
How “Jury Nullification Training” Became The Latest Progressive Power Play.
Jury nullification is one of the rarest and most controversial features of the American legal system. It happens when jurors vote to acquit someone even though they believe the law was broken — usually because they disagree with the law itself.
It is not common. It is not routine. And it is certainly not supposed to be weaponized.
Yet in Minneapolis, an activist network called Defend612 is openly promoting virtual sessions titled “The People’s Pardon or Jury Nullification,” pitching them as a form of resistance against federal immigration enforcement.
Let that sink in.
They are not merely discussing legal theory. They are advertising “jury nullification training” as a tactic to “protect our local heroes” and “resist the ICE occupation.”
This isn’t civic education. It’s a coordinated attempt to undermine prosecutions they politically oppose.
From Civic Duty To Political Sabotage
Jury nullification has a long history. In extreme cases — genuinely unjust laws, true tyranny — it has been cited as a moral backstop. Even veteran attorney Doug Wardlow acknowledged it “can be an important tool for resisting tyranny.”
But here’s the critical distinction: rare and extraordinary is not the same thing as routine and strategic.
When activists begin organizing trainings specifically to influence jurors to derail prosecutions — especially in cases where there is no demonstrable authoritarian overreach — the line between conscience and corruption gets dangerously thin.
Even more disturbing were social media posts from Nick Kruse, a Democratic Party activist, encouraging followers to “act neutral” during voir dire in order to get seated on juries and acquit anti-ICE defendants.
“Act neutral.”
That’s not civic engagement. That’s instructing people to deceive the court.
Voir dire exists to ensure impartial juries. Coaching activists to conceal bias so they can sabotage a trial from inside the jury box attacks the very foundation of due process.
The Feng Case And The Radicalization Of The Jury Box
The push for nullification comes amid federal prosecution of activists, including the case of Claire Louise Feng, who is accused of biting off part of a U.S. Border Patrol agent’s finger during a confrontation.
Kruse reportedly argued that “no one should be going to prison for defending our city against ICE.”
That sentiment may fire up activists. But in a nation governed by laws, not mobs, criminal charges are resolved in courtrooms — not by political loyalty tests inside jury deliberations.
Selling nullification as “the people’s pardon” reframes jurors from neutral fact-finders into political operatives.
That’s not justice. That’s jury tampering by ideology.
When Activism Turns Into Obstruction
Defend612’s messaging doesn’t stop at jury training. The group has criticized state and city leadership, including Governor Tim Walz and Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, accusing them of siding with “the rich and powerful.”
They urge supporters to “keep building power,” “keep patrolling our streets,” and continue organizing against federal enforcement.
Meanwhile, a past investigation by City Journal tied Defend612 to organized “ICE watching” networks — tracking federal agents, coordinating rapid-response protests, and mobilizing activists across neighborhoods.
Add jury nullification training to that ecosystem, and you have something far more serious than a protest.
You have a strategic effort to obstruct law enforcement at every level: in the streets, online, and now inside the courtroom.
The Dangerous Precedent No One Wants To Admit
Here’s the question no one seems eager to answer:
If activists can organize to nullify laws they dislike, what stops others from doing the same?
Today it’s immigration enforcement. Tomorrow it could be tax law. Gun law. Environmental law. Civil rights law.
Jury nullification was never meant to be a partisan loophole or a tactical shield for political allies. It is an exceedingly rare phenomenon — not a mass training seminar.
Normalizing organized jury nullification doesn’t empower “the people.” It erodes the rule of law and replaces it with selective enforcement driven by ideology.
And once that door is opened, it doesn’t close neatly.
Bottom Line
Calling organized jury nullification “the people’s pardon” is slick marketing. But beneath the slogan lies a troubling strategy: politicize juries, infiltrate trials, and obstruct prosecutions you don’t like.
The jury box is not a protest platform. It is a cornerstone of constitutional justice.
Turn it into a political weapon, and the entire system starts to crack.
We are losing law and order. We are losing our nation.
We are being screwed.
— Steve