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#8 years of witness for the Prosecution
renegadesstuff · 3 months
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The secret “I love you” signal 🤏
S8E10, “Witness for the Prosecution” aired 8 years ago (February 14, 2016) 💖
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the jurist system seems really cool i hope they keep using it :-)
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🌈 lawsbian Follow
hey girl. am i a suspect. because you can "court" me any time
🧊 just--ice Follow
try.
🌈 lawsbian Follow
hey girl. am i a suspect. because you can "try" me any time
🌈 lawsbian Follow
hey girl. are you a lawyer. because you can "try" to "court" me any time
🌈 lawsbian Follow
hey girl. am i on trial.
🌈 lawsbian Follow
i'm determined to make this work btw
🌈 lawsbian Follow
hey girl. law
🔪 violencekilling Follow
hey girl. are you a murderer. because ow ough ouch agh stop stabbing me
732,390 notes
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🌟 rockliker270 Follow
guys watch out hes gonna shelly de kill you
293,485 notes
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🎀 copiicat Follow
they called me to the witness stand and the defense attorney just shouted "BOOOOOO WE HATE YOUR PUSSY"
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🧇 edible-evidence Follow
look if i was on trial and the guy prosecuting me started advertising his music i'd just plead guilty. avoid the embarrassment of getting put in prison by a guy who basically used the trial to say "this blew up btw here's my soundcloud"
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⚖️ courtofpublicopinions Follow
💞 lawveyourself Follow
didnt miles edgeworth defend someone in a case once
⛲ fountainoftruth Follow
do you know the difference between a prosecutor and a defense attorney
270,934 notes
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💟 longingforyou Follow
being rivals isn't enough i need to kiss you
💟 longingforyou Follow
who the fuck is evil magistrate
💟 longingforyou Follow
STOP TAGGING THIS WITH LAWYERS?????
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🐈 nyattorney Follow
they hired a guy to stand in court and shout "GET A ROOM YOU TWO" whenever the lawyers start getting a little too homoerotic
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💥 courtroomchaos Follow
your honor i know all the evidence points to my client being guilty. but come on you have to admit he kinda ate right
💼 courtofwaw Follow
mia fey when they had phoenix wright on trial
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🔍 thuthseeker Follow
ok hot take but i feel like these lawyers should maybe not be allowed to drag literal children to court with them?? how many people have gotten genuinely actually fucking SHOT in court and they're just ok bringing fucking 8 year olds in?
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💼 courtofwaw Follow
happy almost christmas to all who celebrate
💫 dizzydreamers124 Follow
it's march
🎄 holidazed Follow
happy almost christmas :)
😈 knownjaywalker Follow
WHO is putting this on my dash
👁️ cymorgue Follow
STOP POSTING THIS. IT IS JUNE.
🐼 pandastar91 Follow
ITS ALMOST CHRISTMAS!!!!!!!
1,589,589 notes
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💽 platinumcourtrecord Follow
evil gavinners be like. innocent hate. this is a nothing post
19,384 notes
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🥚 eggvidenced Follow
STOP asking me about the dl-6 post idc idc look even phoenix wright forged evidence once shut up
📕 lexculpatory Follow
he didn't forge the evidence, though. it was kristoph gavin who ordered the forgery. this was covered in the trial of vera misham. if you're going to try to compare yourself to well known figures, you could at least check the veracity of your claims.
🥚 eggvidenced Follow
yeah well. he might have. on a different case or something.
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🃏 thecourtjester Follow
i tried to take the bar exam but they didnt let me because i wasnt cunty and traumatized enough
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😇 innosense Follow
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683,876 notes
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🦀 mad_libz_87 Follow
when will global studios realize that i do not WANT another shitty steel samurai spinoff i just want the original show back
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⚖️ courtofpublicopinions Follow
she present on my evidence til i reach a verdict
⚖️ courtofpublicopinions Follow
WRONG BLOLG. DON'T REBLOG THIS. DELETE POST DELETE POST DELETE POST I SWEAR WE'RE PROFESSIONALS HERE
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👑 courtroyals Follow
"we need more great prosecutors" you guys couldn't even handle manfred von karma
🧊 just--ice Follow
didn't he kill someone?
👑 courtroyals Follow
irrelevant. you guys couldn't handle him.
