On “Trumpland with Alex Wagner,” MSNBC’s Alex Wagner travels the country talking with the people on the frontlines of Trump’s policies and promises.
On this very first episode, Alex travels to DC—but not for the inauguration. Hours after President Trump was sworn into office for the second time, he began issuing a series of presidential pardons for the January 6th insurrection. Listen along as Alex speaks to the inmates, their families, and the police officers who survived one of the most violent attacks on the Capitol in our nation’s history.
Catch new episodes of “Trumpland with Alex Wagner” on Thursday evenings during Trump’s first 100 days. You can find the show in the “Alex Wagner Tonight” feed. Remember to follow the show so you don’t miss a single episode. And sign up for MSNBC Premium on Apple Podcasts to listen without ads.
This episode aired January 23, 2025.
Note: This is a rough transcript. Please excuse any typos.
Alex Wagner: A note to listeners, this podcast contains some explicit language.
Rachel Maddow: Trump is now officially 47th President of the United States. That happened at noon on the dot. He then took the oath of office very shortly thereafter. His second inaugural address.
Donald Trump: During every single day of the Trump administration, I will, very simply, put America first.
Alex Wagner: Earlier this week, on a very cold afternoon in Washington, D.C., Donald John Trump was sworn in as the 47th President of the United States. Trump was inside the Capitol Rotunda surrounded by the political, financial and cultural elite. But outside of that room, the ceremony was watched by millions of people the world over.
Some were anxious, others were excited. Everyone was wondering about what a second Trump term will mean for immigration, the economy, the environment, America, and the globe.
I’m Alex Wagner, host of “Alex Wagner Tonight” on MSNBC. And for the first 100 days of this new administration, I’m going to be taking a break from the anchor chair to get out into the field. I’ll be going to the front lines and speaking to the players and the principals on both the issuing and receiving ends of Trump’s policies. We’re calling this new show, “Trumpland with Alex Wagner.”
These are conversations we can’t always have on TV, with people you definitely don’t usually see on TV. You’ll get a 360-degree view of what’s happening both at home and overseas now that Donald Trump is once again President of the United States.
This week, I’ve been reporting on a group of people nervously anticipating what President Trump might do on his very first week back in the White House.
Lester Holt: President Donald Trump not wasting any time getting down to business.
Alex Wagner: The convicted defendants of the January 6 insurrection, as well as their families and the police officers who were the victims of the attack itself.
Donald Trump: We want a unified country. They said, “Don’t talk about the J6 hostages that you’re going to be releasing today.
Alex Wagner: Do you think now that he’s pardoned everybody, he can count on this group of people again?
Ben Pollock: Oh, absolutely. I would die for the man. I would have died for him that day.
Michael Fanone: There are no words to describe this moment other than I’ve been betrayed by my country.
Alex Wagner: Within hours of taking office, President Trump issued full pardons to roughly 1,500 J6 defendants.
So, on this first episode of “Trumpland with Alex Wagner,” I’m headed to D.C., but not for the inauguration. We’re headed to jail.
Unidentified Male: Thank you, President, for signing those pardons. And as always, as I’ve told everybody, remember the President adheres to his promises. Promises made, promises kept. Promises made, promises kept. Promises made, promises kept.
Alex Wagner: On the campaign trail, Donald Trump talked repeatedly about pursuing pardons for January 6 inmates if he was elected. You could read a lot into the fact that he referred to them as hostages.
But this outcome, the blanket pardon of 1,500 criminal defendants involved in the Capitol insurrection, is just about the most extreme version of what this might have looked like. Nobody really saw this coming, even Trump’s running mate.
Just eight days before being sworn in as vice president, JD Vance indicated quite strongly that violent offenders would not be granted pardons.
JD Vance: If you protested peacefully on January the 6th and you’ve had Merrick Garland’s Department of Justice treat you like a gang member, you should be pardoned. If you committed violence on that day, obviously you shouldn’t be pardoned.
Alex Wagner: But of course, that is exactly what Donald Trump did, literally hours after he was sworn in as president. And there was no better audience for that news on Monday night than the one outside the detention facility in Washington where an estimated 22 January sixers have been locked up, D.C. jail.
