WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

393

When you lose the courts you lose the country. Between corrupt judges and corrupt law enforcement you lose the deterring of bad behavior.

In Mark Levin's exclusive, "Brandon Straka's January 6 Story Reveal,' Brandon had the floor not only to provide Americans with the details and video evidence of what happened but to reveal what followed his arrest. Mark Levin pulled no punches and encouraged Straka to tell his story by asking direct and hard-hitting questions. Brandon delivered on every question, bringing to light what Mark describes as the "injustice in our courts." Brandon explained:

the courts continued his case five times, dragging it out for over a year;

the court-ordered strict pretrial supervision for over a year;

his court-ordered ankle monitor that he now has to wear as part of a three-month in-home confinement sentence;

he received a three-year probation sentence and 60 hours of community service;

the judge imposed the maximum fine of $5,000 and $500 restitution to the Capitol, despite the judge's acknowledgment that he did not engage in destructive behavior or vandalism at the Capitol.

He went on to say that the prosecution's initial recommendation was severe surveillance measures as a condition of the three-year probation, which would have allowed for surveilling of his phone, computer, bank accounts, social media accounts, and email accounts for the entire probationary period. This was ultimately not included in the final sentencing, but it begs the question of why it was brought to the table at all.

When you lose the courts you lose the country. Between corrupt judges and corrupt law enforcement you lose the deterring of bad behavior. In Mark Levin's exclusive, "Brandon Straka's January 6 Story Reveal,' Brandon had the floor not only to provide Americans with the details and video evidence of what happened but to reveal what followed his arrest. Mark Levin pulled no punches and encouraged Straka to tell his story by asking direct and hard-hitting questions. Brandon delivered on every question, bringing to light what Mark describes as the "injustice in our courts." Brandon explained: the courts continued his case five times, dragging it out for over a year; the court-ordered strict pretrial supervision for over a year; his court-ordered ankle monitor that he now has to wear as part of a three-month in-home confinement sentence; he received a three-year probation sentence and 60 hours of community service; the judge imposed the maximum fine of $5,000 and $500 restitution to the Capitol, despite the judge's acknowledgment that he did not engage in destructive behavior or vandalism at the Capitol. He went on to say that the prosecution's initial recommendation was severe surveillance measures as a condition of the three-year probation, which would have allowed for surveilling of his phone, computer, bank accounts, social media accounts, and email accounts for the entire probationary period. This was ultimately not included in the final sentencing, but it begs the question of why it was brought to the table at all.

(post is archived)