Let's Look at Glassman and Parker
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Summary
It’s May 8, 2026. Welcome to yestohellwith.com.
Over the past several weeks, we have discussed the structure of prosecution in America.
We have discussed:plea bargaining,prosecutorial immunity,withholding of evidence,courtroom pressure,and why so many defendants lose long before trial ever begins.
But next week —we are going to move from theory to example.
A real federal example.
An example involving a man named Orlando Carter.
And two federal prosecutors who had the power to stop an injustice —but did not.
Former United States Attorneys:Benjamin Glassman.And Kenneth Parker.
These men occupied positions of enormous authority inside the federal system.
And yet the question remains:
What happens when prosecutors are presented with evidence of a wrongful prosecution —and choose institutional protection over the interests of justice?
Next week, we are going to examine how the federal system failed an innocent man.
Not emotionally.Not rhetorically.But structurally.
Because if justice depends entirely upon the discretion of prosecutors —then what happens when that discretion fails?
Next week, we begin examining the Orlando Carter case.
And as always —may truth reign supreme.
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