Prairieland Defendants Sentenced Today to Prison Terms Ranging from 30-100 Years

panic 50 points 29 comments June 23, 2026
prairielanddefendants.com · View on Hacker News

Discussion Highlights (8 comments)

NDlurker

Concealing a document? Conspiracy to conceal a document? What? I need to Google that. Sounds un-constitutional af!

Exoristos

"Family members and supporters ... called the punishment cruel, callous and starkly disproportionate to the defendants’ actions." The defendants were convicted "on a variety of federal charges, including riot, material support for terrorists, attempted murder, possession and conspiracy to use explosives, and conspiracy to conceal documents." What is a proportionate sentence for convictions like these? In other words, is there a norm when looking at similar convictions?

pm90

This is absolutely outrageous. A complete mockery of the criminal justice system and especially of Texas.

DivingForGold

Note that Song was a firearms instructor and a United States Marine Corps Veteran .. I gather the State really wanted to send a message with the 100 year sentence handed down to him. But on another note, he did brandish a rifle and shoot a police officer, anyone could expect the worst for that. I guess they can appeal ?

delichon

> Eight members of a North Texas Antifa terror cell received historic federal sentences on Tuesday, with prison terms ranging from 30 years to life in prison for their roles in the shooting ambush on an Immigration and Customs Enforcement detention facility. https://www.ngocomment.com/p/breaking-exclusive-north-texas-...

MisterMower

I guess these guys think attempted murder and possession of explosives is “common protest activity”?

tbrownaw

Headline: "for Common Protest Activity" Body: "material support for terrorists, attempted murder, possession and conspiracy to use explosives" Um?

dbingham

The National Lawyers Guild released a pretty incredible statement about this trial. They basically were not allowed to mount a defense, in blatant violation of their constitutional rights. > Alarmingly, this mistrial order is just the latest example of attacks on the Prairieland Defendants’ constitutional rights to access to counsel, a fair and impartial jury, an adequate defense, a public trial, and more. Judge Pittman has made highly unusual moves that suppress defense teams and which federal lawyers have not seen during their entire careers: [...] > NLG remains extremely concerned about these cases. Defendants’ First Amendment rights to free expression, assembly, and association; their Sixth Amendment rights to counsel; their Fifth Amendment rights to a public trial; and their Second Amendment rights to bear arms are under attack in North Texas. If unchecked and ignored, this case and the judicial decisions coming from it will set a very dark precedent for the rest of the country. https://www.nlg.org/all-eyes-on-north-texas/

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