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In this case, the truth was inconvenient to the prosecution.

Part 1 made the geopolitical argument for Trump’s pardon of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez.

Part 2 examined the case the Biden Department of Justice put on.

Part 3 examined how the prosecutors lied to get the trial in front of a biased judge and an uninformed jury.

This is Part 4.

The more one examines it, the more obvious it becomes that Trump pardoned former Honduran president Juan Orlando Hernandez not only because it was in America’s geopolitical interest but also because it was in the interest of justice.

It will take many stories to explain how the US federal trial of Juan Orlando Hernández was a show trial.

It appears to have been theatrically produced through a collaboration between Judge P. Kevin Castel and the Biden DOJ to ensure that a Manhattan jury convicted Hernandez.

Nine Ledgers

The government’s case relied on drug ledgers seized in an investigation of Honduran traffickers. A drug ledger is a handwritten notebook that records amounts, names, and payment dates.

There were nine ledgers seized by Honduran police in June 2018 from Honduran trafficker Magdaleno Meza. Meza was murdered in October 2019 at a Honduran maximum-security prison. The man who possessed the notebooks could not testify. The prosecution provided the interpretation of his ledgers.

Two of Meza’s nine ledgers contained the entry “La JOH.”

La is the feminine article in Spanish. It would naturally refer to a woman or to a business — not to a man. But the government told the jury La JOH was a reference to Juan Orlando Hernández.

The defense wanted the jury to see all nine ledgers because in the other seven ledgers, there were entries showing that JOH did not mean Juan Orlando Hernández.

The SDNY prosecutors, of course, objected and asked the judge to suppress the seven ledgers.

They had good reason.

What the Other Ledgers Showed

One of the suppressed ledgers recorded payments to JOH under entries that read: “payment to JOH for fumigation.” And: payment to JOH for weeding and cleaning of River.

JOH appears to be a business that performed agricultural work. A fumigation company. Not a person. Not the former president of Honduras.

Juan Orlando Hernández was not a fumigation contractor.

The compliant Judge P. Kevin Castel, of course, sustained the objection. The jury never got to see the evidence that the JOH entries in a dead drug dealers ledgers did not refer to Hernandez.

Radar That Did Not Exist

Three cooperators — Alexander Ardón, Luis Pérez, and Fabio Lobo — testified that Hernández provided them with radar information to help their drug shipments evade detection when they were active drug traffickers.

Pérez fled Honduras in 2014. Lobo was arrested in 2015. Ardón was referring to his years as mayor of El Paraíso, which ended in 2013.

The kind of information the cooperators described was when and where Honduran detection systems tracked aircraft. Where the radar coverage gaps were on a given day. When the system was active and when it was not. This intelligence would permit a trafficker to schedule a cocaine flight when no radar would see it land.

The defense called Xavier Rene Barrientos, the former head of the Honduran Air Force. Barrientos testified that no radar existed in Honduras until after 2015.

The cooperators were unable, on cross-examination, to specify what radar information they had received.

The radar testimony was the prosecution’s evidence that Hernández did not merely benefit from drug trafficking but was feeding traffickers government intelligence in real time.

Three federal cooperators testified that Hernandez gave them radar information from a system that did not exist during the years they described.

The U.S. State Department’s annual International Narcotics Control Strategy Reports during these years confirm this. The State Department repeatedly noted that Honduras lacked detection radar capabilities, which was why Honduran airspace was used so heavily as a cocaine-trafficking route.

The Hernández prosecution was led by United States Attorney Damian Williams’s office in the Southern District of New York. The four trial prosecutors were Assistant United States Attorneys Jacob Gutwillig, David Robles, Elinor Tarlow, and Kyle Wirshba.

The Prosecutors Coached the Lie

Three drug traffickers — three men facing the rest of their lives in federal prison unless they told the story the prosecution wanted to hear — did not invent the same story independently.

Federal cooperators meet with prosecutors and DEA agents. They tell their version. The prosecutors guide them. They tell it again. The version that ends up before a jury is the one the prosecutors coached.

The prosecutors must have known the radar story was a lie. But it was more than that. The prosecutors almost certainly came up with the story. The State Department had been publishing the truth for years. Every annual International Narcotics Control Strategy Report documented that Honduras lacked radar for detection.

The prosecutors put three witnesses on the stand to tell a story they knew was not true. The federal criminal code calls it subornation of perjury. 18 U.S.C. § 1622.

The Irony

There is a little irony that should not be overlooked. Hernández was the president who got radar installed. The U.S. Southern Command credited him for it. General John Kelly told the U.S. Senate that under Hernández, drug-trafficking flights into Honduran airspace had been almost stopped.

The man the cooperators said was helping cartels evade detection was the man who built the detection.

The Pattern

The seven ledgers the jury did not see. The radar that did not exist. Small things, maybe.

But still, the rules of evidence exist because the truth is often unwelcome to one side or the other in every trial. In this case, the truth was inconvenient to the prosecution.

We will present many more examples of inconvenient truths in this series.

