The DC man who went viral for allegedly throwing a sandwich to a border customs officer last month was prosecuted in the Federal Court on Wednesday by a minor crime to assault a federal agent.

Sean Charles Dunn, accused of throwing the Hoagie amid the federal acquisition of President Donald Trump in the application of the law in Washington, now faces a jury trial established for early November.

The position takes up to a year in jail.

The case is one of several in which prosecutors allege “attacked” or “prevented” DC residents to federal agents in the course of their duties during Trump’s crime and the repression of immigration in the capital of the nation. Defensor lawyers have said that many of these cases are withered And it is not worth the time and resources of the court.

A Grand Jury already refused to accuse Dunn for a federal position to assault a federal official: one of the many shameful rejections, the great jurors have given Jeanine Pirro, the former personality of News who is now the American lawyer of Trump for DC, the lack of ensuring an accusation directed the Pirro office to present the position for a minor crime, which does not need a revision of a large jury.

A Dunn lawyer declined to comment after a brief hearing before a judge in the Federal Court on Wednesday.

Street art in Washington, DC, who represents a man who allegedly threw a sandwich to a customs officer and border protection.
Street art in Washington, DC, who represents a man who allegedly threw a sandwich to a customs officer and border protection.

The Washington Post through Getty Images

Trump has tried to present DC as an infernal landscape full of criminals and needs a federal acquisition, although violent crime recently fell to a minimum of 30 years. While many residents have concerns about crime, an overwhelming majority opposes the way in which it has federalized the local police and flooded the streets with agents of the Department of National Security, the Federal Office of Investigation and other agencies.

Dunn, a former employee of the Department of Justice, became a kind of popular hero for the supposed launch of sandwich, with images that appear in the city that portrayed a man by throwing a hoagie as an act of resistance.

The Pirro office seems to be charging as many arrest as possible for the most rigid charges they can find, even in seemingly minor cases. The city courts have been diving under a heavy case load.

The great jurors have refused to accuse at least seven times in five cases that involve clashes between defendants and federal officers in DC in the last two months, a sure sign that residents are not buying the accusations of Pirro.

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After his hearing on Wednesday, Dunn left the courtroom and, before jumping in an elevator, briefly thanked an apparent supporter who was waiting in the hall.

“You have this,” the supporter told him.