What began as an odd string of tourist arrests over peeling paint has turned into a felony prosecution in the nation’s capital, as Olympian David Hearn fights Reflecting Pool charges with an aggressive legal defense.
A Grand Jury Indictment and a Not Guilty Plea
On July 9, 2026, U.S. Olympic canoeist David “Davey” Hearn appeared in D.C. Superior Court for his formal arraignment. Unlike the three tourists arrested earlier in the month, who face minor misdemeanor charges for property damage valued under $1,000, Hearn has been hit with a more severe felony count of destruction of public property. The U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia, Jeanine Pirro, alleges that Hearn caused more than $1,000 in structural damage.
Prosecutors allege that on June 19, Hearn was observed “forcefully and violently pulling up and removing the bottom liner” of the pool with both hands. Hearn entered a formal plea of not guilty. His defense team, led by prominent attorney Norm Eisen, insists Hearn did not tear or destroy any material, but merely touched a piece of the blue coating that was already detached and peeling off the bottom. Superior Court Judge Carmen McLean released the Olympian on his own recognizance. Hearn stoically accepted the terms, and his next status hearing is officially locked in for August 5, 2026.

Strategic Failure of the “American Flag Blue” Project
The escalating criminal prosecution comes amid a political embarrassment over the state of the landmark itself. This spring, President Donald Trump fast-tracked an extensive rehabilitation project for the 2,030-foot-long pool ahead of the country’s 250th anniversary celebrations over the July Fourth weekend.
The taxpayer-funded effort saw its budget balloon from an initial estimate of under $2 million to an astonishing $14 million. At the President’s personal direction, contractors applied a specialized lining in a custom hue labeled “American flag blue.” However, the expensive renovation immediately suffered major engineering failures. The chemical coating began heavily peeling and bubbling off the concrete floor, and the water rapidly turned green with invasive algae.
Former athletic peers and civic supporters packed the Washington courtroom to maximum capacity to protest the felony classification. Many argued that visitors who touched the loose paint were simply curious about why a $14 million public project had failed so spectacularly. As the legal teams prepare their discovery files, the political pressure surrounding Olympian David Hearn fighting the charges is just part of the plan. Trump has gotten his scapegoat.
My Opinion
This is a system designed to find a civilian scapegoat for a multi-million-dollar government failure. The Trump administration spent $14 million of taxpayer money on a vanity project to turn a historic pool “American flag blue,” only for the paint to immediately bubble up and turn into a green, algae-ridden soup because of terrible engineering.
To slap a decorated U.S. Olympian with a felony property destruction charge, threatening his freedom because he touched a piece of plastic liner that was already peeling off the floor during a bike ride, is completely unconscionable. As his attorney, Norm Eisen perfectly stated outside the courthouse, it is not a crime to touch water in the United States. Prosecutor Jeanine Pirro is using aggressive, theatrical language like “forcefully and violently pulling up a liner” to paint a world-class athlete as a dangerous vandal. This hyper-aggressive prosecution isn’t about protecting public property; it’s a desperate attempt by public officials to shift the blame away from their own staggering incompetence and intimidate citizens who point out the obvious.
Bottom Line
Outside the courthouse, waves of protesters carrying signs reading “The Deflection Pool” made it clear that public sympathy lies firmly with the embattled athlete. While Trump continues to focus on national infrastructure aesthetics, Hearn’s legal team is preparing to prove that the structural integrity of the basin was completely flawed long before their client ever stepped near the water. As Olympian David Hearn fights off the Reflecting Pool charges in front of Judge McLean next month, this case will serve as a definitive test of whether the federal government can use criminal indictments to cover up structural engineering blunders.





