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This looks like the prosecution's team:Orlando Sonza, I'm assuming, since he is apparently heading the team, but I don't know.
We'll find out tomorrow, I suppose.
jmo
One of the main attorneys assigned to the case — Orlando Sonza — is a failed Ohio Republican congressional candidate who graduated from law school in 2022 and whose only prosecutorial experience until now entailed working in the Hamilton County Prosecutor's Office over the course of about a year and a half as an intern, a law clerk and assistant prosecutor, according to his personnel file seen by CBS News.
A second Civil Rights Division attorney who was added to the case after the indictment was returned, Greta Gieseke, is also a 2022 law school graduate who is assigned to the Civil Rights Division's appellate section.
A third lawyer added to the case, Josh Zuckerman, is a 2020 law school graduate who worked as an associate for four years at the multinational law firm Gibson Dunn before joining the Justice Department.
A few hours after CBS News sought comment, Civil Rights Division Acting Deputy Associate Attorney General Robert Keenan, who previously appeared in court during an initial appearance for several of the defendants, formally entered an appearance in the case.
Keenan is a longtime federal prosecutor from the U.S. Attorney's Office in Orange County, California, though he has not handled many civil rights matters, a review of court filings show.
Civil rights attorneys predict charges against Don Lemon, others will be dismissed, citing flaws in FACE Act
Inexperienced prosecutors are testing FACE Act in their case against Don Lemon. But the law has constitutional problems that make it untenable to charge misconduct in a house of worship.