STONEZONE NEWS

The American people are not children. They do not need to be protected from the truth by lawyers, handlers, bureaucrats, or partisan media figures.

A federal judge in Washington has now done what the political class, the bureaucratic permanent government, and the Biden damage control machine hoped would never happen. United States District Judge Dabney L. Friedrich has denied Joseph R. Biden Jr.’s effort to block the Department of Justice from releasing redacted audio recordings and transcripts of Biden’s interviews with ghostwriter Mark Zwonitzer, the very interviews relied upon by Special Counsel Robert Hur in his investigation of Biden’s mishandling of classified documents.

This is more than a procedural ruling in a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) case. It is a major victory for transparency, accountability, and the principle that the American people have a right to know who was capable of exercising the powers of the presidency and how key decisions were made. The case, brought by the Heritage Foundation and Mike Howell, sought records from Hur’s investigation, including the Zwonitzer materials specifically cited in Hur’s report. Hur was appointed in January 2023 to investigate classified documents discovered at the Penn Biden Center and Biden’s Wilmington, Delaware residence. Although Hur declined to prosecute Biden, he concluded that it would be difficult to convince a jury that an elderly former president with significant memory problems possessed the criminal intent necessary for conviction.

Hur’s report described recorded conversations in which Biden struggled to remember dates, events, and details from his own life. Those findings were explosive because they contradicted years of assurances that Biden remained vigorous, alert, and fully capable of performing the duties of the presidency. Americans were repeatedly told not to believe what they saw during public appearances when Biden appeared confused, forgetful, or unable to complete basic remarks without extensive assistance.

Now the courts are moving us closer to the underlying evidence. Biden intervened in the FOIA lawsuit and sought a preliminary injunction to stop the release. His attorneys argued that the recordings involved deeply personal conversations connected to the writing of “Promise Me, Dad” his memoir about the death of his son Beau and his decision not to run for president in 2016. No reasonable person dismisses the pain of losing a child. Yet these recordings were not merely private family conversations. They became evidence in a Special Counsel investigation involving classified documents, prosecutorial discretion, and the mental state of a man who later occupied the most powerful office in the world.

Judge Friedrich’s opinion makes that distinction clear. The court found that the Department of Justice had already made extensive redactions to protect family matters, health information, deaths, illnesses, and references to private individuals. What remains largely concerns subjects already discussed publicly through the Hur Report, congressional testimony, and Biden’s own writings.

This was not a judicial order to expose private grief. It was a rejection of Biden’s attempt to use privacy as a blanket shield against public scrutiny of government records. The ruling is especially important because the court recognized the extraordinary public interest involved. Hur’s investigation centered on a sitting president, classified documents, and a prosecutorial decision that carried enormous political and constitutional consequences. The public has a right to evaluate the evidence Hur relied upon when he chose not to prosecute Biden while simultaneously expressing serious concerns about his memory and mental faculties.

Biden’s legal team argued that the Justice Department’s decision to release the materials was arbitrary and politically motivated. Judge Friedrich rejected that argument, finding that the Department had adequately explained its decision and that Biden was unlikely to prevail on the merits. Most importantly, the court concluded that the balance of equities and the public interest favored disclosure.

This is precisely how the Freedom of Information Act is supposed to work. FOIA was enacted to pierce government secrecy and allow citizens to understand what their government has done in their name. Records matter. Evidence matters. Audio matters because tone, hesitation, confusion, pace, and comprehension cannot always be captured by a transcript. That is why these tapes matter more than Biden’s defenders would like to admit. A transcript can be summarized and interpreted. A recording carries the pauses, the uncertainty, the strain, and the cadence of a person speaking in real time. If Hur relied on how Biden sounded and behaved during these interviews, then the American people are entitled to hear enough of that evidence to determine whether Hur’s conclusions were fair and accurate.

The Heritage Foundation and Mike Howell deserve credit for pursuing this fight when many of the self-appointed guardians of transparency showed little interest in the underlying facts. Their victory is not merely a conservative victory. It is an American victory because government records ultimately belong to the people.

The autopen controversy now hangs over this matter as well. If Biden’s decline was visible years before it became publicly undeniable, then Americans deserve answers about who exercised authority when he could not. They deserve to know who made decisions, who controlled access, who approved policy, and who wielded power behind the scenes while presenting the image of a fully functioning president. This is not a trivial matter. It goes to the constitutional heart of self-government.

