zachary Rehl was arrested in March 2021 for his involvement in the events of January 6. A Philadelphia judge ordered Rehl, a member of the Proud Boys, to be released from custody pending trial.
 
But Joe Biden’s Justice Department immediately asked a D.C. federal judge to keep Rehl in jail indefinitely even though he was not accused of committing a violent crime. Claiming Rehl “abetted” the destruction of government property—“a federal crime of terrorism,” prosecutors wrote—the government argued that no condition of release could keep the community safe from Rehl, a former Marine with no criminal history.
 
Enter D.C. District Court Judge Timothy Kelly.
 
“The Court finds that the nature and circumstances of the offenses weigh in favor of detention,” Kelly wrote in his July 2021 order. “[Although] there is no evidence Rehl carried or used a weapon that day, or laid his hands on anyone in a violent manner, he said and did things that are highly troubling.”
 
After spending two years in jail not convicted of any crime, Rehl is currently on trial in Kelly’s courtroom along with four other Proud Boys charged with seditious conspiracy—an indictment filed a year after their initial charges. Kelly has kept all five defendants behind bars awaiting trial, repeatedly denying all subsequent motions for release while at the same time granting one delay after another.
 
Kelly, naturally, is invested in justifying his cruel decision to incarcerate innocent men (yes, the country’s jurisprudence still assumes the presumption of innocence) for two years. Which only partially explains why he is running roughshod over the rights of the defendants to make sure they are found guilty.
 
Appointed to the bench by President Trump in 2017, Kelly spent 10 years working for the Justice Department including the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, which prosecutes every January 6 case. He won an award from the FBI’s Washington Field Office, the very same office investigating every January 6 case. This is the sort of professional incestuousness Trump supporters from flyover country confront in the nation’s capital.
 
What’s unfolding in Kelly’s courtroom is a mockery of justice—a politically motivated case heavily reliant on  speech and activity that should be protected by the First Amendment rather than substituted for hard proof of any crime, let alone a plan to overthrow the government. For example, when FBI investigators raided Rehl’s home, they found no weapons or detailed plot to run Congress out of town on January 6 but instead recovered clothing and challenge coins produced by the Proud Boys.
 
Despite having no relevance to the merits of the case, Kelly allowed the government to enter the coins into evidence to show the “relationship” between the defendants.
 
Apparently nothing is too inconsequential, dubious, or political in nature to offend Kelly’s judicial sensibilities. Kelly has allowed prosecutors to play for the jury a clip of Trump’s comment during the September 2020 presidential debate instructing the Proud Boys to “stand back and stand by,” a throwaway line that had nothing to do with January 6. Prosecutors want the clip used in an overt attempt to portray the Proud Boys as “white supremacists,” a description offered by debate moderator Chris Wallace. (Six jurors are black.)
 
What the government wants, the government gets in Kelly’s courtroom.
 
Kelly also seems unconcerned with the origins of a document the Justice Department cites as evidence of the traitorous “conspiracy.” In criminal indictments, the government referred to a document sent to Enrique Tarrio, leader of the Proud Boys, which “set forth a plan to occupy a ‘few crucial’ buildings in Washington, D.C. on January 6.”
 
The inference is that Tarrio was the author of the plan, or at least, a willing recipient. Not only did Tarrio not write the document, investigators can’t confirm he read it or shared it with others. A former (current?) government intelligence asset is at least partially responsible for penning the document—something that raises lots of red flags considering the number of FBI informants embedded in the Proud Boys months before January 6.
 
Which is one aspect of the case Kelly seems to want to avoid, as does the Justice Department. One defense attorney suggested this week that as many as 15 informants worked the Proud Boys case, but almost all the information related to informants is under seal.

Read more

5 1 vote
Article Rating
Subscribe
Notify of
1 Comment
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments

Well, you can’t have an insurrection without insurrectionists. If your political goal is to produce an insurrection, then you’ll have to find yourself some insurrectionists. So, anyone and everyone that was in the vicinity of the Capital on January 6th becomes an instant candidate.

They can’t allow them to await trial outside of jail because they will expose the ridiculousness of the accusations. They have to keep them couped up and publicity squelched.

There is no possible doubt what is going on here. This is (yet another) leftist kangaroo court designed to provide the insurrectionists for the insurrection charge. Like the Trump associates who were all convicted of, not the crimes they were charged with, but process crimes that happened in the process of the bogus charges being investigated, the long list of “convictions” will be the proof of the existence of insurrectionists and, therefore, of an insurrection.

The lives and families destroyed in the process? Well, too bad. The left’s work must be done.