Unidentified Male: Praise God. Thank you so much, Lord Jesus, for doing the good work that we know that you do. Holy Spirit, you’re welcome here outside the D.C. gulag. We will be receiving our J6 hostages by midnight. This is going to happen.
Alex Wagner: The jail is a multi-story concrete building. From where we’re standing across the street, you can see an intake area, with large gates that open for vehicles and barbed wire spooled around the tops of the building. People are gathered in a small open patch of dead grass. It’s sloped downhill and there’s ice everywhere. But for the crowd of 50-ish die-hard January 6 supporters, this might as well be a summer barbecue. There’s music and singing and dancing. All that’s missing are the hot dogs.
Unidentified Male: Put your hands up, J6. Put your hands up, everybody. Let’s go, let’s celebrate for our freedom.
Alex Wagner: A small group of family and friends has been meeting outside this facility to hold a vigil and sing the national anthem while on the phone with the inmates inside.
(CROWD SINGING NATIONAL ANTHEM)
Alex Wagner: They’ve been doing this every night for over 900 days, and they’re getting impatient.
Unidentified Male: Hey, hey, D.C. gulag, let our people go!
Unidentified Male: Let our people go..
Alex Wagner: What have you heard about what the President is doing tonight?
Mickey Witthoff: I heard everybody’s getting out of jail. Tonight, we’ve had several released across the country.
Alex Wagner: But no one’s come out of D.C. jail.
Mickey Witthoff: Not yet.
Alex Wagner: I wasn’t here, but what was the reaction like when you heard the news?
Mickey Witthoff: It’s amazing. It’s what everybody’s been waiting for, for four years.
Alex Wagner: One of the main organizers of these vigils is Mickey Witthoff. They call her Mama Mickey and she’s become a second mother for countless January 6 defendants and their families. Mama Mickey is a no-bullshit kind of presence at these vigils, someone who both advocates loudly for the inmates inside the jail and keeps their supporters outside of it in line. She’s also the mother of Ashli Babbitt, the only January 6 protester who was shot and killed by Capitol Police.
You may have seen the video, a woman trying to climb through one of the doors where glass had been broken out. As the mob breaches an area of the Capitol until she’s taken down by a shot from a Capitol Police officer, a shot that proved to be fatal.
Babbitt was a 35-year-old Air Force veteran who had traveled to D.C. from California to be there that day. J6ers consider Babbitt a martyr for their cause and Mama Mickey a representative for family members of those prosecuted. She says she’s spoken to Donald Trump multiple times.
So, was anybody surprised or did everybody thought he was going to let everyone out?
Mickey Witthoff: He said he was and then when I talked to him last week, he said, tell them that he loves them, keep their chins up and he’s been supportive throughout. He’s called the vigil and talked to them over the phone and I am not surprised. And I think anybody that was there that day, even the men that weren’t perfectly well-behaved have done enough time and it’s time for them to come home.
Alex Wagner: You’ll have to forgive the music in the background, but as I mentioned, this gathering was part vigil, part protest, part celebration.
Do you think President Trump’s going to suffer any political fallout from pardoning people?
Mickey Witthoff: He suffers political fallout for whatever he does.
Alex Wagner: But I just mean there are some folks who are in jail who assaulted law officers (inaudible).
Mickey Witthoff: Well, there were lots of law officers that assaulted American citizens. They said that everybody came to overthrow the government and if you think about the fact that it was a gun-toting populist of the United States of America that showed up on the Capitol grounds, and the only weapon used was the one that was used to kill my daughter. So, American citizens did not show up to take over the government with water bottles and flag poles.
Alex Wagner: I just wonder if you think the whole country’s going to see it that way.
Mickey Witthoff: No.
Alex Wagner: So you think he’s taking a risk?
Mickey Witthoff: Absolutely.
Alex Wagner: I’m sure you feel like you’re going to have his back for this. What does that look like?
Mickey Witthoff: Trump supporters will always be Trump supporters. Haters might always be Trump haters, unless they give him a chance to be America’s president, which I believe he will be a president for all Americans. I believe right now, you know, with the system we have, with the Democrats and Republicans, and I think that our leaders, they divide us by example.