Biden’s defenders will argue that examining these questions is unfair to an aging man. That argument might carry greater force if Biden had been a private citizen. It carries far less weight when applied to the President of the United States. Compassion for age and illness should never become an excuse for concealing facts that voters have a right to know.

Judge Friedrich’s ruling does not order the release of everything, nor does it eliminate appropriate redactions. What it does establish is a simple but essential principle. When records illuminate the conduct of government, the public interest can outweigh the privacy claims of even the most powerful officials. The Biden tapes may ultimately prove historically significant, not because they resemble the Nixon tapes, but because they may reveal the hidden reality behind a presidency that many Americans increasingly believe was presented under false pretenses. The question is no longer whether Biden experienced memory problems. Hur placed that issue firmly into the public record. The question now is how early those problems became apparent, how serious they were, who knew about them, and what efforts were made to conceal them from the voters.

The American people are not children. They do not need to be protected from the truth by lawyers, handlers, bureaucrats, or partisan media figures. They need the facts. They need the records. They need the tapes. Judge Friedrich’s ruling is a welcome step toward restoring the simple but indispensable principle that in a free country, the government does not own the truth. The people do.

In the past few weeks, Vice President JD Vance has shown precisely why President Donald Trump made one of the most consequential decisions of his political career by selecting him as running mate. Vance has stepped into hostile territory and emerged stronger, defended the America First agenda with precision, and positioned himself as the steady voice of a pragmatic foreign policy that prioritizes American interests over endless wars. These performances are not accidents—they are the product of rare political instincts and a rare understanding of the movement that President Trump birthed.

Consider his appearance on ABC’s The View. This was no friendly forum. Vance walked into a panel where at least four of the six co-hosts approached the segment with open hostility. Questions came rapid-fire on the economy, immigration enforcement, the administration’s handling of Epstein files, his own past comments about President Trump, black history in public spaces, and other topics that might make a lesser intellect flinch. Vance steadfastly defended President Trump’s record, clarified positions without apology, and maintained composure amid interruptions and pointed attacks. Vance handled it with the grace under fire that defines real leadership. He showed up, engaged directly, and refused to be rattled. That is courage.

The same day, Vance sat with Megyn Kelly on her SiriusXM show to address divisions on the Right over the administration’s Iran policy. Rather than dismiss skeptics or escalate intra-movement tensions, he explained the strategic rationale, urged critics to remain engaged in the Trump coalition, and made the case that faith in the president’s judgment is always warranted. Vance diffused objections without conceding principles. Few figures can thread that needle—speaking to the base’s legitimate concerns about foreign entanglements while reinforcing unity behind America First priorities. These back-to-back appearances revealed a politician operating at a higher level: unflappable in hostile ground while remaining persuasive within his own coalition.

Vance’s greatest strength is his ability to articulate President Trump’s America First agenda in language that resonates with everyday Americans. He connects the dots between reckless foreign policy, economic stagnation at home, and the erosion of national sovereignty better than almost anyone in public life. His populism is not academic—it flows from the lived reality of communities hollowed out by bad trade deals, open borders, and wars that drained blood and treasure while delivering little for working families. Vance explains these connections logically and forcefully, turning complex realities into clear imperatives. That talent makes him indispensable for sustaining the MAGA movement’s momentum.

Nowhere has this been clearer than in his role as the public face of the Islamabad Memorandum, the agreement that ended active hostilities with Iran and opened a pathway to nuclear inspections and accountability through peace talks. Vance has led aspects of the diplomatic process in Switzerland, briefed the press, and defended the deal against critics who prefer confrontation. While some neoconservative voices and their allies on Capitol Hill have whined, trashed the agreement as appeasement, and pushed for a more belligerent approach, Vance has stood firm for a policy of peace through strength. He has reminded audiences that American interests are best served by avoiding new quagmires in the Middle East. Polls cited by President Trump show the deal enjoying significant support—56 percent approval in one survey—with majority backing across key demographics, including Republicans and MAGA voters. Vance has become the visible counterweight to the warmongering impulses that have long tried to co-opt Republican administrations. He is redefining what strength looks like: prudent diplomacy that protects American lives and resources rather than squandering them on conflicts that benefit the globalists. Vance’s instincts here are pitch-perfect.

