Border Patrol agent testifies sandwich thrown at him "exploded all over,"

32 pointsposted 2 hours ago
by rolph

20 Comments

legitster

2 hours ago

> Federal prosecutors failed to secure a felony indictment from a grand jury in Washington in the immediate aftermath of the incident, and instead charged Dunn with a federal misdemeanor assault charge for allegedly assaulting, resisting, opposing, impeding, intimidating and interfering with a federal officer.

"A grand jury would indict a ham sandwich, if that's what you wanted,"- Sol Wachtler.

FYI - felony charges would have been up to 10 years, misdemeanor is much more in line with the actual "crime" and would only be 6 months.

potato3732842

2 hours ago

6mo for throwing a sub because the target gets a government paycheck is still bullshit. We ought to demand equality under the law for law enforcement.

riskable

2 hours ago

This administration hates heroes.

greesil

2 hours ago

This trial puts them in quite a pickle.

ebbi

an hour ago

Where was the sandwich from?

It's been a while I've bought a sandwich that was loaded with fillings.

stuffn

2 hours ago

> Lairmore said he "could feel it through his ballistic vest" and it "exploded all over" him after the Subway stack hit him. He said he "could smell the onions and mustard" on his uniform, and even had an onion string hanging by his police radio later that night. The fast-food mustard, he said, stained his shirt.

The first test of a hypersonic subway apparently.

On one hand, yes, it's probably simple battery given how loose the definition is. But the lengths at which this guy goes into how traumatized he is by a subway sandwich, juxtaposed by the intimidating posture border patrol is trying to project, is absolute comedy gold.

> Dunn's attorneys later pressed Lairmore on two gag gifts that his coworkers bought him after the incident, including a plush submarine sandwich and a "felony footlong" patch that Lairmore said he put on his lunchbox.

His own buddies were clowning on him.

legitster

2 hours ago

> In a post on X announcing Dunn's firing, Attorney General Pam Bondi called Dunn "an example of the Deep State we have been up against."

The "deep state" is low-level paralegals throwing sandwiches.

treetalker

2 hours ago

> But the lengths at which this guy goes into how traumatized he is by a subway sandwich …

Without doubt, the most bountiful and intense BS I've heard from witnesses on the stand has come from cops.

ourmandave

2 hours ago

He said he "could smell the onions and mustard"...

The Fox News chyron will probably be "protesters use mustard gas on brave officer"

saulpw

an hour ago

During the Seattle BLM protests, SPD vacated the neighborhood precinct building to show how violent the protestors were, and then they claimed that an "incendiary device" had been thrown through the window to burn down the building. The "incendiary device" in question was a candle which I don't believe was even lit.

rolph

2 hours ago

at first i checked to see i wasnt reading an onion article, then it hit me, this is serious.

potato3732842

an hour ago

>His own buddies were clowning on him.

They're clowning on him for it being poor taste to push the issue, like a beat cop who hits his quota by nailing an old lady for 5-over on the way back to the station on his last shift of the month. C'mon man let it go.

They're not clowning on him for lying about it to make it seem serious in court. They all play crap like that up when it suites them.

zippyman55

2 hours ago

I don't get why this could not have been a learning experience for the two. Mustard is ok, but while I do hate mayo I think it would not induce PTSD.

fallinghawks

an hour ago

Mustard is not OK. Where do you think mustard gas comes from? ;) That guy was deploying a chemical weapon in violation of the Geneva protocol.

grebc

2 hours ago

The writers for The Onion don’t even need to write. Just report straight facts.

jethronethro

an hour ago

Must have been a foot-long, fully-loaded sandwich.

rolph

2 hours ago

this article drove home, the nature of spin, the uncertainty of reality, due to second order information