The Jedi did nothing wrong in "The Wrong Jedi" Arc, while Ahsoka did pretty much everything wrong. (Star Wars: The Clone Wars.)

One of my least favorite TCW arcs (then and now) has got to be "The Wrong Jedi" for a myriad of reasons, among them being the lazy character assassination of Barriss Offee because they forgot to give Ahsoka any other friends. But let's put that aside for now.

The general consensus among fans is that this arc shows the evil, corruption, (insert long trail of insults here) and arrogance of the Jedi Order. In the way that they cruelly throw Ahsoka under the bus and do nothing but play politics the entire time. It's in fact, so terrible, that Ahsoka (in her series) still hates them thirty years later and implies they all deserved to die in a genocide for it.

Except that's not what happened, at all. In fact, the Jedi were pretty reasonable that arc, especially when compared to Ahsoka Tano.

Note: I'm going to be sarcastic for comedic effect. I'm not trying to insult anyone who likes the arc or Ahsoka.

The crimes of Ahsoka Tano.

-So there's a bombing at the Jedi Temple, and they think they've caught the right person. The Jedi turn her over to the government and Ahsoka's so pissed off (because she wanted to make her PAY) that she outright questions the Chancellor to the face of a Republic Admiral. Then, when she goes to visit the suspect, she winds up dead via Force choke.

-The guards naturally suspect her and confine her to a cell. Only for Ahsoka to decide to bust herself out after spotting a keycard on the floor and assuming it must be from Anakin. She's quite smug about this and doesn't seem overly worried, for the record.

-Ahsoka runs right into the path of a pile of dead bodies (so if she stayed in her cell her name would've been cleared) and this prompts the guards to think she's a murderer and attack. However, Anakin arrives and takes control of security, telling her that he believes her and to simply come down so they can figure it out... Ahsoka runs away instead.

-She continues resisting arrest, assaulting clones/police, slicing terminals, teaming up with an infamous Separatist War Criminal (Ventress), and then is found with the bombs that were used to attack the Jedi Temple. Where she's finally arrested again, having accomplished nothing.

Her actions successfully subverts the entire investigation, as now everyone is focused on catching her before she does something stupid. So nobody's even looking for the real bomber, thanks Ahsoka!

Note that the Jedi Council's response to her breaking out of prison was to send two Jedi (and their clones) to catch her (not kill, mind you)... led by Anakin Skywalker and Plo Koon, the two who most believed in Ahsoka's innocence. Which I would call insanely compassionate on their part. They picked the two cared about her the most to bring her back, knowing they wouldn't take any risks with her life.

But somehow I'm meant to believe that the Council was out to get her.

The people versus Ahsoka Tano.

Having made herself look like the most guilty woman alive, the Council decides to interrogate her. People hold this scene up as the big "evil Jedi" example but if you actually stop and think about it they're behaving entirely rationally.

-Ki-Adi-Mundi asks her how the prior suspect died, Ahsoka's got nothing except to say someone used the Force to kill her.

-Plo Koon asks her to explain her association with Sith Assassin Ventress to them. Ahsoka replies in the most shady way possible with, "We had... an arrangement" then doesn't elaborate. If I didn't think she was guilty before, I would now.

-In the face of her dodging the previous question, Mace Windu tries to press her for details, sternly asking if Ventress was responsible for helping her acquire the bombs they found her with. Note that he's not even accusing her of the bombing itself yet.

-Ahsoka dodges the questions again and angrily declares (without evidence) that they're all deceived (something a disgruntled Jedi might say, perhaps? Providing motive for the bombing in their eyes).

-Mace Windu says that they know that someone is trying to deceive them and are simply trying to discover if its Ahsoka or someone else. This would be a perfect chance for Ahsoka to be honest with them, maybe confess that she acted irrationally but that she didn't commit the original crime, or apologize for her recklessness or...

-Nah, I'm just kidding, Ahsoka gets angrier and has an emotional outburst over being suspected. Yoda tries to encourage her a bit but Anakin ruins the moment by having an angry outburst of his own. And so, faced with zero evidence of her innocence and a mountain of evidence to the contrary, the Jedi say they're handing Ahsoka over to the authorities. Which still means there'll presumably be a trial or further investigation.

Oh, and as soon as he's no longer preoccupied chasing Ahsoka, Anakin immediately solves the crime and clears her name in roughly one quarter of an episode. Which he'd have presumably been able to do from the start if she hadn't gone off the rails.

Now there is one defense that's made for Ahsoka, and that's something like-

"But Ahsoka was a child, a baby, she'd barely even learned to walk! She had no knowledge, experience, or-"

Okay, in all seriousness the defense is that Ahsoka was only sixteen or seventeen at the time, therefore we shouldn't be surprised that she behaved this way, and that the Jedi are therefore still to blame.

There are a few problems with this defense. First off, Ahsoka's behavior isn't consistent with that of a scared child. A scared child would stay in the prison cell and/or go running to a trusted mentor when they called for her (saying he believed in her innocence), they wouldn't run amok and face off against the entire military as well as their own order, or work with a sworn enemy who'd tried to kill them in the past.

Secondly, Barriss Offee is the same age as Ahsoka. So let's imagine an AU where the Jedi caught her under suspicious circumstances, should they treat her with kids gloves too? Even though they're investigating a fatal bombing?

Thirdly, this defense is never used in-universe, it's only brought up by fans who apply hyperrealism to stories. In-universe, Ahsoka has led armies, helped spark a rebellion, and dueled Jedi killers without flinching. This might be a new situation but she's dealt with enough that she should be able to handle things with at least a modicum of composure. To say otherwise is to ignore the entire series.

In summary, the Wrong Jedi is held up as an example of Jedi corruption but really people are complaining that the Jedi weren't acting corrupt enough. Implying that they should've shown heavy bias toward Ahsoka and refused to follow the evidence pointing to her guilt.

Insult to injury, Star Wars Rebels then expects us to believe that Ahsoka became a master spy, lol. There's no way she'd be that subtle judging from the last time we saw her prior.