The establishment understood exactly what Vance would bring to the ticket from the moment President Trump chose him as his Vice President. The reaction in 2024 was fury. Legacy media, Never Trump operatives, and neoconservative holdovers in the GOP launched a sustained campaign of sabotage and personal destruction. Vance was labeled the “worst” vice-presidential pick ever. Old statements were weaponized. A coordinated psyop tried to convince the public he was a liability. They failed—because the American people recognized authenticity and conviction when they saw it. That opposition was never really about qualifications; it was about preventing an unapologetic America First outsider from reaching the highest levels of power. President Trump’s choice has already proven to be a tremendous success, both electorally and in governance. Vance has shown loyalty without sycophancy, effectiveness without fanfare, and a willingness to take on entrenched interests inside and outside the coalition.

As the 2026 midterms approach, Vance’s value as a communicator becomes even more critical. He should be deployed regularly across media platforms—friendly and adversarial alike. His messaging has the rare quality of setting the national tone for the entire party. When Vance speaks clearly about the administration’s achievements—the border security gains, economic recalibration, and now a tangible step toward lasting peace in the Middle East—he arms Republican candidates everywhere with a coherent, resonant narrative. Vance cuts through media distortion, energizes the base, and persuades independent voters that America First delivers results. In a cycle where turnout and message discipline will decide control of Congress, Vance is the not-so-secret weapon who can help lock in lasting gains.

JD Vance is a truly special political talent. The establishment tried to destroy him before he could make an impact. This moment right now is exactly what they feared. President Trump rejected the Republican conventional wisdom and made a choice in Vance that continues to pay dividends. Vance has earned his place as Vice President not through pedigree or favor-trading, but through courage, clarity, and an instinctive grasp of what America First actually means. The country is better for having him in this role, and the movement is stronger because he is unequivocally himself.

California Governor Gavin Newsom’s carefully cultivated image as the slick, telegenic heir apparent of the Democrats is cracking under the weight of millions being funnelled into organizations tied to his wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom. A federal Department of Justice investigation, rooted in whistleblower complaints and public records, is examining the finances, tax compliance, and nonprofit dealings of the “First Partner” and, by extension, the governor himself. 

Newsom calls it a Trump-orchestrated “witch hunt” designed to derail his 2028 presidential ambitions. That “poor me” victimization defense sounds familiar — it echoes the initial denials from other politicians, like disgraced former Congressman Eric Swalwell, whose self-inflicted wounds later proved fatal to their careers. The evidence here is not fabricated talking points; it rests on a host of evidence—including IRS filings, Fair Political Practices Commission disclosures, and years of investigative reporting.

Newsom has been running a classic influence loop scam that has operated in plain sight. Under California’s behested payments system, elected officials can solicit unlimited donations from corporations, interest groups, and regulated entities to favored nonprofits. There are no contribution caps like those on campaign donations or gifts, only disclosure rules. Newsom has been the state’s most prolific practitioner: since 2011, he has steered $347.2 million — 62 percent of all such behests by California lawmakers — to his preferred causes.

A substantial portion has landed at organizations linked to his wife. Peering into Siebel Newsom’s records show that she was an early progenitor of using the woke DEI scam to fill her slimy husband’s coffers. The California Partners Project, which Siebel Newsom co-founded to promote “gender equity,” has received more than $4.3 million in behested donations since 2020. One donor alone, the Federated Indians of Graton Rancheria (operator of a major Sonoma County casino that lobbies Sacramento), gave $1.8 million.

Even more revealing is the Representation Project, the 501(c)(3) nonprofit founded by Siebel Newsom in 2011 to combat “gender stereotypes” through documentaries and advocacy. IRS filings show that over the past decade, the nonprofit paid her approximately $150,000 annually as Chief Creative Officer and another $150,000 yearly to her for-profit production company, Girls Club LLC, for licensing rights to her films Miss Representation and The Mask You Live In. Combined, she and her LLC have pulled in more than $3.7 million. Additional corporate donors to the Representation Project — including PG&E, AT&T, Kaiser Permanente, and Comcast — have business interests within the governor’s orbit. A 2021 Sacramento Bee investigation already flagged over $800,000 in such donations, which are a thinly veiled pay-for-play scheme.

