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Trump Authorizes JAG To Begin D.C. Military Tribunals Against Those Who ‘Betrayed the Nation’

For years, patriots have demanded it. Now, it’s finally happening. President Trump, backed by U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro, has called in the Judge Advocate General’s Corps (JAG) to wage war on the entrenched corruption of Washington, D.C.

Twenty battle-hardened military prosecutors, trained in espionage, treason, and war crimes, have been deputized to act as federal prosecutors in the nation’s capital. Their mission: clear the backlog of street crime, pursue corrupt officials, and prepare sealed indictments against the swamp’s most protected figures.

Mainstream outlets are already acknowledging the scale of this unprecedented move. Reuters confirmed that Trump’s Justice Department is seeking federal charges against those snared in the D.C. crackdown. WJLA reported that Pirro’s office has been left crippled by a shortage of nearly 90 prosecutors, making it impossible to process the hundreds of arrests flowing in since Trump’s federal takeover.

That’s where JAG comes in—stepping into the vacuum, armed not with politics but with discipline and authority.

And while mainstream media portrays JAG’s role as simply “helping with street crime,” White House insiders suggest something far deeper is underway. These aren’t ordinary prosecutors—they are trained in military tribunals. They understand chain of command, evidence collection for national security cases, and the delicate handling of sealed indictments.

That makes them uniquely suited not only to clear cases of gun violence and homicide but to prepare prosecutions against bureaucrats, agency heads, and even elected officials who believed themselves untouchable.

https://twitter.com/nicksortor/status/1959738212286452142

The timing is no accident. In just the first week of Trump’s D.C. crackdown, more than 465 arrests were made, including homicides and firearms offenses, according to Reuters. And on August 11, Trump went even further, invoking the Home Rule Act to seize control of the Metropolitan Police Department and deploy 800 armed National Guard troops into the streets. 

Axios reported days later that Trump signed an executive order creating a special National Guard public order unit to permanently bolster security in the capital.

Taken together, the pieces form a clear picture: Trump isn’t just cracking down on crime in D.C.—he’s laying the legal groundwork for something even bigger.

JAG attorneys are not only handling the day-to-day prosecutions the broken civilian system failed to address; they are quietly assembling cases for military-style justice against those who betrayed the nation from within.

For D.C., the message couldn’t be clearer: The era of protection is over. The tribunals are coming.

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