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📋 lawandwhoreder Follow
law: i'm so law
lawyer, who needs to one up everyone no matter what: i'm more law than you
🏛️ lawyest Follow
hi
📋 lawandwhoreder Follow
you've got to be fucking kidding me
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🧊 just--ice Follow
why is it always murders with lawblr. why don't we ever talk about divorce or something
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irelandking · 9 months
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avenger bucky x regular reader fic recs
bucky barnes x reader
❤️ = fluff 😔 = angst 🔥 = smut 📱 = social media au
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multiparts/series:
the shot heard round the tower - @pellucid-constellations
Part 2: Unwarranted Weakness You just want to know if Bucky has feelings for you. Bucky just wants you to be okay. ❤️😔
flowers bloom - @teamatsumu
soulmate au, Whenever someone is injured, flowers bloom on their soulmate at the area of the wound. She is born with flowers around her entire left shoulder. ❤️
hero for hire - @delicatelyherdreams
Tired of constantly being sat on the sidelines for missions, Bucky Barnes decides that he’s going to do his own hero work and offer his services to the public as a freelance “hero for hire.” He expects to be asked to rescue cats from trees or help little old ladies cross the street, but he doesn’t expect to get tangled up in your life. He definitely doesn’t expect to fall for you either. But, when you’re a hero for hire, you’ve gotta see the mission through ❤️😔
under oath - @ugh-supersoldiers
The people called for justice, the state answered. The trial of State v. Barnes is set to begin, and the odds are most certainly not in favor of the not so beloved ex Winter Soldier. That’s where you come in, the quick, smart, and all too brave lawyer set on defending and saving one Bucky Barnes from legal prosecution. The only problem? He’s not so sure he’s worth saving at all. 😔🔥
little boy blue - @samingtonwilson
Next Parts: Little Bo Peep, Sticks and Stones, A was an Apple Pie steve coaxes bucky to go on one of his classroom visits ❤️
wordpeddler - @heli0s-writes
An online petition for the Avengers to be interviewed turns into a series of misadventures with the so-called wordpeddler. ❤️📱
sure, jan - @buckysmischief
While writing your college history paper on WWII, you decide to tweet your favorite avengers, Steve Rogers and Bucky Barnes, for help. They were also the most qualified. It’s not like they would actually reply, right? ❤️📱
must've been the wind - @pies-writes-and-more
Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, Part 5 Bucky helps reader out of an abusive situation 😔
play pretend - @bucky-bucky-bucky-bucky
part 2 you ask bucky to pretend to be your boyfriend in a bar ❤️🔥
cookies, kisses, and such - @stevebabey
part 2: candlelight and cuddles bucky moves in next door to you and you bake him cookies ❤️
sunrise - @wkemeup
After an explosion takes his arm and his only sense of belonging, Bucky is discharged from active duty and sent back to civilian life. Left with a storm of unchecked guilt, Bucky is content to live out the rest of his days in the hollow comfort of the dark. This is, until Sam drags him down to the local VA and he meetsyou. (Modern AU) parings: bucky x reader (veteran!bucky x librarian!reader) ❤️🔥
uncle buck - @enchantedbarnes
You take your nephew to a Bucky Barnes and Sam Wilson Q&A event. The mischievous 8-year-old asks if he can get in line to ask a question. Against your better judgement you agree and let him go up by himself. ❤️
oh no, that's bad - @andyl394
You’re a college student, you’re mad angry, Bucky ruins your paper, that’s not good is it? ❤️📱
bucky's bistro dates - @wonderlandmind4
A Bistro owner is witness to Bucky Barnes bad dates. ❤️
café crema - @wonderlandmind4
The first time was an accident. The second time was coincidence. The third time is just unlucky. The fourth time is getting out of hand and the fifth may or may not be with intent. Otherwise known as The One Where He Spills Her Coffee. ❤️🔥
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pet-genius · 2 years
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Too Deep for the Healing
I made this post because I witnessed a massively triggering reddit debate, but the mods at r/harrypotter wouldn't post it (I admit, I asked a friend to post it for me). Trigger warning: Sexual Assault.
So, did James commit sexual assault against Snape?
The opener is a trick question, because “sexual assault” is technically a term of art in law and in psychology. Wizards aren’t governed by any Muggle legal system and the Hogwarts library doesn’t carry the DSM. For that matter, wizards are also fictional and written by an author, so whether something falls under a technical definition from an entirely different semantic field (psychology and law… vs. YA fantasy literature) is meaningless.
With that said, in all fairness, if you apply the technical criteria, it definitely was sexual assault. 
From the England and Wales Rape Crisis website:
<<The Sexual Offences Act 2003 says that someone commits sexual assault if all of the following happens:
They intentionally touch another person (James declared intent)
The touching is sexual (if the very act of using Levicorpus on Snape wasn’t sexual in itself, the threat that followed surely was)
The other person does not consent to the touching (no brainer)
They do not reasonably believe that the other person consents (no brainer and kind of the point)
The touching can be with any part of the body or with anything else (let’s say that if the British legislator had had the foresight to include wizards, they would have added “wand”)>>
Also from that website:
<<There are many other ‘tactics’ that someone might use to sexually assault someone. For example:
bullying>>
So there you are.
