UPDATE: Please also see my updated post arguing Judge Hannah Dugan is not guilty of any crime, and the charges against her should be dismissed immediately.
Milwaukee County Circuit Court Judge Hannah Dugan’s arrest by the FBI earlier today (April 25, 2025) seems to involve a full-blown collision between the federal government, the state judiciary, and the soul of due process itself.
According to initial reports, Judge Dugan was taken into federal custody after allegedly interfering with an Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) operation the week before. The allegation? That she obstructed the attempted arrest of Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, an undocumented immigrant appearing before her on unrelated misdemeanor charges.
The federal government claims she stepped in, delayed agents, and allowed Flores-Ruiz to temporarily evade capture. But when you strip away the noise, the political spin, and the flash of sirens outside a courthouse, here’s what’s left: a critical moment demanding calm, clear-eyed questions before any conclusions are drawn.
And it’s not just about Judge Dugan. It’s about what kind of country we want to live in.
The Basics: What We Know So Far
Judge Dugan was arrested near the Milwaukee County Courthouse, reportedly without confrontation. Federal officials allege she obstructed an official proceeding, possibly by hiding Flores-Ruiz, rerouting him, or otherwise delaying federal agents inside a courthouse, an area traditionally protected as a safe space for due process, not a hunting ground for federal raids.
Interestingly, the warrant situation is murky. Some reports suggest ICE agents had a valid warrant. Others raise questions about whether it was a judicial warrant (signed by a judge) or just an administrative one (issued internally by ICE)—a critical legal difference.
Flores-Ruiz was eventually captured outside the courthouse after a foot chase. Judge Dugan, for her part, has pushed back hard, calling the early reports about her “nearly all inaccurate.”
The Bigger Picture: Context Matters
Judge Dugan’s arrest wasn’t some random act dropped from the sky. For weeks, Milwaukee was wrestling with ICE arrests inside the courthouse, sparking outrage across political lines. Community leaders worried that courthouse raids would scare witnesses, victims, and defendants away from exercising their rights. County officials were already drafting new policies to protect the integrity of the court system.
Judge Dugan’s alleged actions happened right in the middle of this heated environment. She didn’t act in a vacuum, and the federal government’s decision to swoop in and arrest a sitting judge pours gasoline on an already raging national debate over immigration enforcement, judicial independence, and local versus federal authority.
The situation only got murkier when the FBI Director announced her arrest on social media, using loaded terms like “illegal alien” and “perp.” Then, without explanation, the post was deleted. A public agency making partisan noise, then suddenly going quiet? That’s not how justice is supposed to work.
The Questions That Need to Be Answered
As trial lawyer, I know better than to jump to conclusions based on headlines, tweets, or political statements. Real answers only come when the right questions are asked, and answered under oath, not online.
Before anyone decides who’s right, who’s wrong, and what this case really means, we need the following seven questions answered:
1. What kind of warrant did ICE agents possess on April 18th?
Was it a judicial warrant signed by a judge, or merely an administrative warrant issued internally by ICE? The legal authority for arrest actions hinges entirely on this distinction.
2. Where exactly did the ICE agents intend to make the arrest?
Were they operating in a truly public area where federal agents have more leeway, or were they trying to enter a non-public space inside the courthouse where different legal protections apply?
3. What did Judge Dugan actually do during the incident?
Did she knowingly direct the defendant to avoid agents? Did she follow courthouse procedures? Or did she simply try to preserve courtroom order and rights without any intent to obstruct?
4. Were ICE agents following proper legal and procedural guidelines?
Did the agents present the required documentation appropriately, and did they coordinate with courthouse officials as standard protocol typically demands?
5. Was there any prior official guidance issued by the courthouse regarding ICE arrests?
Had Judge Dugan or other judges been instructed on how to handle immigration enforcement attempts inside the building in order to protect court integrity?
6. Why did the FBI Director make a premature public announcement—and then delete it?
What internal decisions were made regarding public communication, and did political motivations influence the public rollout of this arrest?
7. Was Judge Dugan’s conduct truly unlawful under the relevant statutes, or was she fulfilling her duties to protect due process within her courtroom?
Did her actions meet the legal definition of obstruction, or were they consistent with a judge’s obligation to uphold constitutional rights, and if so, was the arrest driven more by politics than by clear evidence of a crime?
Was Judge Dugan individually targeted for political reasons, or was her case handled the same way any alleged obstruction case would be?
Why These Questions Matter
Every American who cares about due process, fairness, and the integrity of our legal system should care about this case. These seven questions aren’t just legal technicalities. They go straight to the heart of whether this arrest was about upholding the law, or sending a political message.
Because if we start arresting judges based on incomplete facts or political scorekeeping, the damage won’t stop with Judge Dugan. It will reach every courtroom, every lawyer, every witness, and every citizen who expects justice to be blind, not weaponized.
This moment demands more than hot takes or partisan finger-pointing. It demands real answers, real facts, and a real commitment to the rule of law, for everyone.
And until we get those answers, every American should hold their judgment, and hold their leaders accountable.
Mitch Jackson, Esq. | links
You’re Informed. Now Get Dangerous.
Want to take your political understanding from headline skimmer to democracy defender? My AI knows everything I’ve published and can break it down 24/7. Ask it anything.
PS: Arresting a sitting judge at her own courthouse? Fine. But here’s a question every taxpayer should be asking: how many federal officers did this take—and how much did it cost us?
You know what I'd rather see? I'd like to see the arrest of the man who incited a violent attack on our Capitol on January 6th. I'd like to see the arrest of the guy who walked off with classified documents and stashed them in an unsecured bathroom at Mar-a-Lago. I'd like to see the architect of the biggest cryptocurrency grift in history face real consequences.
And while we’re at it, I'd like to see some of these taxpayer-funded resources used to go after the people in the current administration who have broken the law in broad daylight over the past three months.
But hey, maybe that's just me paying attention.
This post is free—but building a future rooted in truth and democracy takes real investment. If my work speaks to you, subscribe and if you can, chip in $5/month or $50/year—because independent journalism that actually gives a damn (and delivers ideas you can use today) is worth backing.
This is insanity.
Shocking and wrong. It is only the beginning…