JAG CONVICTS ACTIVIST FEDERAL JUDGE JAMES BOASBERG OF TREASON
By Michael Baxter
July 12, 2025
The US Navy Judge Advocate Corps on Friday secured a conviction against former federal judge James Boasberg, the treasonous wretch who enjoined President Donald J. Trump to stop deporting illegal aliens in March of this year.
As reported previously, JAG investigators arrested Boasberg in mid-March outside a posh D.C. restaurant, after showing him an arrest warrant alleging that he had, at Obama’s suggestion, signed two unconstitutional rulings aimed at preventing the president from deporting MS-13 and Tren de Aragua gang members. An Obama appointee, Boasberg was among a bevy of activist judges investigated for treason as Trump ramped up deportation efforts to protect Americans and their jobs from the 20 million illegals that entered the country throughout the Biden regime’s hostile takeover of the federal government.
Boasberg was taken to JAG’s Pensacola processing center, where he, like most Deep Staters, claimed he was innocent and refused to answer questions. A magistrate found probable cause to detain him pending a military tribunal and ordered that he be put on the next available flight to Guantanamo Bay. There, he had been housed at Camp Delta (JAG had considered depositing him among the 176 illegal aliens detained at GITMO earlier this year) until summoned Friday morning to stand trial.
He sat alone at the defense table, flanked by guards.
Rear Admiral Lia Reynolds, the acting Judge Advocate General, said, “Mr. Boasberg, you’ve refused counsel, is that right? It’s your intent to represent yourself?”
Boasberg frowned. “I am not representing anything, including myself; I don’t acknowledge the legality of your court, and I’m a target of political persecution. I’m a federal judge. If I needed a lawyer, I’d be my own. I have nothing but contempt for you.”
“Perhaps you’re unaware of two time-tested sayings: A man who is his own lawyer has a fool for a client, and, if you’re guilty, you needed a lawyer, and if innocent, you really need a lawyer,” the admiral said.
She addressed the panelists JAG had chosen to decide Boasberg’s fate, asserting that he (a) knew that his injunctions were unconstitutional prior to authoring them, (b) was influenced by Barack Hussein Obama, and (c) conspired with other activist judges to impede the president’s deportation agenda.
The admiral showed the panel text messages JAG had retrieved from Boasberg’s phone. On March 13, two days before issuing injunctions blocking Trump’s use of the Alien Enemies Act, Boasberg texted 27 federal judges—most Obama or Clinton appointees—in nine states, urging them to exercise their judicial authority to stymie Trump’s deportations. Replies came fast and furious: “How is this legal?” “Can we do that?” “Is it legal?”
Boasberg responded, “We’ll make it legal,” implying he knew it wasn’t.
Nonetheless, on March 15, Boasberg temporarily blocked the president’s use of law, as two planeloads of violent gangsters were en route from the United States to El Salvador. He demanded that the Trump administration order the flights to turn around, land back in the US, and release the detainees. But the planes were already in international airspace, over which Boasberg had no authority. When they landed in El Salvador hours later, Boasberg threatened to hold the Trump administration in contempt. He had also sent to his fellow radical judges a message expressing his outrage. “Can you believe this? We must stop him. No one else will! If Trump bends the law, so can we. We decide what the law is, not Trump!”
Not all of his compatriots were committed to his seemingly rebellious plot. “We dare not go against Trump,” “Let’s just bide our time,” “There’s a time and a place for everything, and this isn’t the time or place,” were some replies to his message.
Their replies didn’t calm Boasberg’s rage. “I’ve talked to Barack. None of us would be where we are if it weren’t for Barack or Bill. We owe it to them. Barack told me we must be united in this to stop deportations. We can’t just sit back and interpret law; that time’s gone.”
Admiral Reynolds asked Boasberg if the text messages he had sent accurately reflected his view of the law. He did not answer.
She asked the panel whether Boasberg was guilty of treason, and they, without hesitation or deliberation, delivered a verdict of “guilty” and recommended capital punishment.
Boasberg jumped to his feet and said he wished to appeal the verdict.
Admiral Reynolds was shaking her head. “You’re a detainee convicted of treason; you have no right to appeal.”
She scheduled Boasberg to hang to death on July 17.
LINK: rumormillnews.com/Seawitch
SOURCE: https://realrawnews.com/2025/07/jag-convicts-activist-federal-judge-james-boasberg-of-treason/