The Deep State's coordinated assault on President Trump has been laid bare in stunning new documents that reveal Chief Judge Beryl Howell privately endorsed Special Counsel Jack Smith's weaponized lawfare campaign against the 45th and 47th President.
According to bombshell reporting from The Federalist, behind-the-scenes communications show Judge Howell—who oversaw the grand jury proceedings in Trump's case—telling prosecutors she "loved" their legal strategy to take down the man who would become President again.
This is the smoking gun that proves what America First Patriots have been saying all along: the entire prosecution of Donald Trump was nothing more than a politically motivated witch hunt orchestrated by the administrative state and their judicial allies.
The Fix Was Always In
Judge Howell's private cheerleading for Smith's prosecutors destroys any pretense of judicial neutrality in what was supposed to be an impartial legal proceeding. How can any American trust a system where judges are secretly rooting for one side behind closed doors?
"This revelation confirms that Trump was facing a kangaroo court from day one," said one legal expert. "The judge wasn't just biased—she was an active participant in the persecution."
The timing of these revelations couldn't be more significant. As President Trump continues to drain the swamp in his second term, the American people are getting a clear picture of just how corrupt and weaponized our justice system had become under the Biden regime.
This is exactly why Trump's mandate includes reforming the Department of Justice and holding accountable those who turned our legal system into a political weapon. The Deep State thought they could destroy Trump with their lawfare—instead, they've only made him stronger and exposed their own corruption.
How many more smoking guns are hidden in the files of this failed persecution? The American people deserve answers, and President Trump deserves vindication for surviving the greatest political witch hunt in our nation's history.
