MAY 18: WHEN DISSENT BECOMES CONSPIRACY, THE FIRST AMENDMENT, AND DEMOCRACY, ARE ON TRIAL
May 18 is not just a trial date. It’s a test. Not just of one man. Not just of one protest. But of whether we still recognize the line between dissent and criminality . A U.S. Army veteran, Bajun Mavalwalla II, now faces federal conspiracy charges tied to his role in an anti-ICE protest in Spokane, Washington. He is the son of Bajun R. Mavalwalla, a retired U.S. Army intelligence officer and three-time Bronze Star recipient, whose career spanned over two decades, including deployments to Iraq and Afghanistan. This context matters. Because it grounds this moment in something larger than a single case. Let’s be precise about what that means. This is not a routine charge. This is not a minor escalation. Conspiracy is one of the government’s most powerful tools, designed to address coordinated, intentional efforts to obstruct or harm. It requires proving agreement, intent, and action. When that threshold is applied to protest activity, the question is no longer just legal. ...