Sure, some people view this as “pantsing,” a cutesy way to refer to the (perplexing) act of surprisingly taking off a person’s pants. When I (F) was about 8, a classmate (M) opened the door to my bathroom stall in front of other kids to poke fun at me, and I gotta say it never registered and still doesn’t register as a sexual assault because we were literal children. Shitty, it might have been, but… meh. James wasn’t 8, or 10. I just can’t imagine anyone old enough to shave, who doesn’t have serious developmental issues, not understanding that genitals aren’t just “funny”. But if one insists on classifying it as “pantsing,” they should refer to the Wikipedia entry, which speaks of a 5-second long process, not the culmination* of a protracted affair. Also from Wikipedia: “The United States legal system has prosecuted it as a form of sexual harassment of children.”
*I hope it was the culmination: we don’t see if it went that far so we obviously can’t know if it might have gone even further.
So if one were to be fair while applying strict technical terms to James’s action (assuming he went through with it), one would have to cede the point. The term “sexual assault” might be emotionally charged, but going by objective definitions, it applies.
But of course it’s the emotional charge that matters here, because again, IT’S A BOOK. So I suppose there’s no escaping asking ourselves if James went through with his threat*. It’s more likely than not, since the scene could have easily ended with James being interrupted, or even saying “just kidding, I don’t want to make everyone cry, his face is ugly enough.” His furious expression and the fade-to-black suggest that he did. Also, to feature nudity in a YA novel (in which James is, after all, intended as a positive character) would have been literally impossible. The implication is heavy enough. And honestly, I really would like to know who watches a sitcom where the characters start kissing, discuss having sex, and get as naked as the censors would allow before the scene is cut… and needs help figuring out what’s going on here. For James to catch himself on time and not follow through might have been a very compelling way to start his redemption arc, but as we know, that took another year+.
*If he didn’t, it’s mere sexual harassment. But then, to turn the James defenders’ argument against them… it’s one memory out of his entire life. Who’s to say he wasn’t even worse on other occasions? After all, the title “Snape’s Worst Memory” is, in retrospect, about Lily - not the bullying, which was very clearly business as usual.
If Snape had been a girl, it would have been a no brainer. If James had been Snape’s victim, let’s be real, it would have been a no brainer too.
We know what happened had because what happened traumatized Snape… and Harry. Immediately after he saw it, Harry wondered if his dad might have somehow forced his mom to marry him. In HBP he is still unable to tell Ron and Hermione what he had seen in the Pensieve, and doesn’t even say anything when he remembers Snape had called Lily a mudblood. Even in DH, two years after he had seen the memory, he looks away rather than watch the scene unfold again (and the phrasing - “But Harry kept his distance this time, because he knew what happened after James had hoisted Severus into the air and taunted him; he knew what had been done and said” - is highly suggestive). Also, since it's a book, here's the traditional end-of-book canonical voice of the author explaining to us how we ought to feel:
“I trust Severus Snape,” said Dumbledore simply. “But I forgot — another old man’s mistake — that some wounds run too deep for the healing. I thought Professor Snape could overcome his feelings about your father — I was wrong.”
This is the same Dumbledore who had, a book earlier, expected Snape and Sirius to play nice, the same Dumbledore who can criticize a man who had just expired in front of his grieving godson, so if he says Snape could not overcome his feelings about James, he probably had good reason to.
We know Snape only bothered to hide very few memories in the Pensieve, presumably the highly volatile and top-secret ones, during the occlumency lessons. We know Snape was surprisingly okay with Harry infiltrating his embarrassing childhood memories, and it was only Harry viewing SWM that drove him over the edge, up to and including defying Dumbledore. We know that it was Harry’s attempt at Levicorpus that made Snape lose it during the HBP confrontation (and not Sectumsempra or even Crucio). In short, we know he’s traumatized. To insist that he’s not legitimately traumatized, but just bitter and petty about getting one-upped and defeated by James or whatever, is not only cruel but also exactly how people react to victims in real life. Minimization, victim-blaming, and denial. How damaging, to be a victim and see this shit, honestly.
Sure, you can interpret Snape as petty and bitter, and you would be right. But you gotta admit the hatred for James rivals all else. Easy - James got Lily*. It’s not Snape’s (valid) trauma, it’s his (incelly, entitled, invalid) jealousy. Except that Snape could have very easily attempted to use a love potion on Lily himself, or taken some measure - any measure - to alleviate his jealousy. And when others accuse him of jealousy, it’s never about Lily or romantic success in general - it’s about James’s Quidditch skills. JKR, however, supplements:
“James always suspected Snape harboured deeper feelings for Lily, which was a factor in James' behaviour to Snape."