This is not abstract “nonprofit chicanery.” It is a direct pipeline: state power and donor access leads to behested money to family-controlled nonprofits which results in salary, licensing fees, and production revenue to the governor’s spouse and her company. Siebel Newsom’s annual earnings from these arrangements have hovered around $300,000, contributing to a family lifestyle that includes multimillion-dollar homes and other assets. The Representation Project’s own filings show executive compensation consuming a striking share of revenue in some years — precisely the kind of private inurement and self-dealing that IRS rules and basic nonprofit governance are supposed to prevent.

Newsom’s complaints that this is purely political theater ignore the lengthy paper trail. The DOJ probe, which includes IRS involvement and has expanded from an initial focus on Siebel Newsom’s taxes and finances, originated from whistleblower complaints to the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Sacramento well before recent public escalation. Agents have interviewed former employees and associates and issued subpoenas for records. These are standard steps in examining potential tax crimes and nonprofit compliance violations, not the hallmarks of a hastily manufactured political hit job. California’s own FPPC has already fined Newsom’s operation multiple times—for $13,000 and $31,500, respectgively—for late or incomplete behested payment disclosures.

The pattern of chief executives using nonprofits to shift around illicit money extends far beyond Sacramento. In Florida, a grand jury and legislative scrutiny examined how $10 million from a Medicaid overbilling settlement with Centene was directed to the Hope Florida Foundation, the charitable arm of an initiative launched by First Lady Casey DeSantis. The funds were diverted from state coffers and used on a political fund run by DeSantis’ then-chief of staff. The episode damaged reputations, stopped Casey DeSantis’ gubernatorial ambitions cold and underscored how first spouses’ nonprofits can become vehicles for corrupt money transfers. Across administrations and parties, the public is awakening to these arrangements as settlement slush funds, grant-making opacity, and family foundation pipelines face increasing congressional and media scrutiny.

Newsom was never a credible national contender. His record — an explosion of homelessness, business exodus, energy unreliability, and failed economic policy that delivered measurable decline — already disqualified him in the eyes of most Americans outside of coastal bubbles. This family enrichment scandal simply accelerates the inevitable. Even if the DOJ investigation yields no criminal charges (proving criminal intent in complex nonprofit and tax matters can oftentimes be difficult), the public record of self-dealing will provide devastating ammunition for progressive primary challengers who already view Newsom as an inauthentic, focus-grouped moderate poser more interested in personal branding than achieving genuine change. He will be rejected as the Democratic nominee in 2028.

Voters across the spectrum are growingly increasingly tired of polished operators who treat public office as an exercise in vanity. They are rejecting the used-car-salesman archetype — whether it wears a red tie or a blue one — in favor of bold authenticity. Newsom’s bonafides as a soulless hack position him as the perfect sacrificial lamb for populists from all sides to revel in his destruction. The old insider game of directing favors, behests, and nonprofit dollars to connected entities is coming to an abrupt, unceremonial end. California’s governor now finds himself in the crosshairs not because of any partisan vendetta, but because the evidence of his corruption has finally become too grotesque to ignore. 

President Trump’s NATO strategy aligns perfectly with MAGA interests.

President Donald Trump’s America First foreign policy is delivering results that were, until very recently, dismissed as impossible. NATO allies, long content to let the United States shoulder the burden of their defense, are finally stepping up. Germany, Europe’s economic powerhouse, is pledging to build the continent’s strongest army, signaling a broader shift across the alliance. This is not charity or coincidence—it is the direct outcome of relentless pressure from President Trump, who has made clear that the era of American taxpayers subsidizing European security is over.

Jens Hanefeld, Germany’s Ambassador to the United States, has said Berlin is “stepping up.” Chancellor Friedrich Merz aims for Germany to field Europe’s strongest conventional forces, anchored in NATO but increasingly self-reliant. The country has signed over 380 contracts worth more than $33 billion with American defense firms for jets, helicopters, air defense, and ammunition—helping the U.S. economy thrive as they embrace self-sufficiency. Defense spending is ramping up toward 5% of GDP well before 2035, with plans to recruit nearly 100,000 new soldiers. Russia’s aggression in Ukraine resulted in talk of “Zeitenwende”—a turning point—but it was not realized until President Trump issued his relentless pressure.

European elites know they can no longer freeload. For decades, the U.S. provided the bulk of NATO’s deterrent power while allies skimped on spending and indulged in social spending sprees. Europeans were able to lavishly enjoy socialism, racking up the tab on Uncle Sam—with the U.S. taxpayer getting the shaft, as usual. President Trump has changed that equation. President Trump expects real contributions and equitable burden-sharing, and he is succeeding where previous administrations were unsuccessful. This progress infuriates the globalist class, who preferred Europe dependent on endless American largesse united under a bureaucratic superstructure.

