Anonymous wrote:At this point I am actively against statehood and counting down the number of Congress-people and their staffers who need to be mugged and murdered before Congress takes federal action on crime here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:![]()
#BlackLivesMatter
Stupidest thing a city has ever done.
Again … this was vandalism. Not the city.
How long was it left there to see?
Anonymous wrote:DC crimes are not prosecuted. They declined to prosecute 67% of local arrests. Philly was only 4% to give an example
DC is allowing crime to happen and not chosing to prosecute it they are eventually asking for it and voters are supporting it
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC crimes are not prosecuted. They declined to prosecute 67% of local arrests. Philly was only 4% to give an example
DC is allowing crime to happen and not chosing to prosecute it they are eventually asking for it and voters are supporting it
This is it right here. I personally know 3 DC residents who were the victims of crime and none of their cases were prosecuted. They returned "no paper" on every single case.
1. Carjacking. Victim provided very good description of the guys who did it, including a pair of distinct shoes. The guys were caught in the stolen car nearby. The descriptions matched and the one guy was wearing the shoes. Prosecutor chose to no paper due to lack of evidence. This was in 2022.
2. Robbery. Surveillance footage of the robbery was provided to the police. No prosecution. What's even better in this case is that the victim went to the location where her belongings were recovered and spoke with the manager of the business about security footage. The manager would not send her the footage (said the police could get it, tho) but allowed her to use her cell phone to record the screen. The person who robbed her and the person who ditched the belongings are the same. The police never even asked about any security footage from either location. This was in 2023.
3. B&E. Ring footage and inside video footage provided to the police. No prosecution. This was in 2023.
Make it make sense, please.
The young people of DC know they can pretty much do what they want and get away with it.
Anonymous wrote:At this point I am actively against statehood and counting down the number of Congress-people and their staffers who need to be mugged and murdered before Congress takes federal action on crime here.
Anonymous wrote:This is when I switched about face on statehood.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:754th carjacking yet--"In March Congress reversed a revision to Washington’s criminal code passed by the district council which, among many other changes, dropped mandatory minimum sentences for carjacking. It was the first time Congress had nixed a local law in three decades."
This is interesting and eye opening. This doesn't alarm anyone?
Yes. Charles Allen was very upset when Congress reversed his failed Crime Legalization Bill.
Anonymous wrote:754th carjacking yet--"In March Congress reversed a revision to Washington’s criminal code passed by the district council which, among many other changes, dropped mandatory minimum sentences for carjacking. It was the first time Congress had nixed a local law in three decades."
This is interesting and eye opening. This doesn't alarm anyone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:754th carjacking yet--"In March Congress reversed a revision to Washington’s criminal code passed by the district council which, among many other changes, dropped mandatory minimum sentences for carjacking. It was the first time Congress had nixed a local law in three decades."
This is interesting and eye opening. This doesn't alarm anyone?
Exactly. This was an outrage. There were so many marble mouthed explanations about why the criminal code was outdated and had to be revised, but this right here never made any sense and was completely outrageous (along with other proposed changes). I had a long email back and forth with Charles Allen in which he claimed he was actually tough on violent crime and not making carjacking a lesser crime. I was totally gaslit.
Anonymous wrote:754th carjacking yet--"In March Congress reversed a revision to Washington’s criminal code passed by the district council which, among many other changes, dropped mandatory minimum sentences for carjacking. It was the first time Congress had nixed a local law in three decades."
This is interesting and eye opening. This doesn't alarm anyone?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DC crimes are not prosecuted. They declined to prosecute 67% of local arrests. Philly was only 4% to give an example
DC is allowing crime to happen and not chosing to prosecute it they are eventually asking for it and voters are supporting it
Can we sue the AG for not doing its job and for endangering the people of DC?
Yes, you can!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:![]()
#BlackLivesMatter
Stupidest thing a city has ever done.
Again … this was vandalism. Not the city.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:![]()
#BlackLivesMatter
Stupidest thing a city has ever done.