Alex Wagner: As we moved around the crowd, there was an older gentleman giving a speech while holding a huge American flag, one that he says he carried with him on January 6th. It’s gigantic, bigger than the bedspread on a California king. It’s also flying upside down.
Mickey Witthoff: 1,475 days.
Unidentified Male: You heard it first from Mama Mickey. God bless you. God bless the U.S.A! Feudal day, baby.
Alex Wagner: His name is Ben Pollock, and he’s here from Florida.
I’m with MSNBC.
Ben Pollock: Oh, hi.
Alex Wagner: Yeah. So, we’re out here, we’re trying to understand what’s happening.
Ben Pollock: Wow.
Alex Wagner: Yeah.
Ben Pollock: It’s about time I got to talk to you guys. I’ve been waiting —
Alex Wagner: Yeah, I’m sure.
Ben Pollock: — quite a while for an interview.
Alex Wagner: Well, here we are.
Ben Pollock: Yeah. Here we are, the last day.
Alex Wagner: Yeah. Well, we’re at the beginning of a whole new chapter.
Ben Pollock: Yeah, right. That’s right.
Alex Wagner: So, you’ve been out here holding vigil. Who do you have inside?
Ben Pollock: I got Jonathan Pollock and Olivia Pollock. We were all, as a family, came up on January 6th with our church. And I got friends, Michael Perkins, and he’s going to be released out of Coleman in Florida. And then I got another buddy on an ankle monitor. All my friends are locked up right now.
Alex Wagner: It’s your son and daughter?
Ben Pollock: Yes.
Alex Wagner: What are they in for?
Ben Pollock: They’re in for about everything.
Alex Wagner: We looked up the exact charges and just about everything isn’t a bad description. Jonathan faced 17 counts and multiple alleged felonies, including assaulting officers with a dangerous weapon. In Jonathan’s case, that meant charging at police with a flagpole. Among Jonathan’s other charges were violent entry, disorderly conduct and theft of government property.
Olivia was charged with multiple felony offenses along similar lines as her brother. She also assaulted police officers who were trying to contain the riot outside the Capitol.
Before the two were arrested last year, they were on the lam, running from law enforcement and evading accountability for three years. Now their trial, which was supposed to take place next month, has been scrapped. Their charges dropped and their release from the D.C. jail imminent.
Do you think now that he’s pardoned everybody, he can count on this group of people again?
Ben Pollock: Oh, absolutely. I would die for the man. I would have died for him that day.
Alex Wagner: I would die for the man. Here’s this father out here in almost zero-degree weather, flying a 10-foot-long American flag, waiting for his children to be released from jail. And his commitment to the guy who landed him in this nightmare is unwavering. So, yeah, I believe Ben Pollock.
The police had been maintaining a loose perimeter in front of the jail, insisting everyone stay across the street in the designated vigil area. But at one point, there’s some type of commotion coming from inside the jail, just beyond the glass doors that block our entry.
I think someone’s getting out. Should we go across the street? Yeah. All right, so, okay.
People start to run towards the front entrance of the jail. In a matter of seconds, there’s a large crowd.
Dozens of police stream out of the building and from down the street to form a barricade in front of the glass. The loose perimeter they had been maintaining is no longer so loose. The energy in the air is frenzied.
Watch out, Leon. Watch out. It’s like you’re on a mound of ice.
But whatever anyone initially thought, it does not appear anyone is being released. Police start to push us back to the park, slowly, and thankfully without issue.
Unidentified Female: Here all the time, don’t move.
Unidentified Male: May I have your attention, please. You guys can protest and say whatever you’d like from the comfort of the sidewalk and the park. Please do not try and come across the street. Thank you.
Alex Wagner: It ended up just being a brief interaction, but it was tense and it was hard to avoid how on the nose it all felt. January 6 participants and their family members rushing towards a line of officers, a reminder of how quickly a crowd can become a mob.
And then around 10 PM, a couple of well-dressed guys, perhaps just arriving after an inaugural ball, come out to announce that two prisoners, brothers Andrew and Matthew Valentin, have been released, unceremoniously, through a back exit. And it appears that’s probably it for tonight.