By Frank Parlato for Art Voice – https://artvoice.com/2026/05/05/the-show-trial-of-juan-orlando-hernandez-part-4-the-prosecutors-coached-the-lie/

Part 1 made the geopolitical argument for Trump’s pardon of former Honduran President Juan Orlando Hernandez.

Part 2 examined the case the Biden Department of Justice put on.

Part 3 is about how the prosecutors got a biased judge and an uninformed jury. The legal name for what they did is forum shopping.

Hernández was tried in the Southern District of New York. The prosecutors alleged his criminal conduct happened in Honduras, Mexico, and other countries. None of it happened in Manhattan.

For crimes committed outside the United States, Congress wrote Title 18, United States Code, Section 3238. The venue lies in the district where the offender is first brought into the country. 

Hernández was extradited from Honduras on April 21, 2022. His point of entry into the United States was Florida.

The case could properly have been tried in Florida. The Southern District of New York, then headed by United States Attorney Damian Williams, chose Manhattan instead.

Why does it matter whether it was Miami or Manhattan? Both are American cities. The reason is pretty obvious to anyone without their rose colored justice glasses on.

SDNY judges, including Judge Kevin Castel, who tried the case, are mostly former SDNY prosecutors. Castel was an Assistant United States Attorney in the office before he was a judge.

Florida federal judges, on the other hand, come from diverse backgrounds, including defense lawyers, civil practitioners, and state court judges. Federal judges in Florida — including judges of Cuban and Venezuelan heritage — would have known of Hernandez and might have been inclined to give him a fair trial.

The Biden DOJ knew it would more likely get a pro-prosecution judge in Manhattan.

The second reason is the jury.

A South Florida jury might have included Cuban refugees, Venezuelan exiles, and Honduran emigrants. A South Florida jury would have known what happens to former presidents in Latin America when their political opponents take power, and might have asked questions in deliberation that a Manhattan jury was less likely to ask.

The DOJ may have wanted Manhattan because a jury there was more likely to accept the prosecution’s word about what kind of country Honduras was and what kind of man Hernández was.

The Stipulation

The Southern District of New York did not present records of Hernandez’s arrival in Florida to the jury. That might have ended the trial in Manhattan.

The defense agreed to a stipulation, drafted and presented by the Department of Justice, stating that Hernández had been first brought to New York. The first point of entry was Florida.

The stipulation was read to the jury. The jury believed it.

A reader may ask why Hernández did not correct the record. Three reasons.

First, American federal venue rules — the rule that says a defendant first brought into the United States in Florida should be tried in Florida — are not concepts a foreign defendant tracks.

Second, Judge Castel had ordered that Hernandez review certain pretrial materials only in the presence of retained counsel. His retained counsel was sick. The visits stopped.

Third, the stipulation system in federal practice works through the lawyers. A stipulation is a document drafted by the prosecution and reviewed by the defense. The defendant typically never sees it before it is signed. He sees it when it is read aloud at trial. By then, the agreement will have already been made.

The system functions because federal prosecutors are presumed to be honest with defense lawyers about basic facts. A defense lawyer assumes that when the United States Attorney’s Office tells him the defendant was first brought to New York, the United States Attorney’s Office is not making it up.

Judge Castel instructed the jury on the venue element of the charges based on the stipulation that Hernandez first landed in Manhattan rather than in Florida.

The defense’s appeal papers state that the prosecution later conceded the venue stipulation read to the jury was false.

What That Means in Plain English

If a defense lawyer did that to a federal prosecutor — drafted a stipulation containing a false fact, induced the prosecutor to sign it, used it to obtain a verdict — the defense lawyer would be disbarred. There might be a criminal prosecution for obstruction of justice.

When the Department of Justice does it, the trial is held in prosecution-friendly Manhattan and not Miami.

Judge P. Kevin Castel, presented with a post-trial admission by the prosecution that he had instructed the jury on a false fact regarding a constitutional element of the case, could have ordered briefing, set aside the conviction, or ordered a new trial in the proper district.

He sentenced Hernández to 45 years.

Part 4 on the show trial of Juan Orlando Hernandez is coming next.

By Frank Parlato for Art Voice – https://artvoice.com/2026/05/04/part-3-the-framing-of-honduran-president-juan-orlando-hernandez-by-bidens-doj/

The North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) was born in 1949 out of the smoldering ruins of World War II, when the great capitals of Western Europe lay either shattered by bombardment or hollowed out by exhaustion. It was not merely a treaty but a civilizational covenant, an ironclad vow that the nations of the Atlantic world would stand as one against the encroaching specter of Soviet expansion. Article 5 is the beating heart of the alliance, declared that an attack upon one would be regarded as an attack upon all. This was not diplomatic ornamentation it was a stark and solemn guarantee designed to prevent the Red Army from ever again rolling westward across a defenseless continent. The United States, ascendant and economically unscathed, became the keystone of this structure, underwriting the defense of Europe not only with troops and matériel but with its industrial sinews and nuclear deterrent.

