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The Trump Administration Just Won a Terrifying Victory Over Protesters

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17.03.2026

The Trump Administration Just Won a Terrifying Victory Over Protesters

An appeal is coming, but the conviction of several protesters on charges of providing “material support” for terrorism is a chilling sign.

The future of protesting in the United States may have been decided in a cramped Depression-era courtroom in downtown Fort Worth on Friday of last week. Nine defendants, who federal prosecutors claimed were part of an “Antifa cell,” were found guilty of an array of charges, including providing “material support” for terrorism, for attending a demonstration outside an ICE facility that turned violent on July 4, 2025. The verdict is a clear victory for the Trump administration, which, after Charlie Kirk’s assassination, has stretched the definition of “domestic terrorist organization” to include a staggeringly broad set of “terroristic activities,” such as “extremism on migration, race, and gender.” The Trump administration had already informally labeled its perceived enemies as radical terrorists, from Renee Nicole Good and Alex Pretti, who were killed by federal agents in January, to Marimar Martinez, who was shot several times by a Border Patrol agent last year. But last Friday, for the first time, the formal designation stuck in court.

What constitutes an Antifa terror cell? Apparently, a group of people that did not all know each other before being scooped up and charged as one. While some of the nine defendants who were convicted on Friday had met through self-defense classes, the Socialist Rifle Association, and an anarchist book club, loosely associating through Signal group chats, others didn’t know anyone—and only happened to be at the Prairieland ICE Detention Center last July 4 because they found the details for the demonstration online. 

The events of that night lasted about half an hour: a handful of protesters arrived outside the facility around 10:37 p.m. wearing dark clothing—what prosecutors defined as “tactical gear” and “black bloc” attire—and set off fireworks as part of a noise demonstration to show solidarity with the detainees inside. Some brought weapons—11 firearms were recovered at the scene, many from inside cars or unassembled in backpacks—though group chat logs before the demonstration suggest they thought carrying them would act as a deterrent against violence from police or federal agents. At least two protesters broke off from the main group and spray-painted cars in the parking lot and an empty guard shack with anti-ICE slogans, slashing a van’s tires and breaking a security camera. It took approximately 15 minutes after the demonstration began for corrections officers to call 911. Two minutes later, a local police lieutenant, Thomas Gross, arrived at the scene and drew his weapon,........

© New Republic