By 11 PM, police officers start leaving, and so do we.
Unidentified Male: Free J6.
Alex Wagner: We’re back the next day, January 21st, bright and early-ish, and so is the crowd. Very, very slowly, inmates from the D.C. jail are being released.
Did you get out today?
Rachel Powell: Yes, just a little bit ago.
Alex Wagner: And you weren’t here, right?
Rachel Powell: Yes.
Alex Wagner: You were here?
Rachel Powell: I was here for the last couple of weeks because I was waiting to be resentenced.
Alex Wagner: This is Rachel Powell, better known as “Bullhorn Lady” or “Pink Hat Lady,” along with her friend, Cynthia Hughes. According to prosecutors, on January 6th, Powell was part of a group of rioters who used a cardboard pipe as a battering ram to break a window at the Capitol. She also used an ice axe for a different window.
Powell wore a recognizable pink hat and used a bullhorn to give rioters instructions, telling them that they needed to coordinate together if they were going to take the building. Powell had only been at the D.C. jail for a few weeks after being moved from Hazelton federal prison in West Virginia. She was found guilty of a total of nine felony and misdemeanor offenses and served only one year of her five-year sentence.
The thing I wonder is, was there ever any moment in jail where you were, like, why am I here? Did you ever have any frustration with President Trump? Did you ever feel like he had landed you guys in jail?
Rachel Powell: No, no, absolutely not because I believe he really just wants to make America great again. Now, why was I sitting in prison when Anthony Fauci is loose? Why am I sitting in prison when Liz Cheney is loose? Why do those people get pardons? Because they’re guilty, but they were never brought to justice. And yet me, a mom, I made a mistake and broke a window at the Capitol. I’m sorry, but do I have to lose my whole life for it when we have these criminals running the government that now have pardons? That bothered me.
Cynthia Hughes: Donald Trump is not responsible for January 6th, okay? Grown men and grown women, whatever actions they took that day, they are responsible for themselves. And the country spoke loud and proud on November 5th, and they said, “Donald Trump is not responsible for January 6th,” and that’s what we believe.
Alex Wagner: We met another recent exoneree, a younger man, 31 years old, named Robert Morss. Morss has curly, long hair, which was being kept in place under a bright red Make America Great Again hat. Morss was one of several people who had been released from a different detention center, but came to Washington to show his support.
So my name’s Alex.
Robert Morss: Nice to meet you.
Alex Wagner: Nice to meet you.
When did you get out?
Robert Morss: Last night, 11:45 PM.
Alex Wagner: And where were you?
Robert Morss: I was in the Pittsburgh halfway house.
Alex Wagner: Okay.
Robert Morss: Yeah.
Alex Wagner: So, you were in a halfway house.
Robert Morss: Yes.
Alex Wagner: Can you explain how you ended up being there?
Robert Morss: Sure. So, on June 11th, 2021, I was arrested for my actions on January 6th.
Alex Wagner: Yeah.
Robert Morss: I spent the next three and a half years in prison. And then on August 29th of last year, I was released from prison to the halfway house in Pittsburgh.
Alex Wagner: Okay.
Robert Morss: And that’s where I remained until last night. And instead of going home and going to sleep, like I really wish I did right now, I decided to drive here.
Alex Wagner: In May of 2023, Morss was sentenced to 66 months for several charges, including assaulting, resisting or impeding officers with a dangerous weapon. Before January 6, Morss had served as an Army Ranger and did three tours in Afghanistan. He told me, he now feels like a new man.
Robert Morss: I’ve grown accustomed to being a felon. I’ve grown accustomed to having weight on my back and essentially trying to get used to the fact that my former life was just eradicated. Half of my friends and family don’t speak to me anymore. My brothers completely disowned me. My dad who raised me to fall in love with the Founding Fathers, read the Declaration of Independence on the 4th of July, barely even speaks to me, so this has not been easy.
When the Declaration of Independence ends with the last lines of them pledging their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor to each other, we kind of know what that’s like to have it all taken from us. So, it was a beautiful thing and almost like God’s poetry to have it slowly returned with a slate being wiped clean and being free at last.