For decades NATO functioned as a bulwark against totalitarian expansion. It was the rampart behind which Western Europe rebuilt its cities, revived its economies, and cultivated the illusion that history’s tempests had been permanently tamed. Yet alliances, like empires, are subject to entropy. What begins as a pact of mutual necessity can, over time, metastasize into an arrangement of asymmetry and indulgence.

Enter the President Trump whose view of NATO has been as unvarnished as it is disruptive. Where previous presidents spoke in the dulcet tones of diplomatic continuity, he has approached the alliance with the unsentimental calculus of a ledger clerk auditing a profligate enterprise. He has repeatedly pointed out a reality long obscured by diplomatic euphemism: the United States bears a disproportionate share of the alliance’s financial and military burden.

The figures are not merely instructive; they are startling. The United States accounts for roughly two thirds of total alliance defense spending. While American taxpayers fund a vast military apparatus that spans continents, many European allies have for years lingered below the alliance’s own benchmark of allocating 2% of the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to defense. Nations with immense economic capacity have historically underinvested in their own military capabilities, relying instead on the implicit guarantee that American power would serve as their ultimate insurance policy. This arrangement resembles less a partnership of equals than a sprawling estate in which one industrious proprietor shoulders the costs while a coterie of tenants enjoy the comforts.

The critique is not merely fiscal; it is philosophical. The question has been raised whether an alliance conceived in the crucible of the Cold War retains its original raison d’être in a world where the Soviet Union has long since dissolved into the pages of history. To some, NATO risks becoming an ossified relic, a ceremonial guard still pacing before a gate that no longer requires protection.

Yet this worldview is not devoid of reverence for tradition and symbolism. Indeed, it is here that admiration for the British monarchy becomes particularly illuminating. There has been longstanding respect expressed for a late monarch widely regarded as a paragon of dignity, continuity, and sovereign gravitas. Interactions with her successor have likewise been framed within a broader appreciation for the pageantry and historical continuity of the Crown.

This admiration is not incidental. It reveals a perspective that, while skeptical of bureaucratic alliances, retains a deep affinity for institutions that embody endurance, hierarchy, and national identity. The British monarchy represents an unbroken thread of civilizational coherence, a living testament to the idea that power can be both ceremonial and substantive, both symbolic and real.

The juxtaposition is striking. On one hand stands a sprawling multinational consortium whose purpose has become increasingly ambiguous and whose financial architecture resembles a lopsided ledger. On the other stands an institution that has survived wars, revolutions, and societal upheavals precisely because it understands the alchemy of symbolism and authority. One is a committee. The other is a throne.

Historically, alliances that fail to recalibrate often find themselves eclipsed by events. The Delian League of ancient Greece began as a voluntary coalition against Persian aggression, only to devolve into an empire that bred resentment among its members. The Concert of Europe, forged after the Napoleonic Wars to preserve continental stability, eventually succumbed to the centrifugal forces of nationalism and great power rivalry. NATO now faces a similar inflection point, caught between its storied past and an uncertain future.

Critics argue that challenging the alliance imperils a cornerstone of global stability. Supporters contend that such scrutiny is a long overdue act of strategic realism, forcing allies to confront the inequities that have long undergirded the arrangement. In truth, both perspectives contain elements of validity. NATO is neither an anachronism to be discarded nor a sacred relic beyond reproach. It is a structure that demands renovation if it is to remain relevant.

The central question is whether NATO can evolve from a dependency model into a genuine partnership. Can Europe assume greater responsibility for its own defense, thereby transforming the alliance into a more equitable enterprise? Or will it continue to rely on the American colossus, content to let the United States taxpayers bear the burdens while others draft communiqués? 

In the final analysis, the debate over NATO is not merely about budgets or troop deployments. It is about sovereignty, responsibility, and the enduring tension between idealism and realism in international affairs. The current moment has forced this debate into the open. Whether one views it as provocation or reform, it has undeniably exposed the fissures that lie beneath the alliance’s polished exterior.

And so NATO stands at a crossroads, its future suspended between legacy and transformation. Like an aging fortress whose walls once repelled invaders but now require reinforcement, it must decide whether to adapt or risk obsolescence. History offers no guarantees, only precedents. The alliances that endure are those that recognize when the world has changed and possess the courage to change with it.

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Roger Stone is a seasoned political operative, speaker, pundit, and New York Times Bestselling Author featured in the Netflix documentary Get Me Roger Stone.

Richard Nixon, Ronald Reagan, and Donald Trump—all of these Presidents relied on Roger Stone to secure their seat in the Oval Office. In a 45-year career in American politics, Stone has worked on over 700 campaigns for public office.

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Stone’s bestselling books include The Man Who Killed Kennedy: The Case Against LBJThe Bush Crime FamilyThe Clintons’ War on WomenThe Making of The President—How Donald Trump Orchestrated a Revolution, and Stone’s Rules with a forward by Tucker Carlson.
For the last 15 years, Roger Stone has published his International Best & Worst Dressed List. Stone is considered an authority on political and corporate strategy, branding, marketing, messaging, and advertising.
Stone is the host of The StoneZONE on Rumble and is also the host of The Roger Stone Show on WABC Radio.

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