Close Menu
  • Home
  • Alternative News
    • Politics & Policy
    • Independent Journalism
    • Geopolitics & War
    • Economy & Power
    • Investigative Reports
  • Double Speak
    • Media Bias
    • Fact Check & Misinformation
    • Political Spin
    • Propaganda & Narrative
  • Truth or Scare
    • UFO & Extraterrestrial
    • Myth Busting & Debunking
    • Paranormal & Mysteries
    • Conspiracy Theories
  • Contact Us
  • About Us

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

AI Revives the Conglomerate

June 12, 2026

Vindication for Young Elon Musk

June 12, 2026

Trump Nominates Jay Clayton for Top Intel Role

June 12, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TheOthernews
Subscribe
  • Home
  • Alternative News
    • Politics & Policy
    • Independent Journalism
    • Geopolitics & War
    • Economy & Power
    • Investigative Reports
  • Double Speak
    • Media Bias
    • Fact Check & Misinformation
    • Political Spin
    • Propaganda & Narrative
  • Truth or Scare
    • UFO & Extraterrestrial
    • Myth Busting & Debunking
    • Paranormal & Mysteries
    • Conspiracy Theories
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
TheOthernews
Home»Political Spin»For America’s 250th Birthday, Pardon the East Haven Four
Political Spin

For America’s 250th Birthday, Pardon the East Haven Four

nickBy nickJune 12, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email



Dennis Spaulding’s baby was two days old when Spaulding became a federal felon. He was later sentenced to five years in prison and missed the first years of his daughter’s life.

But Spaulding never sold drugs. He never stole a dime. He never seriously hurt anyone. He was a decorated and well-respected police officer.

President Obama’s Justice Department targeted him out of ideological animus.

Now President Trump, who plans to pardon 250 worthy individuals for America’s 250th birthday, should put Spaulding and his fellow East Haven Police Department officers – John Miller, David Cari, and Jason Zullo – at the top of that list.

They deserve to have their names cleared. And America’s police officers deserve a clear signal that the political persecution of cops is over.

Enforcing the law fairly and legally should not put an officer in the Justice Department’s crosshairs. But that is exactly what happened to the East Haven Four.

During the Obama administration, these four cops from East Haven, a sleepy Connecticut town of 30,000 people, were pulled into a national civil-rights crusade over illegal immigration.

East Haven officers had found that more than 1,000 vehicles were operating with fraudulent out-of-state plates. Many were connected to a Pennsylvania scheme that sold plates and tags to illegal immigrants and unlicensed drivers for roughly $1,500 apiece. After uncovering a sprawling and dangerous $2 million fraud, the officers made hundreds of arrests and pursued criminal cases – most of which resulted in convictions.

When officers seized roughly 80 suspicious plates from a local bodega in 2010, an immigrant-rights activist and priest arrived with a video camera and interfered with the police investigation. Soon activists, Ivy League lawyers, and the Obama Justice Department descended on the small town.

Investigations by the police department’s internal affairs division, the state of Connecticut, and the FBI followed. Each failed to substantiate the explosive claim that the officers were motivated by racial bias.

That did not matter to Obama’s DOJ, which was determined to make an example of officers accused of targeting innocent immigrants as the administration pushed for mass amnesty in Congress.

Tom Perez, Obama’s handpicked head of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division, treated the criminals like victims and the cops like criminals.

The FBI even sent an undercover unit with “Hispanic-looking” agents to drive around East Haven and see whether officers would stop them. The agents followed traffic laws and used legal tags. They were not stopped once, despite weeks of surveillance.

Yet even after the FBI could not substantiate DOJ’s allegations of racial animus, Perez pursued the case anyway.

Perez wanted a federal consent decree over the police department to impose Washington’s preferred policing policies. When the town resisted, the Justice Department brought the hammer down. It singled out four officers for supposed civil-rights transgressions.

The officers’ alleged offenses were minor. The convictions and sentences were not.

Sgt. Miller went to prison for poking an unruly and intoxicated suspect in the chest. Officer Zullo failed to report that his cruiser had touched a suspect’s motorcycle during a chase. No one was injured and there was no damage. He still got two years.

Cari, a decorated officer who had been wounded in the line of duty, received 30 months.

Spaulding, an eight-year police veteran, received the harshest sentence: five years. He served three. His apparent offense was not merely the conduct alleged by prosecutors, but his refusal to admit guilt after repeatedly being cleared of wrongdoing in other investigations.

While the officers’ lives were destroyed, Perez’s political star kept rising. He became Obama’s secretary of labor, then chairman of the Democratic National Committee during Trump’s first term. He later ran for governor of Maryland as a progressive. Most recently, Perez joined the Biden White House as an adviser on the border crisis it was facilitating.

Perez’s actions amounted to a vindictive act of political weaponization against ideological enemies. They ruined the lives of four family men who had dedicated themselves to protecting their community.

No one is above the law. But officials like Perez bent the law to fit their agenda, not justice.

Now President Trump has the power to rectify this miscarriage of justice and uphold the rule of law.

A pardon cannot undo all the harm caused by this political persecution. It cannot restore the years these men lost, the careers destroyed, or the childhood moments they missed.

But it can redeem them in the eyes of the law. It can correct the record. And it can restore the good names of good men who never should have been made federal felons in the first place.

Trump should pardon the East Haven Four – not as an act of mercy, but as an act of justice.

Jason Johnson is the president of the Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund, which advocates for pro-police policies and provides legal aid to wrongfully accused officers and is representing the East Haven Four. Johnson is the former deputy commissioner of the Baltimore Police Department.



Source link

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
nick
  • Website

Related Posts

Large Libel Models Ruling in Germany, Allowing Liability Against Google AI

June 12, 2026

Graham Platner signals a problem for Democrats, and the rest of us

June 12, 2026

Rise of the Pro-Worker Conservative Is Changing U.S.

June 12, 2026
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Our Picks

Putin Says Western Sanctions are Akin to Declaration of War

January 9, 2020

Investors Jump into Commodities While Keeping Eye on Recession Risk

January 8, 2020

Marquez Explains Lack of Confidence During Qatar GP Race

January 7, 2020

There’s No Bigger Prospect in World Football Than Pedri

January 6, 2020
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss

AI Revives the Conglomerate

Alternative News June 12, 2026

Jeff Bezos and Elon Musk are building the same thing: a holding company glued together…

Vindication for Young Elon Musk

June 12, 2026

Trump Nominates Jay Clayton for Top Intel Role

June 12, 2026

There Is No Pride in Genocide: Rome Pride Rejects Pinkwashing as Israel’s Slaughter Continues

June 12, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
© 2026 ThemeSphere. Designed by ThemeSphere.

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.