The arrogant European response reveals the depths of their narcissistic entitlement. In his commentary, EU Institute for Security Studies Director Steven Everts urged Europe to “focus on defending itself, not on keeping Trump happy.” He laments Trump’s use of burden-sharing as “an instrument of personal reward and punishment,” decrying threats of troop adjustments as coercive theater. Similarly, Rym Momtaz at the Carnegie Endowment portrayed Trump as turning NATO into “a tool of coercion” against Europe. She cataloged supposed “humiliations,” from tariff threats to troop repositioning, claiming the U.S. is undermining its own alliances. These tantrums, while laughable, are quantifiable evidence that the successes of President Trump’s NATO realignment are now an undeniable reality.

Europe’s decadence and greed have left it vulnerable. The prolonged Ukraine-Russia conflict—fueled by European hubris and U.S. blank checks under Biden—has devastated economies. Billions poured into weapons, sanctions backfired, and energy crises crippled industry, resulting in inflated costs and eroded living standards. Resources wasted on a grinding proxy war could have fortified borders or invested in domestic resilience. Instead, Europe doubled down on strategic folly while American forces and treasure held the line.

Worse, as they bleed economically, European leaders curtail the core rights of their own citizens all the while lecturing the world about the merits of democracy. The EU pushes aggressive digital censorship regimes, targeting “disinformation” to silence dissent on migration, climate, or Ukraine policy. Speech codes, platform regulations, and surveillance stifle debate—the very freedoms NATO was erected to defend. This is the endpoint of bureaucratic mismanagement from elites who believe accountability is a dirty word. They have become accustomed to external dependency paired with internal authoritarianism.

NATO’s broader track record exposes its obsolescence. Formed to counter Soviet expansion, the alliance failed to prevent multiple wars and conflicts in its sphere. It expanded aggressively eastward, provoking tensions after the Western-led coup in 2014, yet delivered neither victory nor lasting peace in Ukraine. Endless summits produced commitments rarely met. Quite frankly, NATO should be disbanded. Collective defense has devolved into an expensive subsidy scheme that disincentivizes European responsibility and entangles America in perpetual overseas commitments.

Since full dissolution may not be immediate, President Trump is pursuing the next best path: transformative realignment. By pressuring laggards and demanding accountability, he forces member states to confront the reality that their free ride is over. Germany and others are responding, however grudgingly. This decoupling process allows the United States to shed the role of the world’s policeman. America First means prioritizing our borders, economy, and military superiority at home, not indefinite garrisons subsidizing ingrateful allies who resent us.

Trump’s approach is vindicated. European buildup, however belated, strengthens deterrence against real threats like Russia without requiring endless U.S. blank checks. When America leads with strength and self-interest, allies adapt and the sky does not fall. The tantrums from Brussels and Berlin think tanks only highlight their disconnect from voters who increasingly favor national sovereignty. Critics claim this frays alliances, but the opposite is true. A Europe that pays its way and fields credible forces is a better partner for the U.S. than sluggish, dependent clients. For too long, NATO meant Americans bleed and Europeans complain. President Trump is flipping the script.

As we focus on rebuilding at home—securing borders, restoring manufacturing, and destroying cultural Marxism—President Trump’s NATO strategy aligns perfectly with MAGA interests. No more subsidizing decadence. No more ignoring sovereignty for supranational fantasies. The realignment is working because it rejects the failed status quo. Europe must now prove it can defend itself. Germany’s pledges are a start, but follow-through matters. The United States will remain engaged on our terms—not as an ATM or enforcer for globalist failures. President Trump’s success here underscores the deeper truth that strong leadership rooted in national interest delivers results that polite multilateralism never could. The globalists may seethe, but America—and a more responsible Europe—will be better off for President Trump’s NATO realignment.

In the case of Juan Orlando Hernández, there appears to be many lies by the prosecution.

Part 1 made the geopolitical argument for Trump’s pardon of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez.

Part 2 examined the case the Biden Department of Justice put on.

Part 3 examined how the prosecutors lied to secure the trial before a biased judge and an uninformed jury.

Part 4 showed how the prosecutors coached cooperators to lie about ledgers and radar that did not exist.

