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LetMyPeopleVote

(169,320 posts)
Mon Aug 25, 2025, 07:56 PM Aug 25

Third grand jury refuses to indict DC woman accused of assaulting agent during ICE arrest

Normally, a prosecutor can indict a ham sandwich. Here Piro tried three times to indict a protester and got three no-bills from the grand jury



Appointing Jeanine Pirro leads to Jeanine Pirro-level results. www.wusa9.com/article/news...

James Downie (@jamescdownie.bsky.social) 2025-08-25T23:04:54.774Z

https://www.wusa9.com/article/news/crime/for-third-time-grand-jury-refuses-to-indict-dc-woman-accused-of-assaulting-agent-during-ice-arrest-jeanine-pirro-sidney-reid-sandwich-guy/65-785e2e30-46cf-4e90-b81a-9e9c219c6750

WASHINGTON — A grand jury declined for a third time to indict a D.C. woman accused of assaulting an FBI agent during an inmate swap with ICE – a rare loss for federal prosecutors that could foreshadow further trouble if the case goes to trial.

U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro’s office said in a filing Monday it would move ahead with charging Sidney Lori Reid with a misdemeanor for the alleged assault outside the D.C. Jail in July. A magistrate judge had given prosecutors until Monday afternoon to secure an indictment against Reid or see the felony version of the assault charge dismissed.

Grand juries decline to indict, known as a “no true bill,” in only a small fraction of federal cases. To secure an indictment prosecutors need only show probable cause a crime was committed. That’s much lower than the standard in criminal trials. A grand jury declining to indict three times on the same case is a warning the evidence may not stand up at trial, according to attorney Christopher Macchiaroli, a partner at Silverman Thompson Slutkin White who previously served as an assistant U.S. attorney in the federal prosecutor’s office in D.C.

“Seeking an indictment for a third time is extremely rare and usually only reserved for the most serious of crimes,” Macchiaroli said. “If a governmental entity cannot convince a super majority of grand jurors that there is a fair probability that a crime was committed, it is virtually impossible to believe that twelve jurors in the same relevant jurisdiction could unanimously at a future date find guilt beyond a reasonable doubt, the highest standard of proof under the law.”

Reid was arrested in July for allegedly resisting attempts to restrain her after she refused to back away from ICE officers who were conducting arrests outside the D.C. Jail. In the process, they said, an FBI agent received scrapes to the back of her hand.

Prosecutors sought to indict Reid with an enhanced felony version of an assault charge that requires inflicting bodily injury on a federal officer and carries up to eight years in prison. The charge is the same offense filed earlier this month against a former DOJ employee accused of throwing a sandwich at a U.S. Customs and Border Protection agent.
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popsdenver

(397 posts)
13. Watch out
Mon Aug 25, 2025, 10:12 PM
Aug 25

Subway will start marketing/featuring it as: THE KILLER SANDWICH just to increase sales/profits

chowder66

(11,221 posts)
4. I wish the grand jury could turn it around on Pirro and instead indict her. That would be next level!!
Mon Aug 25, 2025, 08:13 PM
Aug 25

yankee87

(2,655 posts)
8. Jury nulifacation
Mon Aug 25, 2025, 09:26 PM
Aug 25

Even if a case somehow made it through, just do like old-South, jury nullification.

nuxvomica

(13,605 posts)
14. I dare say she's never kept boxwine beyond its sell-by date
Mon Aug 25, 2025, 10:22 PM
Aug 25

So she may not know how that tastes.

hildegaard28

(776 posts)
11. This is why
Mon Aug 25, 2025, 09:35 PM
Aug 25

I'm not as concerned as others about the court system falling to Trump. The biggest obstacle to their use of the courts to nab Trump's enemies is the jury system. Most Americans still believe in justice, so as long as we have juries, we have safeguards.

LetMyPeopleVote

(169,320 posts)
16. Deadline: Legal Blog-Jeanine Pirro's office fails three times to convince grand jurors to return indictment
Tue Aug 26, 2025, 01:12 PM
Aug 26

Prosecutors in the capital failed a shocking three times to secure an indictment in a case of an alleged assault against a federal agent.

🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣

Poor big bad FBI agent hurt his wittle hand! 🤣🤣🤣🤣

Jeanine Pirro’s office fails three times to convince grand jurors to return indictment www.msnbc.com/deadline-whi...

Tabby (@tabbys-corner.bsky.social) 2025-08-26T16:11:17.595Z

https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/jeanine-pirro-washington-indictment-rcna227190

The bar for securing indictments in criminal cases is relatively low — so low that there’s a saying that prosecutors could indict a ham sandwich. But prosecutors in the nation’s capital have failed a shocking three times to get grand jurors’ approval for a felony case to move forward in an alleged assault against a federal agent.....

The rejection came in the case of Sidney Reid, who prosecutors in Washington alleged last month had “forcefully pushed” an FBI agent’s hand against a cement wall and “caused lacerations” on the agent’s hand during an immigration enforcement protest.....

Monday afternoon came and the government filed not an indictment but a notice to the court. It said not only that “an Indictment has not been returned in this case” but, incredibly, that “a third grand jury returned a no true bill.” A true bill is when the grand jury votes to indict.,.....

It’s worth noting that this is only a preliminary phase of the case, and if it moves forward to trial, prosecutors must prove it to the people of D.C. beyond a reasonable doubt to secure a conviction. There’s a general line of thinking that, however embarrassing it is for a grand jury to return a no true bill, in those rare times that happens, grand jurors have done prosecutors a favor of sorts by keeping a potentially shaky case from a trial jury.

Still, three times might be a sign that the message should’ve been received at least the second time.

But the U.S. Attorney’s Office led by former Fox News host Jeanine Pirro isn’t giving up. Not completely. Though prosecutors are apparently no longer trying to make it a felony case, they filed what’s called an “information” that charges Reid with a misdemeanor assault. That lets them move the case — a hobbled version of it, anyway — forward without grand jury approval.

LetMyPeopleVote

(169,320 posts)
18. In at least three cases so far, grand jurors have refused to approve felony charges against people the administration sa
Sun Aug 31, 2025, 07:18 PM
Aug 31

In at least three cases so far, grand jurors have refused to approve felony charges against people the administration said assaulted law enforcement.

Strike four … Trump’s unqualified DOJ may please him, but they’re losing like nobody’s ever seen before in front of the Grand Jury.

Grand jury rejects yet another felony indictment in Trump's D.C. crackdown www.msnbc.com/deadline-whi...

@jimrissmiller.bsky.social 2025-08-31T20:16:33.324Z

https://www.msnbc.com/deadline-white-house/deadline-legal-blog/trump-dc-crackdown-grand-jury-reject-felony-indictment-rcna228104

Whatever is happening, it’s not normal. That’s true of much else these days, but this latest stark chapter goes to the heart of the justice system. While it’s well understood that trial juries wield significant power, grand juries can shape, curb or kill cases at their inception. Most cases easily move past the grand jury stage. But grand jurors in D.C. aren’t acting as a rubber stamp.

We already knew about the whopping triple failure to indict Sidney Reid, as well as the failure to do the same against sandwich thrower Sean Dunn. Both cases are proceeding as misdemeanors instead of felonies after grand juries rejected more serious charges of assaulting law enforcement.

Now, grand jurors have declined to approve another indictment in a case charged under that same assault statute. This one involves Alvin Summers, whose case prosecutors actually moved to dismiss (though “without prejudice,” meaning they could try again later, a distinction that dominated the saga surrounding New York City Mayor Eric Adams). Seeking a permanent dismissal on Thursday, Summers’ lawyers wrote that the officer’s testimony “was rejected by the grand jury, presumably after reviewing the body-worn camera video.”....

That previously led me to wonder, in examining the Reid and Dunn cases, whether grand jurors simply thought prosecutors couldn’t satisfy the relatively low evidentiary burden at this preliminary stage of a case, or whether grand jurors were making more profound statements of nullification, the latter referring to situations in which jurors believe prosecutors have proved their cases but nonetheless reject them because they find the prosecutions or what they represent offensive.

The implications of either scenario are striking. And remember, this is just what we know about what has happened so far. This incredible story is still being written, but it’s one that can’t be ignored amid everything else that’s abnormal in these times.

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