Jury selection begins for DC man charged with throwing sandwich at federal agent
Sean Charles Dunn faces misdemeanor assault trial after throwing a sandwich at a federal agent during a politically charged law enforcement surge in Washington, D.C.
- Jury selection has started for Sean Dunn, charged with throwing a Subway sandwich at a federal agent during a law enforcement surge in Washington, D.C. in August.
 - U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro filed a misdemeanor assault charge after a grand jury declined felony charges against Dunn.
 - Dunn's attorney claims he is being vindictively prosecuted, while U.S. Attorney General Pam Bondi labeled him part of the 'Deep State.'
 - A video captured Dunn shouting insults at Customs and Border Protection agents before throwing the sandwich during a nightclub event.
 
90 Articles
90 Articles
In August, in protest, Charles Dunn threw his sandwich at a border official in Washington, D.C. He became an icon of the anti-Trump movement. Now he is on trial.
Sean Dunn, former employee of the Department of Justice, is on trial. He had thrown a salami sandwich at a border guard in protest against the US President's migration policy.
Foot-Long Fiasco: Trial of Sandwich Tosser Implodes as DOJ Fumbles Jury Rules
Monday was supposed to mark a high-profile win for the Justice Department, but the trial of accused sandwich tosser Sean Dunn barely got off the ground before it hit a wall of embarrassment. Dunn, who was initially targeted with felony assault charges for allegedly hurling a foot-long sub at a federal agent during the D.C. takeover, now faces only a misdemeanor after several grand juries refused to indict him on the more serious charges. The ope…
First he insulted police officers, then his dinner flew: in the US capital the court case against Sean Dunn begins. For the resistance movement against the Trump administration, the »Sandwich Guy« is an icon.
DOJ's trial against sandwich hurler kicks off with a misfire
Monday kicked off the trial of accused sandwich tosser Sean Dunn, who the Justice Department tried to indict on felony assault charges after he chucked a foot-long at a federal agent tasked with the D.C. takeover. The problem, however, is that there's already a flub in the trial. The Justice Departm...
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 66% of the sources are Center
 
Factuality
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium





















