President Donald Trump’s long time ally Roger Stone was sentenced to 40 months in prison. However, on the way back to Washington following his India visit, Trump attacked the jury forewoman on social media in another rant and accused her of bias against his associate.
Politicalflare reports that Trump took to Twitter to once again air his dislike of the verdict given to Stone, who was charged for obstruction of legal proceedings, witness tampering, and false statements to Congress. The President targeted jury forewoman Tomeka Hart in his tweet. “There has rarely been a juror so tainted as the forewoman in the Roger Stone case. Look at her background. She never revealed her hatred of “Trump” and Stone. She was totally biased, as is the judge. Roger wasn’t even working on my campaign. Miscarriage of justice. Sad to watch!” tweeted Trump.
Contrary to Trump’s claim that Stone never worked on his campaign, he did.
Prior to Trump’s twitter attacks, Hart had already spoken up about the matter two weeks before, sharing her thoughts alongside fellow juror Seth Cousins, who wrote an op-ed piece. Hart echoed Cousins’ sentiments regarding the decision to plead Stone guilty. Hart quoted, “We did not convict Stone based on his political beliefs or his expression of those beliefs. We did not convict him of being intemperate or acting boorishly. We convicted him for obstructing a congressional investigation, of lying in five specific ways during his sworn congressional testimony and of tampering with a witness in that investigation.” Hart also mentioned the four prosecutors who chose to resign as the response to speculation that the DOJ was interfering with their recommended sentencing for Stone.
Meanwhile, Judge Amy Berman Jackson, who gave out the sentence to Stone, fired back at Trump’s attacks as well as the attacks from the conservative, Pro-Trump media such as Fox News’ Tucker Carlson and InfoWars’ Alex Jones. Jackson said that these attacks were part of the intimidation tactics used in Stone’s case. Recalling Trump’s Twitter attacks towards Hart and the commentaries from Jones and Carlson, Jackson addressed that making the identities of the jurors public would bring them in harm’s way.
“In a highly publicized political climate, the risk of harassment and intimidation of any juror is extremely high,” said Jackson. She also pointed out that even if the judges who take on the cases are voluntary, jurors do not have that option and must be respected by the public.


US Revises UN Resolution on Iran Strait of Hormuz Attacks Amid Russia-China Opposition
Mexico President Claudia Sheinbaum Reconsiders Early School Closure Plan Ahead of 2026 World Cup
Russian LNG Shadow Fleet Expands Amid Arctic LNG 2 Sanctions
Keir Starmer Faces Leadership Pressure as Labour Turns Toward Europe
Senate Stablecoin Bill Sparks Clash Between Banks and Crypto Industry
Trump-Xi Summit Sparks Renewed Hope for Americans Detained in China
Russia Accuses Ukraine of Ceasefire Violations Amid Drone and Artillery Attacks
Taiwan Confident in Strong U.S. Relations Ahead of Trump-Xi China Summit
Trump to Visit China for Key U.S.-China Summit With Xi Jinping
US Auto Industry Urges Trump to Block Chinese EV Market Access
Malaysia Unveils Energy Security Plan Amid Iran Conflict and Rising Oil Costs
Israeli Strikes in Gaza Kill Three as Ceasefire Tensions Continue
Germany Rejects Putin’s Proposal for Schroeder to Mediate Ukraine Peace Talks
TikTok Nears $400 Million Settlement With Trump Administration Over Child Privacy Lawsuit
Netanyahu Signals Plan to End Reliance on U.S. Military Aid Within 10 Years 



