Weaponizing police power to physically seize control of an independent nonprofit sets a precedent where executive âauthorityâ is enforced by force first and legality later, and that erodes every citizenâs expectation of due process. On these facts, the most plausible criminal exposure would hinge on whether officials knowingly exceeded lawful authority and used force or intimidationâpotentially implicating federal civil-rights offenses (18 U.S.C. § 242) and conspiracy (18 U.S.C. § 371), though the core injury is the normalization of coercive governance without judicial process. Even if prosecutors decline, the conduct flatly violates antiâabuse-of-power norms: government actors treated institutional disagreement as ânoncomplianceâ to be crushed, not a legal question to be resolved in court. When the state can enter, eject staff, and install leadership in a private entity by assertion and escort, our democratic stability becomes contingent on who controls the badge.