The diabolical, maniacal Deep Stater learned his fate Thursday morning not in a courtroom but in his Camp Delta cell as he nibbled on a slice of dry toast from his breakfast tray. Admiral Crandall, accompanied by three guards, delivered the news personally.
“So, have you made up your mind, Crandall,” Garland sniggered. “This food is awful. You can beat me, but you can’t break me.”
Garland’s left eye was swollen shut, and he had a purple lump on his face the size of a grapefruit.
“I have. I find you guilty, and you will hang,” the admiral told him.
“Wrong decision, Admiral Crandall,” Garland said.
“I don’t think so,” replied the admiral. “Enjoy your breakfast.”
Their brief vis-à-vis followed the most audacious display of courtroom theatrics since JAG started prosecuting Deep Staters several years ago. Garland demanded his freedom and the release of 32 detainees, adding that if JAG executed him, dozens of J6ers, among them wrongly incarcerated military personnel, would suffer an identical fate. The threat gave Adm. Crandall a long moment of pause; he had cleared the courtroom and retired to his office, vowing to resume the tribunal on Thursday.
But Adm. Crandall decided to forgo further testimony following a series of meetings and telephone calls that afternoon, a GITMO source told Real Raw News. As the conversations were private, the source couldn’t share details on who said what; he knew, however, that the admiral had scheduled lengthy calls with General Eric M. Smith and President Donald Trump. The outcome of the convos suggested neither Trump nor Smith considered Garland’s threat credible, as it seems unlikely either man would sacrifice innocent lives.
Our source said he thinks President Trump encouraged Admiral Crandall to order a “beat down” for Merrick Garland; at once after they spoke, two JAG investigators dragged Garland from his cell to an interrogation room. Garland had no visible bruises or cuts prior to the interrogation, but he emerged from the room a bloody mess, nose smashed in and eyes shut with swelling.
“Looks like that scrawny little bastard is tougher than he looks. He got a shellacking but didn’t break,” our source said.
The admiral, he added, then spoke with the three panelists JAG had picked to hear the case, asking whether they had heard enough from Garland to find him guilty of treason. They said they had and expressed a desire to attend the execution.
“I have faith in God; this is the right decision, and no harm will come to innocent people in federal custody,” our source said.
He hinted, too, that President Trump might attend Garland’s hanging.
In closing, he said the execution will take place on April 4.
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