PowerElectronix 6 days ago

They really are cracking down on those protestors, jeez... Makes you wonder how much money is rolling in the ICE-Private prison system relationship.

NoSalt 6 days ago

Misleading title. The relevant sentence is this:

> "The prosecution claimed Sanchez moved the zines so they wouldn’t incriminate his wife, who attended a protest outside the Prairieland immigration detention center near Dallas, where a police officer was wounded by gunfire."

The "Texas man" in question was involved in evidence tampering in a case that involved the shooting of a police officer. The title here makes it sound like simply moving paper around is against the law.

  • mikestew 6 days ago

    It’s still a flimsy basis for the case. He didn’t attend the protest nor even knew about it. The motivation wasn’t proven, it’s all in the prosecution’s head for all we know.

    • frakt0x90 6 days ago

      And even so, why on Earth would tampering with evidence warrant 30 years in prison? That is inhumane.

      • tbrownaw 6 days ago

        I would think that a coverup should always be treated as slightly worse than the thing being covered up. Because of general "don't design systems with perverse incentives" principles.

        • stonogo 6 days ago

          The thing being covered up here is being in the general area when someone else committed a crime. I'm not seeing how 30 years lines up with slightly worse than that.

        • fc417fc802 6 days ago

          Only in the case that you can prove both thing and intent to cover up thing beyond a reasonable doubt. And in that case since you've got both convictions then covering it up only needs to carry a small penalty (relative to thing).

          If you don't have to prove thing then you end up with a situation where all sorts of mundane actions can be construed as covering something up.

        • 4MOAisgoodenuf 6 days ago

          What is the thing being covered up that is worth 30 years in prison?

          • deepsummer 6 days ago

            "Prosecutors said that the group launched a premeditated terror attack on the detention facility inspired by antifa ideology, by setting off fireworks, vandalizing property, and shooting at police officers who responded. One officer was struck in the neck with a bullet and survived."

            https://www.cbsnews.com/texas/news/ice-detention-attack-defe...

      • sekh60 6 days ago

        They aren't a cop.

    • ryandrake 6 days ago

      I guess Guilt By Association is the law of the land once a cop is shot.

  • lanyard-textile 6 days ago

    I understand your inference but I don't think we know enough to conclude that with the information here, especially judging by other comments.

    We don't know if he was truly involved in any kind of evidence tampering, if he was prosecuted for it, or something else.

  • marcosdumay 6 days ago

    "Involved" the shooting of a police officer in the loosest possible sense. If the guy's wife had any relation at all with the shooting, it would be explicit in the article.

    • tbrownaw 6 days ago

      > would be explicit in the article.

      This is blatantly an advocacy piece, so that's not a valid assumption.

  • DangitBobby 6 days ago

    I recommend reading the whole thing to find the relevant bits. The judge says he is sentencing based on thought crime.

    > U.S. District Judge Reed O’Connor said he intended to “send a message to anyone who shares a similar ideology.”

    > The following can be attributed to Freedom of the Press Foundation (FPF) Chief of Advocacy Seth Stern:

        “If prosecutors are correct that Sanchez moved zines because he feared they’d try to use them against his wife, that’s a commentary on prosecutors’ lawlessness, not Sanchez’s. Under the First Amendment, possessing literature cannot be criminal, so what legitimate evidence could he possibly have been concealing? Political zines like those Sanchez possessed are no different from the pro-Revolution pamphlets this country’s founders had in mind when they drafted the First Amendment’s press clause.
    
        “Sanchez’s case is the latest example of the Trump administration grasping at any legal straws it can to criminalize disfavored ideologies and writings, from conflating dissent with terrorism to deporting immigrants who report on protests or criticize wars the U.S. bankrolls. Americans should not make the mistake of believing Sanchez’s sentence only threatens immigrants, leftists, or so-called Antifa members — they’re just the low-hanging fruit, not the end game.”
    • like_any_other 6 days ago

      > The judge says he is sentencing based on thought crime.

      > Under the First Amendment, possessing literature cannot be criminal

      The existence of hate crime laws in the US says otherwise - political motivation to a crime has long been a component in sentencing: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hate_crime_laws_in_the_United_...

      • M95D 5 days ago

        So now hate the government is a hate crime?

        • like_any_other 5 days ago

          Nowhere did I say that. I addressed the "thought crime" claim, i.e. both take into account the perpetrators motivations and beliefs.

  • mcphage 6 days ago

    > was involved in evidence tampering in a case that involved the shooting of a police officer

    Did the zines shoot the police officer? Or was the police officer shot with the zines?

pjc50 6 days ago

Anyone got the actual indictment?

From linked https://freedes.net/jun-23rd-2026-press-release/ : "Sanchez Estrada, a 39-year-old artist, was found guilty on March 13, 2026, alongside eight codefendants who participated in an anti-ICE protest at the controversial Alvarado ICE detention facility. Under the auspices of “National Security Presidential Memorandum-7,” which was issued after the killing of Christian nationalist influencer Charlie Kirk, Sanchez Estrada was federally charged with “corruptly concealing a document or record” for moving a box of zines the day after the protest. Although he was not present at the protest, nor did he know about it, prosecutors argued that the content of the literature made it evidence of the defendants’ material support for terrorism, and shockingly alleged that the decision to move the box was a conspiracy between Sanchez Estrada and his wife."

Very .. British approach to linking people to "terrorism" on the flimsiest pretext.

  • fc417fc802 6 days ago

    Assuming the quoted source can be trusted then we've got a conspiracy without knowledge of the thing being conspired about plus a blatantly unconstitutional line of argument regarding political views (either held or written take your pick). Last I checked creating a pamphlet about how awesome and amazing Bin Laden was qualified as protected speech.

