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MILWAUKEE - Sentencing for Hannah Dugan, the former Milwaukee County judge convicted of obstructing federal agents from carrying out an immigrant enforcement operation at the courthouse last year, is now on hold.
Dugan and her defense team requested a new trial and an acquittal, but U.S. District Judge Lynn Adelman denied that request in April. She was then scheduled to be sentenced at 10 a.m. on June 3.
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But on Tuesday, days before the sentencing date, Adelman signed an order to hear oral arguments for Dugan's motion that he reconsider a prior order denying dismissal of the case.
Those oral arguments are scheduled for 10 a.m. on June 3, and Dugan's sentencing has been adjourned as a result.
Hannah Dugan leaves federal Courthouse in downtown Milwaukee
The backstory:
A grand jury's two-count indictment accused Dugan of obstructing federal agents and helping an undocumented man evade those agents, who planned to arrest him inside the Milwaukee County Courthouse to arrest him in April 2025. Prosecutors said Dugan told the agents to go to the chief judge's office down the hall and then directed the undocumented man and his attorney to leave her courtroom through a back door.
In December, a jury found Dugan guilty of felony obstruction but not guilty of the misdemeanor charge that accused her of helping the undocumented man evade the agents. She resigned as judge in early January.
Eduardo Flores-Ruiz, the man Dugan was accused of helping, was ultimately arrested outside the courthouse. He later pleaded guilty to illegally reentering the U.S. and, in November, was deported.
The Source: FOX6 News referenced information from prior coverage of Dugan's case, trial, resignation and request for a new trial and acquittal.