Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The baby was left in the car seat on a street in SE but the car is still missing. Curious about where/with who?
https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/4-month-old-girl-found-after-being-taken-in-georgetown-car-theft/3508529/
Thank goodness she is safe.
I hope these guys get charged with kidnapping and child abuse, and get put away for a long time.
Sounds like these guys are on the loose joyriding in the jeep? At our councilmembers safety walk the USAO representative told us they can't charge carjackers cos when four sets of prints are found they don't know who the jacker was.. COMPLETE IMPUNITY and zero solutions offered.
That really seems like laziness. If a link is found between all the suspects, clearly they all carjacked together.
Nope, not according to the communications guy from prosecution at the Council meet n' greet. We brought up carjackings (a friend of ours has been carjacked in DC), and according to the rep, "carjacking cases are very hard to prosecute because who is to say the person who is found with the car is the one who stole it?" So... they don't prosecute. Interpret that as you will.
What in the world is the logic of this? If a diamond necklace is stolen from someone and a person is found in possession of that necklace surely they can reasonably be charged with theft? Same with just about any other stolen goods. What is special about a car that we would think innocent people are just routinely driving stolen vehicles.
And why not at least charge with possession of stolen goods. If they want that charge dropped they can give a name of who they believed gave them lawful possession of the car? If you’re found with a vehicle that is stolen and you are innocent, you should have a reasonable story as to how this happened. Hand over the name.
Nope. They're like oh the car passes through many hands, who knows who stole it, oh well! When stolen cars are recovered they don't even dust them for prints (firsthand experience when we recovered our own stolen, not jacked car).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The baby was left in the car seat on a street in SE but the car is still missing. Curious about where/with who?
https://www.nbcwashington.com/news/local/4-month-old-girl-found-after-being-taken-in-georgetown-car-theft/3508529/
Thank goodness she is safe.
I hope these guys get charged with kidnapping and child abuse, and get put away for a long time.
Sounds like these guys are on the loose joyriding in the jeep? At our councilmembers safety walk the USAO representative told us they can't charge carjackers cos when four sets of prints are found they don't know who the jacker was.. COMPLETE IMPUNITY and zero solutions offered.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why can’t people get ahold of their teens. Curfew curfew curfew
This happened at 6 pm? No curfew is going to fix this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This city can't gentrify fast enough.
Do you think there is more gentrification coming? I know quite a few UMC/MC folks who are considering leaving. I've been in DC for a long time and for the first time ever I've started to consider relocating.
Anonymous wrote:(comments on the WashingtonianProbs instagram)
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A lot of heat for the mom. When I was a kid it was perfectly safe to leave kids or a baby in the car to for a quick store run. Would also walk to the store alone in elementary school at age 5. In safer countries women leave babies in strollers on the front steps to put their groceries in. Those countries are disappearing and those times are gone. She apparently thought Georgetown and its million dollar realty prices were safe.
I’m 45 years old and grew up in upstate NY, and it was never acceptable to leave a 4 month old unattended in a running vehicle while you go shop for perfume.
Anonymous wrote:I’ll say it. I left my child in the car when she was a baby to run into the dry cleaners or other similarly-quick things. The car was always off and locked. It wasn’t smart, but parents of young kids get desperate sometimes.
This is a bit less sympathetic in that it was a perfume store, not mom picking up dry cleaning she needs for work. But still.
Anonymous wrote:I hate it here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’ll say it. I left my child in the car when she was a baby to run into the dry cleaners or other similarly-quick things. The car was always off and locked. It wasn’t smart, but parents of young kids get desperate sometimes.
This is a bit less sympathetic in that it was a perfume store, not mom picking up dry cleaning she needs for work. But still.
This is different, tho, because the car was seemingly left unlocked and running.
Anonymous wrote:
heartwarming? kidnapping an infant and then abandoning it outside?
Anonymous wrote:I’ll say it. I left my child in the car when she was a baby to run into the dry cleaners or other similarly-quick things. The car was always off and locked. It wasn’t smart, but parents of young kids get desperate sometimes.
This is a bit less sympathetic in that it was a perfume store, not mom picking up dry cleaning she needs for work. But still.