Part 5 examined the four cooperators — 134 murders between them, 700 tons of cocaine trafficked, whose uncorroborated testimony was the basis for Hernández’s 45-year sentence.

Part 6 documented the eight years of U.S. government praise for Hernández as a counter-narcotics partner that the jury was not allowed to see.

This is Part 7.

Juan Orlando Hernández served as president of Honduras from January 27, 2014 to January 27, 2022.

On June 26, 2024, Judge P. Kevin Castel in the Southern District of NY sentenced Hernandez to 45 years in US federal prison on drug trafficking and gun charges.

With federal good conduct credit, Hernández, then 55, would have been eligible for release at 93.

The Venue Issue

The SDNY prosecutors had spent nine years building a broader Honduran trafficking prosecution. They had begun in 2015. They convicted Tony Hernández in 2019, and Geovanny Fuentes Ramírez in 2021.

Judge Castel sat on the bench for each of the three trials.

The Biden DEA flew Hernández out of Tegucigalpa on the night of April 21, 2022. The plane landed in Fort Lauderdale before continuing to New York.

Under federal law, the first port of entry determines the venue.

Two Options

The prosecutors had two options. Hand the case to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Florida, as the law requires, and watch their nine years of institutional work get tried in front of a Trump-leaning Miami bench, with a Honduran-American jury pool, in a federal district they did not control.

Or lie.

They lied.

They told the judge and the jury that Hernández was first brought to New York. The lie kept the case in SDNY before Judge Castel.

235-Year-Old Law

The federal venue statute for offenses begun outside the United States — 18 U.S.C. § 3238 — reads:

“The trial of all offenses begun or committed upon the high seas, or elsewhere out of the jurisdiction of any particular State or district, shall be in the district in which the offender … is arrested or is first brought.”

Congress wrote the law for piracy and mutiny cases in the founding era. In 1789, the United States had 13 federal district courts and a Navy bringing pirates ashore from the Caribbean. The federal government needed a place to put them on trial that was convenient. The law was to try the defendant wherever you bring him into the country.

The law has been on the books for 235 years. Prosecutors have applied it to mutineers, slave traders, war criminals, terrorists captured abroad, and — in the modern era — international drug traffickers.

The phrase in the law that controls is first brought. The first federal district the defendant is brought into. Hernández was first brought into the Southern District of Florida.

The federal prosecutors from Manhattan wanted Castel in Manhattan. So they lied about where the plane landed.

The Stipulation

During the trial, the government read the lie to the jury. It was in the form of a stipulation.

The stipulation falsely stated that Hernández was first brought into the United States through New York after his extradition from Honduras in April 2022.

After the trial, prosecutors acknowledged their lie in writing.

“The government concedes that the venue stipulation read to the jury was false.”

The Venue the Prosecution Wanted

They had a strong reason to lie.

They had tried related cases in Castel’s courtroom and knew how he would handle their main witness: Devis Leonel Rivera Maradiaga, the former Cachiros leader who admitted 78 murders.

He had testified for the government at the Tony Hernández trial in 2019, at the Geovanny Fuentes Ramírez trial in 2021.

He also testified at the Juan Orlando Hernández trial in 2024.

Rivera Maradiaga profited from his testimony. The mass murderer has been a federal cooperator since January 2015. He has pleaded guilty. And admitted to ordering 78 killings. He has testified in at least five federal SDNY prosecutions over 11 years.

The federal mandatory minimum on his admitted conduct is life imprisonment plus 30 years. The federal government has not asked the court to sentence him.

His current Bureau of Prisons custody status is not in the public record. He may be in the Witness Security Program. He may be in protective custody. He may be on supervised release.

The federal government will not say.

Florida Might Have Meant Acquittal

The issue was not using murderers as the witnesses against Hernandez, the issue was that a trial in the Southern District of Florida, as the law required, would have introduced the possibility of an acquittal.

The Miami federal bench includes judges appointed by President Donald Trump in his first term. Trump was an ally of Hernández.

Trump believed the prosecution of Hernandez was a Biden DOJ setup.

If the trial occurred where the legal venue was, the Southern District of Florida, it was possible that judges with Cuban-American and Latin American backgrounds — people who understood the history and tensions of the hemisphere not as distant abstractions but as part of the human world around them – might get assigned to the case.

The Miami Jury Pool

The jury mattered too.