Alex Wagner: Let me ask you something. You’ve been through this whole thing.
Robert Morss: Yes.
Alex Wagner: If Trump comes out and says, this is an issue that I need you guys to come out for me. I need you guys to show up for me. It may mean taking to the streets. Do you think that the people who just served years or months or weeks in prison would do that again for him?
Robert Morss: I can’t speak for everybody, but I can speak for myself, and the answer to that question would be yes. I think that Donald Trump is the only politician that we’ve seen in a long time that is not only willing to keep his word, but also who’s not willing to back down when he’s up against the wall.
I mean, this man’s been indicted. He’s been attacked. He’s been shot at.
Alex Wagner: He’s been attempted assassination.
Robert Morss: He’s been through hell. I mean, name anybody else that would have been willing to go through that stuff. And he’s admitted that he’s lost billions of dollars by being president. And so, I mean, whether you like him or you hate him, you got to respect that this man is not a quitter. And so if this man really needed us to show up somewhere, I can’t speak for anybody else, but since he’s not going to quit on the American people, I have no absolute right to quit on him, so I would show up.
Alex Wagner: We’re going to take a quick break. But when we come back, we’ll speak with someone who has risked everything to set the record straight on January 6th, and we’ll find out what Trump’s pardons have meant for him.
(ADVERTISEMENT)
Alex Wagner: Welcome back to “Trumpland.”
When you talk to friends and family members and the actual January 6 inmates themselves, there is a profound sense of victimhood, of grievance, a deep belief that they were wronged by the federal government and the Department of Justice. Very rarely do any of these folks acknowledge the violence of that day. And if they do, they often blame it on a conspiracy theory that January 6 was an inside job, as if to absolve themselves.
There is no proof of that, of course. And the record also plainly shows that January 6 was not a victimless crime. Ashli Babbitt was not the only person who died as a result of January 6. Police Officer Brian Sicknick died in the hospital after he was attacked at the Capitol. Countless law enforcement officers experienced lingering injuries and profound trauma. Police officers Howie Liebengood, Gunther Hashida, Kyle DeFreytag and Jeffrey Smith all later died by suicide.
During this trip, we were in touch with several current and former members of the Capitol Police who witnessed and were attacked at the Capitol on January 6. One of those men was Michael Fanone.
You might remember him. Fanone was an officer for the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department who was tased in the neck by a rioter. Right after he was attacked, Fanone suffered a heart attack and lost consciousness. Another rioter then dragged him into the crowd where a pro-Trump mob began beating him to the brink of death. A few months later, Fanone testified to the January 6 Committee about what had happened.
Michael Fanone: At one point, I came face-to-face with an attacker who repeatedly lunged for me and attempted to remove my firearm. I heard chanting from some in the crowd, “Get his gun and kill him with his own gun.”
Alex Wagner: He said that the rioters called him a traitor and that they only stopped their violent attack after Fanone pleaded that he has children. Fanone resigned from the force 11 months after January 6, reportedly ending his 20-year career in law enforcement with a resignation letter written on a napkin that read, “Go fuck yourselves.”
On Tuesday, my colleague Peter Alexander asked President Trump about his decision to pardon DJ Rodriguez, the man who tased Fanone during the January 6th insurrection. President Trump didn’t have a clear answer.
Peter Alexander: You would agree that it’s never acceptable to assault a police officer, right?
Donald Trump: Sure.
Peter Alexander: So, then if I can, among those you pardoned DJ Rodriguez. He drove a stun gun into the neck of a D.C. police officer who was abducted by the mob that day. He later confessed on video to the FBI and pleaded guilty for his crimes. Why does he deserve a pardon?
Donald Trump: Well, I don’t know. Was it a pardon? Because we’re looking at commutes and we’re looking at pardons?
Peter Alexander: Yes, it’s a pardon.
Donald Trump: Okay. Well, we’ll take a look at everything, but I can say this, murderers today are not even charged.
