Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 11
Brad Lander Wins Not-Guilty Verdict in ICE Protest Case After 6-Hour Bench Trial
Updated
Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 11

Brad Lander Wins Not-Guilty Verdict in ICE Protest Case After 6-Hour Bench Trial

3 articles · Updated · The Washington Post · Jun 11

Summary

  • A federal magistrate judge cleared Brad Lander of a misdemeanor charge tied to a September protest at New York’s 26 Federal Plaza, where he and other elected officials blocked an elevator area used by ICE.
  • Six hours of bench-trial arguments turned on whether Lander had "purposefully" obstructed the 10th-floor lobby; prosecutors sought no jail time and failed to prove liability.
  • Lander had pushed for a trial rather than a quick resolution, saying discovery could expose ICE tactics at the facility and help spotlight detainees' treatment and access to due process.
  • The acquittal lands in a heated Democratic House primary against Rep. Dan Goldman, with immigration enforcement and how aggressively to confront Trump-era deportation policies now central campaign issues.
  • The case follows a separate June incident at the same building in which federal agents detained Lander while he escorted an immigration-court defendant; prosecutors later dropped those charges.

Insights

How does this acquittal impact the strategy of using civil disobedience to hold government agencies accountable?
What is the legal line between civil disobedience and obstruction when protesting inside a federal building?