In South Florida, the jury pool comes from Miami-Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach counties. The Honduran-American community there is one of the largest in the country.

The Cuban-American community in South Florida has long opposed leftist governments in Latin America, including the then-Castro government in Honduras with whom the Biden DOJ allied.

A federal jury in the Southern District of Florida could have included people who had relatives in Honduras during Hernández’s presidency. People who knew the names of the trafficking Cachiros and the Valle Valles. They would know that drug trafficking went down because of Hernandez.

That he fought drug trafficking but leaned right and allied with Trump.

Jurors might include people who understood the political context of the 2009 coup against the leftist Manuel Zelaya, that led to Hernandez’s election and the war on drug traffickers, and the 2022 inauguration of Zelaya’s wife Xiomara Castro, and the slackening of drug trafficking intervention and even the introduction of cultivating the coca plant so that Honduras might be more than a transit stop but an actual exporter of cocaine.

These jurors might have acquitted or hung the jury.

The Press in Miami

The Spanish-language media in South Florida would likely have covered the trial differently from the press in Manhattan.

Most of the New York press reported the case as a straightforward narco-trafficking prosecution against a former foreign president.

The Spanish-language press in Miami would have seen Hernández as a former president who had stood beside Donald Trump at the White House and had been praised for years by the DEA and other officials for reducing drug trafficking out of Honduras.

The prosecutors wanted the case, which was built on killers cutting deals — including Alexander Ardón, the former mayor of El Paraíso, who admitted to 56 murders and served less than six years – in Manhattan.

To keep it there, they gave the jury a false statement about jurisdiction.

A South Florida judge and jury might have looked at the entire case – hinging on guys admitting murders by the dozen up there in suits telling the jury who the real criminal was supposed to be – a little differently.

What the Stipulation Did

The stipulation addressed the one fact necessary to keep the case in Manhattan: New York was the first point of entry. After the verdict prosecutors acknowledged that the statement was not true.

What Castel Did

Judge Castel did not vacate the verdict or order a new trial in Florida. He did not order a new briefing after the government admitted the statement was false.

The stipulation established jurisdiction. Jurisdiction established the court’s authority to return a verdict. If the stipulation was false, the verdict was false.

On June 26, 2024, Castel ignored the issue and sentenced Hernández.

The Appeal

The defense could have appealed the venue ruling (and other issues) to the Second Circuit, which could have affirmed the conviction or vacated it.

Before the 2nd Circuit had reviewed the issue, President Trump pardoned Hernández.

On April 8, 2026, the Second Circuit dismissed the appeal as moot and vacated the conviction.

SDNY’s Business

What remains are a review of how the SDNY conducts business.

Prosecutorial falsehoods are often treated by the judiciary as part of the system instead of a violation of it.

Note, please, that if a defense lawyer had presented a false stipulation to a federal jury, disbarment proceedings would have followed.

Lying, conversely, does not kill prosecutors’ careers. Sometimes it builds them.

That is the part people outside the system have trouble believing.

In the case of Juan Orlando Hernández, there appears to be many lies by the prosecution. The stipulation is merely one of many.

We will cover more of them in the series.

By Frank Parlato for Art Voice – https://frankreport.com/hernandez-venue-lie-castel

As America approaches the 250th anniversary of our independence, the nation finds itself engaged in a struggle far more important than politics, elections, or public policy. We are engaged in a battle for our national memory. The question before us is whether future generations will inherit an understanding of America rooted in truth, gratitude, and pride, or whether they will inherit a distorted version of our history that emphasizes our shortcomings while ignoring our triumphs.

On July 4, 1776 fifty-six brave men affixed their names to the Declaration of Independence and, in doing so, committed an act of extraordinary courage. They were not merely protesting taxes or expressing dissatisfaction with government policy. They were declaring that all men are created equal and endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights. They were asserting that freedom comes from God, not government, and that legitimate government exists only through the consent of the governed. These principles transformed human history and became the foundation upon which the United States was built.

The American Revolution was one of the most remarkable events in the history of civilization. A collection of colonies populated by farmers, merchants, craftsmen, and laborers challenged the most powerful empire on Earth and prevailed. The victory was not merely military. It was philosophical. The Founding Fathers created something the world had never seen before: a constitutional republic designed to preserve individual liberty and limit the power of government. For nearly two and a half centuries, that framework has endured through wars, economic crises, political upheaval, and social transformation.