  • staticman2 6 days ago

    > nor did he know about it

    I'm not loving this turn of phrase. Seems very Weasel-worded. Did not know about it according to who? I think we need a better news source.

    • 4MOAisgoodenuf 6 days ago

      what difference does it make? He is sentenced to go to jail for nearly half a lifetime for transporting a box of magazines. This is insane.

    • pjc50 6 days ago

      It's a press release, i.e. put out on his behalf by his defenders.

  • neuronexmachina 6 days ago

    Link to "National Security Memorandum-7" for reference: https://www.whitehouse.gov/presidential-actions/2025/09/coun...

    Example quote:

    >(h) The Attorney General shall issue specific guidance that ensures domestic terrorism priorities include politically motivated terrorist acts such as organized doxing campaigns, swatting, rioting, looting, trespass, assault, destruction of property, threats of violence, and civil disorder. This guidance shall also include an identification of any behaviors, fact patterns, recurrent motivations, or other indicia common to organizations and entities that coordinate these acts in order to direct efforts to identify and prevent potential violent activity.

    • fc417fc802 6 days ago

      > politically motivated terrorist acts such as ... organized doxing campaigns

      > politically motivated terrorist acts such as ... civil disorder

      I didn't realize the bar for terrorism had fallen so low.

FrustratedMonky 6 days ago

I'd like to say something.

But now that they are rounding people up, and Hacker News can be scraped and User Id's crosschecked with AI surveillance to dox.

I'm actually fearful, the war on free speech is working.

  • d00d0ff000 6 days ago

    Strange that it has just occurred to you that HN is being mined.

    • FrustratedMonky 6 days ago

      not 'just'.

      but someone being jailed for having a 'zine', is really a new level. nobody is safe.

ChrisArchitect 6 days ago
  • jauntywundrkind 6 days ago

    The top comment there is so illuminating. The National Lawyers Guild declaring that these defendants werent even allowed to mount a real defense!

    This sounds like an incredible shame upon America, mostly. I hope many of these sentences are pardoned by a future president.

coldtea 6 days ago

land of the unfree

  • verdverm 6 days ago

    It's federal, a democratic president can pardon them

functionmouse 6 days ago

May I see the zine?

  • tartoran 6 days ago

    What difference does it make? The point being that nobody should be sentenced for transporting pamphlets, regardless of what's in them. And the 30 year sentence? This is absurd.

    • functionmouse 6 days ago

      I wanna see what the administration is so afraid of.

      • tartoran 6 days ago

        I don't think they're necessarily afraid of what's in those pamphlets. I think they're trying to make people afraid to dissent, and I have to say they're having some success at it.

      • blooalien 5 days ago

        They're afraid of "We The People". They want us all too scared to do or say (or even think) anything about anything they do, no matter how heinous the crimes they choose to perpetrate against the citizenry of the "Land of the Free".

    • zulux 6 days ago

      Because we should be able to examine the evidence ourselves. It would let us, as a free people, decide whether this was overreach or valid.

    • rsync 6 days ago

      I want to see the zine(s) so I can duplicate them and publish them at Kozubik.com.

  • lanyard-textile 6 days ago

    A zine about anarchy, apparently. But I can't find any details.

  • verdverm 6 days ago

    Wikipedia has an image of a few https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2025_Prairieland_ICE_detention...

    There are some pretty standard anarchist / anti-government like zines.

    You can find them on the various zine aggregators like: https://guides.library.illinois.edu/zines/online

    Feminist culture coming out of the 70s also incorporates many of the same themes. The first one at the zine link, "Moral Revolution - Creating new values, undermining oppression, and connecting across difference" by Kriti Sharma is quite good.

  • projektfu 6 days ago

    It doesn't matter if it was a gardening monthly, the charge was basically that his girlfriend was arrested and asked him to move it, and, something something terrorism.

fc417fc802 6 days ago

The article attempts to frame this as a speech issue but isn't it actually some sort of obstruction or concealing violation? But what was even the point? The pamphlets were never going to be the smoking gun.

Also since when does obstruction net you 30 years? And apparently the judge openly made a statement indicating unconstitutional bias on his part in court. So I guess the entire thing is a farce meant to intimidate the average joe.

  • TimorousBestie 6 days ago

    > And apparently the judge openly made a statement indicating unconstitutional bias on his part in court. So I guess the entire thing is a farce meant to intimidate the average joe.

    Yeah, the judge is well aware that every court this case can be appealed to already agrees with him. The legal arguments and the facts of the case are causally disconnected from the outcome.

  • tbrownaw 6 days ago

    Here's an older article, talking about how the reason the authorities found this person was because one of the other defendants called him from jail to ask him to remove things: https://www.foxnews.com/us/man-busted-anti-government-anti-t...

    I would expect that at that point it ought to stop mattering whether the evidence being hidden actually would have been useful evidence.

    • fc417fc802 6 days ago

      Thanks to you pointing that out this case has now managed to set a personal record for simultaneous level of disgust I hold for all parties involved.

josefritzishere 6 days ago

This is the most clear cut and direct attack on the first amendment I've seen in my lifetime. It's really viscerally disappointing to see the US government fall to this low. Attacking an ideology is real meat of authoritarianism.

Haven880 4 days ago

Ah....so USA is the new CCP.

freitasm 6 days ago

Meanwhile, the Epstein files continue to be ignored.

  • casey2 6 days ago

    Those pamphlets are the Epstein files