Alex Wagner: We’d had an interview planned with Fanone the day after the mass pardons, but in the morning, we got word that he was heading to the Prince William County Courthouse in Virginia to seek a protective order against several of the people who had just been pardoned by President Trump for their involvement in the Capitol attack.
We were still able to reach him, but by phone. Me inside our car outside of the D.C. detention center, and Michael Fanone heading to the courthouse.
I’m ready. Are you there, Michael? Mr. Fanone?
Michael Fanone: I’m here.
Alex Wagner: Hey, thank you for doing this.
Michael Fanone: Of course.
Alex Wagner: So I’m outside of D.C. jail. I was here last night and I’ve been, you know, trying to get a sense of how people are processing the moment. And I think it probably doesn’t surprise you that the families of the inmates are very excited. They feel like Trump has really delivered for them. And I’ve been wondering how this is all going over with you. What’s your reaction to the pardons and the news of the day?
Michael Fanone: I mean, there are no words to describe this moment other than I’ve been betrayed by my country.
Alex Wagner: Yeah.
Michael Fanone: I’ve been betrayed by those that supported the former president, now President of the United States. I’ve been betrayed by his political opponents, the Democratic Party. I’ve been betrayed by law enforcement.
Alex Wagner: Were you surprised that he pardoned basically almost all of them and commuted the sentences of the rest?
Michael Fanone: Donald Trump announced his candidacy in Waco, Texas. The scene of one of the bloodiest conflicts between the American fringe extremist movement and law enforcement. That’s where he chose to announce that he was running for president. And he’s been saying he was going to pardon each and every one of these violent criminals since day one.
Alex Wagner: This morning, you were going to seek a protective order. Can you talk a little bit about that?
Michael Fanone: I mean, listen, once those charges were dismissed and they received pardons, essentially, in addition to being released from prison, there’s no longer any order in place preventing these individuals from contacting myself and my family. These are individuals who violently assaulted me.
Alex Wagner: Yeah.
Michael Fanone: I was the victim in these criminal cases and in Trump’s Department of Justice, these people go free, and I have no recourse to protect myself and my family.
So, I’m seeking a protective order. I don’t know if it’s going to be granted to be totally honest with you.
Alex Wagner: Yeah. It occurs to me that this is also sending a separate message to people who would otherwise operate extra judicially outside the bounds of the law to do Trump’s bidding, right? He basically now has, well, at least, like, 1,100, 1,200, 1,300 people who have proven that they are willing to do whatever they need to, to keep Trump in power, and now he’s just freed all of them.
Michael Fanone: It says this. It says, this is the age of lawlessness. If you are a Trump supporter and you commit violent crimes on Trump’s behalf, Donald Trump will free you.
Alex Wagner: I wonder what you make of Trump is, as you point out, he’s president. He owns the Department of Justice. What about the other Republicans in office? I mean, does it concern you that the leadership in Congress seems kind of intent on forgetting what actually happened on January 6?
Michael Fanone: I don’t think they’re intent on forgetting what happened on January 6. I think they’re intent on changing the story of January 6 to a patriotic event in which thousands of American patriots fought back against the deep state. That’s going to be the new narrative. You know, I will be the villain in this story.
Alex Wagner: So, rewriting history in real time.
Michael Fanone: Correct.
Alex Wagner: You’re one of only a handful of law enforcement officers who’ve spoken out about this. Do you feel like other folks are watching this and have watched this all play out and are just trying to keep their heads down because they’re worried about their own safety?
Michael Fanone: I will never forgive the officers of the Metropolitan Police Department, U.S. Capitol Police who failed to bear witness to what they experienced on January 6th. I believe wholeheartedly that had there been hundreds of officers lined up to testify about their experience instead of four, that we may not be in this position that we are today.
That being said, it doesn’t just stop at the law enforcement officers. It stops at every American. It stops at anyone who has been adversely affected by Donald Trump and his surrogates and supporters. And anyone who has seen their neighbor adversely affected by Donald Trump and his surrogates and who refuse to step up, speak out, I would hope that journalists seize this moment and refuse to allow anyone in Congress or any elected official to escape taking a side on these pardons.
Alex Wagner: Can you tell me what else you’re doing today? So, you’ve already gone to file the protective order, is that right? Or are you on your way to do that?