What makes America exceptional is not the absence of flaws, is our ability to recognize our mistakes and correct them. Throughout our history, we have expanded liberty, broadened opportunity, and worked to fulfill the promises contained within our founding documents. We fought a devastating Civil War to end slavery and preserve the Union. We expanded constitutional protections to millions of citizens previously denied equal treatment. We have equal pay and fought for our women to have the right to vote. We repeatedly demonstrated that America possesses a unique capacity for self correction while remaining faithful to the principles that gave birth to the nation.

Unfortunately, there are those who seek to reduce America’s history to a catalog of grievances. They teach young people that the United States is defined primarily by its failures rather than its achievements. They encourage Americans to view the Founders solely through the lens of their imperfections while ignoring their courage, wisdom, and vision. They remove monuments, rename schools, and rewrite historical narratives in ways that diminish the accomplishments of those who built and defended this country. This effort does not promote historical understanding. It promotes historical amnesia.

A mature nation is capable of acknowledging both its successes and its failures. We do not honor George Washington because he was perfect. We honor him because he sacrificed power when he could have seized it. We do not celebrate Thomas Jefferson because he was without contradiction. We celebrate him because he gave humanity one of the greatest statements of liberty ever written. We do not revere Abraham Lincoln because he never made mistakes. We revere him because he preserved the Union and guided the nation through its greatest crisis. History should be studied honestly, but honesty requires a full accounting of both virtue and imperfection.

As we prepare to celebrate America’s 250th birthday, we should remember the generations who preserved this Republic through sacrifice and service. We should remember the soldiers who endured Valley Forge and secured independence. We should remember those who fought to preserve the Union during the Civil War. We should remember the Greatest Generation that stormed the beaches of Normandy, fought across the Pacific, and defeated the forces of tyranny during World War II. We should remember the veterans of Korea, Vietnam, Iraq, Afghanistan, and every conflict in which Americans answered the call of duty. The freedoms we enjoy today were not inherited by accident. They were purchased at tremendous cost by men and women willing to place the nation above themselves.

The coming anniversary also presents an opportunity to restore a sense of national confidence. For too long, Americans have been encouraged to apologize for their country rather than appreciate it. Patriotism has too often been portrayed as something outdated or unfashionable. Yet every nation requires a shared understanding of its history and a shared appreciation for the sacrifices that made its existence possible. A people disconnected from their past cannot build a strong future. National pride is not arrogance. It is gratitude for the blessings we have inherited and a commitment to preserve them for those who follow.

President Donald Trump has made the celebration of America’s 250th birthday a centerpiece of his vision for the nation. The anniversary provides an opportunity not only to commemorate our history but also to teach it. Young Americans deserve to learn about the courage of the Founders, the heroism of our soldiers, the ingenuity of our inventors, the faith of our pioneers, and the countless ordinary citizens whose hard work built the greatest nation in human history. They deserve an education that inspires rather than demoralizes and informs rather than indoctrinates.

At its core, the battle for our national memory is about identity. Every family preserves stories about those who came before. We tell those stories because they remind us who we are. We pass down photographs, heirlooms, traditions, and memories because they connect us to something larger than ourselves. Nations are no different. When a nation forgets its history, it loses its sense of purpose. When it abandons its heroes, it loses its understanding of courage. When it ceases to value its traditions, it weakens the bonds that unite its people.

As we approach this historic milestone, Americans should celebrate with confidence and gratitude. We should honor the farmers who left their fields to fight for independence, the immigrants who arrived seeking freedom, the workers who built our industries, the entrepreneurs who drove innovation, the parents who raised generations of patriotic citizens, and the soldiers who defended liberty around the globe. Their stories are America’s story.

The first 250 years of the American experiment have been extraordinary. Despite every challenge, every crisis, and every prediction of decline, the United States remains the most successful and influential republic in human history. Whether the next 250 years are equally successful will depend in large part on whether we remember who we are, where we came from, and what generations of Americans sacrificed to preserve this remarkable nation. America’s future begins with America’s memory. As we celebrate our 250th birthday, let us resolve to preserve that memory, honor those who came before us, and ensure that future generations inherit the truth about the greatest nation the world has ever known.

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WHO IS ROGER STONE?

Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

“Roger’s a good guy. He is a patriot and believes in a strong nation, and a lot of other things I believes in.”

– President Donald J. Trump
Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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