By Kevin D. Williamson
Friday, May 02, 2025
“I am the law!” declared Judge Dredd, the cinematic
supercop played by Sylvester Stallone in the eponymous 1995 film. Milwaukee
County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan seems to have come to a similar
conclusion, and she has been charged with a felony and a misdemeanor in the
matter of Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, an illegal immigrant who was scheduled to appear
before her on domestic battery charges and whom—according to the federal police
agencies today under control of people who won their positions by insisting we should
not trust federal police agencies—the judge tried to help evade arrest and
presumable deportation.
Let us assume, arguendo, that Judge Dugan does not have a
special place in her heart for supposed domestic abusers. If she is, as it
seems, engaged in the same proud tradition of civil disobedience as such heroes
as Henry David Thoreau, then she should go to jail for it as happily as Thoreau
did when he observed:
Under a government which imprisons
any unjustly, the true place for a just man is also a prison. The proper place
today, the only place which Massachusetts has provided for her freer and less
desponding spirits, is in her prisons, to be put out and locked out of the
State by her own act, as they have already put themselves out by their
principles. It is there that the fugitive slave, and the Mexican prisoner on
parole, and the Indian come to plead the wrongs of his race should find them;
on that separate, but more free and honorable, ground, where the State places
those who are not with her, but against her.
The question before the jury—the real jury, I
mean: us—is not the character of Eduardo Flores-Ruiz but the character of the
Trump administration and that of our doddering republic.
Judge Dugan has behaved at least improperly, if not
criminally, if the facts of the case are as described. (And go ahead and put on
the caveat that since we are talking about habitual liars such as FBI director
Kash Patel and other Trump sycophants here, who the hell knows?) Dugan
supposedly sent the agents who had come to arrest Flores-Ruiz to a different
part of the courthouse on an administrative chore and then interrupted the
legal proceedings in front of her to spirit Flores-Ruiz out through the jury entrance
and away from the feds. His evasion of arrest lasted only a couple of minutes,
but, as my colleague Sarah Isgur has
intelligently observed, one can be guilty of obstructing justice even if
one is no good at it.
The Trump administration is lawless—and particularly so
in the matter of immigration, where it has ignored court rulings and trampled
over due process, exiling U.S. citizen children and infamously sending a man
off to a Salvadoran gulag in plain contravention of the law, with President
Trump citing
doctored photos of MS-13 gang tattoos on the deportee’s hands to vindicate
himself. To push back against such lawlessness (and I will here assume that
this is what Judge Dugan is up to) is good and necessary and patriotic. It also
is far from anything that falls under the properly understood professional
duties of a Milwaukee judge and it may be, at times, a crime.
There is much to admire in the tradition of civil
disobedience, from the nonviolent kind practiced by Mohandas K. Gandhi to the
bloodier kind practiced by John Brown. Civil disobedience is the mildest form
of revolution, but it may lead to the more traditional kind of revolution—the
line is short and straight from the Boston Tea Party to Lexington and Concord.
Gandhi meant to work a political revolution in the British Empire and establish
an independent India; the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. meant to work a
revolution within American government and social practice; John Brown
meant to secure the freedom of American slaves as a matter of brute fact
and then let the law accommodate itself to the new political settlement created
not by votes or argument—which had failed in the great moral cause of the
time—but by his Sharp’s rifle. Thoreau expected to be put into jail for
breaking the law, and Gandhi, who read him, adopted the same position. The
Rev. King did some of his best writing in that famous stay in the Birmingham
jail.
The civil-disobedience position, being a revolutionary
position, is always and everywhere a dangerous position, even where it is good
or necessary. It is a way of saying, “I am the law,” or, “My moral sensibility
is the law.” As I wrote
some years ago in the matter of Cliven Bundy, the right-wing militant rancher
waging a desultory guerilla war against federal land-use practices, the problem
with civil disobedience is that every Timothy McVeigh and Unabomber thinks he
is Patrick Henry. There are plenty of people out there who are full of rage and
resentment and who are simply spoiling for a fight—and who will accept any
moral pretext that offers them a rationale for the violence they wish to do.
And there is a less dramatic version of that, e.g., perhaps the case of a judge
looking for any opportunity to stick a thumb in the eye of the Trump
administration.
The Trump administration deserves all the thumbs in its
eyes, of course, Kash Patel more than most of the rest of that feckless gang of
self-serving malefactors. Give or take an accident or two, there are 1070
thumbs in Congress, all of them attached to elected representatives who under
the Constitution are invested with the power—and the duty—to exercise oversight
and to limit by statute the Trump administration’s shenanigans, abuses, and
lawlessness. This, owing to reasons of cowardice and stupidity, they refuse to
do. Judges may rule against the administration, but the administration has
shown itself more than willing to ignore the courts—and to lie to the public
about what the courts have ruled. And, so, what do you do?
What the administration hopes Americans do is what most
Americans are going to do: knuckle under, hope that none of this mess lands on
their heads, and wait for the next election. Others will do what Judge Dugan is
accused of doing: work to subvert the administration, including through illegal
means. And, America being America, you’re a fool if you think there isn’t some
would-be John Brown out there thanking God and the spirit of Eugene Stoner that, at
last, his day has come.
Dugan has been suspended by the state supreme court. Her
lawyers say she “will defend herself vigorously and looks forward to being
exonerated.” If she has something more to say for herself, now is the time. So
far, her attorneys have not disputed the facts of the case but have argued only
that she is being targeted for “performative”
reasons.” No doubt that is true—this is above all else, a performative administration.
This is, for the moment, a minor kerfuffle. But if
Congress does not step up, be sure that someone will. If you think Judge
Dugan is being irresponsible and reckless, then you almost certainly are not
going to like who and what comes next as the lawlessness and chaos continues.
Chaos begets chaos. And the hard part for honest and intelligent Americans will
be that, whatever dumb and destructive excesses Trump’s opponents get up to,
nobody will be able to say that they don’t have a point.
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