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Government Abandons Flag Burning Prosecution, Affirming First Amendment Protections

Last updated: March 14, 2026 11:58 am
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Government Abandons Flag Burning Prosecution, Affirming First Amendment Protections
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The Justice Department’s sudden move to dismiss all charges against Army veteran Jay Carey delivers a decisive victory for First Amendment rights, abruptly ending a prosecution that many legal experts viewed as an unconstitutional test of President Trump’s executive order targeting flag burning.

Jay Carey, a 55-year-old Army veteran from Arden, North Carolina, burned an American flag in Lafayette Park on August 25, 2025, just hours after President Donald Trump signed an executive order directing the Justice Department to prioritize prosecution of flag desecration. Carey was immediately arrested and charged with two misdemeanors unrelated to flag burning itself: igniting a fire in an undesignated area and causing property damage. He pleaded not guilty in September, setting the stage for a constitutional showdown.

The timing was no coincidence. Trump’s executive order asserted that flag burning could be prosecuted under incitement and “fighting words” doctrines, effectively attempting to circumvent the Supreme Court’s ruling that flag burning is a legitimate political expression protected by the Constitution. By signing the order, Trump created a direct conflict between presidential policy and constitutional law, turning Carey’s protest into a de facto test case.

Legal scholars swiftly criticized the order as a dangerous overreach. The Supreme Court has held that the government cannot prohibit expression simply because it is offensive or disagreeable. Carey’s act—a deliberate, peaceful protest in a public park—fell squarely within that protected category. The charges filed against him, while framed as regulatory offenses, were widely perceived as a proxy for punishing his political message, a classic example of selective prosecution that the First Amendment forbids.

The Justice Department’s decision to move for dismissal, filed on March 13, 2026, came without explanation. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia did not respond to requests for comment. But the reversal aligns with the legal reality that prosecuting a veteran for a symbolic protest, especially under an order that conflicts with Supreme Court precedent, was untenable. It also signals a retreat from what appeared to be a politically motivated effort to criminalize dissent.

Carey framed his actions as a defense of constitutional principles. “I set out to demonstrate that the First Amendment is sacred and that no administration has the right to supersede our constitutional rights,” he said in a statement through the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund. “I am glad to stand with all those who are fighting for our fundamental rights and hope that this victory can help the next person who takes a stand.” Reached by phone after the dismissal, he added simply, “It shows people that the Constitution still matters.”

His legal team echoed that sentiment. Mara Verheyden-Hilliard, co-founder of the Partnership for Civil Justice Fund, called the prosecution “a grave threat to First Amendment freedoms.” She stated, “The government’s attempt to criminally punish a protestor based on expressive conduct targeted for prosecution by presidential order posed a grave threat to First Amendment freedoms. The government’s about-face is a critical vindication of those rights. This case also lays the groundwork for defending those across the country who are targeted for vindictive prosecution by the Trump Administration in an effort to silence and punish viewpoints it doesn’t like.”

The dismissal carries broader implications. It reaffirms that even in a highly polarized political climate, the Constitution’s protections remain robust against executive overreach. For activists and protestors, it serves as a reminder that the judiciary—and eventually, even the executive branch—must respect the boundaries set by the Supreme Court. The case also highlights the danger of using regulatory offenses to circumvent free speech protections, a tactic that has been deployed in other contexts, from anti-abortion protests to environmental demonstrations.

Historically, flag burning protests have sparked fierce national debates, from the Vietnam War era to the present. Each time, the Supreme Court has upheld the right to engage in such expressive conduct. Trump’s executive order represented an attempt to reopen that debate through executive fiat, but the swift dismissal of charges against Carey suggests that such efforts will struggle to gain legal traction. The message from the Justice Department’s reversal is clear: constitutional rights are not suspended by presidential preference.

As the nation grapples with ongoing tensions over protest and free speech, the Carey case offers a critical data point. It demonstrates that the system, while imperfect, can still correct itself when faced with blatant constitutional overreach. For now, the flag that Carey burned has become a symbol not of disrespect, but of resilience in the face of authoritarian temptation.

For continuous, authoritative coverage of developing stories, explore onlytrustedinfo.com for the analysis that matters.

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