Michael Fanone: I’m on my way to the courthouse now to file a protective order. After that, I am going to go with my ex-wife and help her with her first firearm.
Alex Wagner: Oh, wow.
Michael Fanone: This is very real for us. I don’t know if you followed some of the incidents involving my mother, but you know, she’s been swatted. She’s received threats. I’ve been confronted in public places and threatened. And she recently had someone throw a bag of feces on her —
Alex Wagner: Wow.
Michael Fanone: — while she was out raking the leaves in her front yard. This is very real. And unfortunately, law enforcement has been feckless in its ability or attempts to protect me and my family.
Alex Wagner: I don’t get it. I’m on the outside. I’ve never been in law enforcement, but how can cops —
Michael Fanone: I already know your question, Alex, and I’m going to answer it for you. The idea that police officers in this country, law enforcement officers, are stewards of the Constitution is bullshit. I was not a steward of the Constitution. I didn’t subvert it, but I looked at it as an impediment in doing my job. My job was to put bad guys in bad places.
And so the American law enforcement officer responds in a positive way when Donald Trump says things, like, we’re going to suspend the Constitution, and we’re going to let you loose in these communities. We’re going to get rid of crime in a day.
Alex Wagner: Yeah.
Michael Fanone: We’re going to let you go out there and do your job, which is just a dog whistle for beat the shit out of everybody that doesn’t comply. And that’s why you can’t rely on police officers and police departments to protect you in this age of government lawlessness.
Alex Wagner: It’s staggering to me that the people who assaulted law enforcement are being pardoned and standing law enforcement is okay with that. I don’t get it. I mean, I understand what you’re saying, but it’s still just an alignment between law enforcement and Trump that seems real unbreakable if they can get with this.
Michael Fanone: I mean, listen, my friend at The Washington Post asked Chief Pamela Smith at the Metropolitan Police Department to comment on this. And you know what her response was? “No comment.” The chief of the Metropolitan Police Department in Washington, D.C. —
Alex Wagner: Yeah.
Michael Fanone: — whose officers were violently assaulted by these individuals has no comment and it’s all fear. It’s the fear of Donald Trump taking office and what retribution lies in store for me if I simply speak the truth and say that this is an outrage.
Well, this is the example of evil exists and persists when good men do nothing. America is doing nothing.
Alex Wagner: We reached out to Michael Fanone the day after that phone call. He told us that the process to seek protective orders was a lot more difficult than anything he had expected. And to carry them out, he would have to find the location for each individual he was concerned about and serve them papers in person. And even then, the protective order would only last two weeks. He told our producers, quote, “That America simply doesn’t give a shit about justice.”
January 6 was a profoundly devastating moment for American democracy. The peaceful transfer of power, once a sacrosanct part of our unique system of self-governance, was trampled. And what’s clear this week is that the fracture that began that day, the tear in the fabric of our democracy, is nowhere close to being repaired.
With Trump’s elevation as the 47th President, the opportunity to degrade not just systems and institutions, but the truth itself, those opportunities will continue to present themselves in ways we can’t yet imagine.
Thanks for listening. We’ll be back next Thursday with a new episode of “Trumpland with Alex Wagner.” You’ll be able to find us in the “Alex Wagner Tonight” podcast feed or just search “Trumpland with Alex Wagner.”
To get this show and other MSNBC podcasts ad-free, just subscribe to MSNBC Premium on Apple Podcasts. As a subscriber, you’ll also get exclusive bonus content you won’t want to miss out on, especially as this new administration gets underway.
“Trumpland with Alex Wagner” is produced by Max Jacobs along with Julia DeAngelo and Kay Guerrero. Our associate producer is Janmaris Perez. Our crew is Enrique Larreal on audio and Liam Lee and Greg Purpura on camera. Our audio engineers are Bob Mallory and Katie Lau. And Bryson Barnes is our technical director. Matthew Alexander is the executive producer of “Alex Wagner Tonight,” and Aisha Turner is the executive producer of MSNBC Audio. And I’m your host, Alex Wagner. We’ll see you next week.