Assuming she doesn’t mean “James thought Snape was morally in the wrong for having feelings for Lily,” the more viable interpretation was “James did not appreciate someone else having feelings for Lily.”
*Never mind that James got Lily long after Snape’s supposedly irrational hatred for James reared its head, so.
James intends the removal of Snape's underpants as an escalation of the verbal and physical violence. What's left, after that? Where do you escalate to, from physical violence? It's a reaction to being romantically rebuffed, and compared (unfavorably) to Snape. Jealousy drove James's behavior, not Snape's behavior, and accusing an assault victim of only acting this way because he's jealous of his assailant is... a choice. Especially when the assailant is dead, and so is the object of jealousy, and there's literally nothing and no one left to be jealous of anymore.
Jealousy explains few to none of Snape’s actions, and rather a lot of what James got up to.
Do we need to discuss what the Death Eaters did to the poor Muggle woman at the Quidditch World Cup? That Draco wasn't trying to be helpful in warning Hermione to run away, but rather was attempting to belittle her by alluding to her sexuality? Do we need to, really? Do we need to recall that Voldemort himself described the Death Eaters' behavior (which wasn't as atrocious as James's) as "Muggle Torture"?
How much do we need to be spoon-fed? “Sexual assault” is a charged term? Good. That scene is meant to be appalling. There’s a reason it’s one of the most detailed, graphic and harrowing scenes. It’s important for understanding these characters.
If JKR had wanted to write James as noble, if arrogant, and Snape as jealous and full of unjustified hatred  toward James, she could have. It’s Snape’s hatred toward poor Harry that’s invalid, as the text comments on.
If one feels that to call someone a “sexual assaulter” is to caricaturize them or unfairly malign them when they’re actually more nuanced and complex than that, I can only reply that they can take it up with the author who had made her character that way. If we want to believe a sexual assaulter can grow, change and atone, good on us for our optimism and compassion, although I hope we reserve some for the victims. If we want to believe James, specifically, did - it’s not my cup of tea, but knock yourselves out. But not calling a spade a spade is not the solution and is not helpful.
One last point. I’ve seen it argued that calling James a sex offender is somehow harmful to “real” victims, because it trivializes “real” sexual violence. Funny, that. Funny that feminists fought with tooth and nail for less exacting interpretations that would protect as many people as possible, and then here we are, resorting to (incorrect) technical classifications to avoid calling someone a sex offender, when being a sex offender is nearly his entire claim to fame. Funny, that suddenly gatekeeping is okay and even beneficial. Funny that we think that if we salvage someone from being considered a sex offender by the strictest definitions, it makes his actions remotely okay. Funny that we need to be reminded again, in 2022, that sexual violence is sometimes about sex, but always about power. That men can be and often are victim, That many people, including many “real victims” (in the sense that they are not fictional and are also victims) take great comfort in the representation of a believable survivor who is nevertheless a hero (and a cautionary tale).
This argument is ridiculous and borders on immoral. No one in their right mind would call Harry’s friends sex offenders as they exposed his form shamelessly while under the effect of Polyjuice Potion. That indeed would be trivializing, so no one does it. It’s especially ridiculous for a fandom that is so adept at understanding parallels and allusions to real life when they’re much less fitting, but instructive all the same, such as house-elf <> slave, lychanthropy <> other stigmatized conditions, and Death Eaters <> Nazis and other hate groups. What's trivializing is the idea that one can atone for and move on from the sexual assault they committed by being nice to some other people. What's trivializing is to maintain that there's a proper way to be a victim, complete with a timeline for healing (and that if you don't comply, you're probably not even a victim). For what it’s worth (and it should not be worth anything), I personally have all the authority and moral high ground I need to make this point.
Hate Snape all you want. He’s a bastard. Criticize his coping mechanisms, by all means. They’re inadequate and toxic - but let’s not tell ourselves he has no need for them. Love James if it makes you happy. Many beloved people are sex offenders and their unlovable victims are… just that, and pretending this isn’t so is helping no one.
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alphaman99 · 4 months
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Harley Butcher
Glenn Glazier posted:
Liberals: "Show us proof that Biden is corrupt and is destroying the country."
Conservatives: "We have lowest Consumer Confidence Index in 40 years, the highest suicide rate since 1941, and our food and gas prices have doubled in the last 3 years."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "Our border is wide open, and there are 8 MILLION unvetted illegals here now that weren't here 3 years ago, many from Hamas, Iran, China, and Russia, many of them with sworn allegiance to our destruction."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "In addition to the MILLIONS of unknowns in our country, our open border is allowing for the import of Fentanyl, which kills MORE Americans per every 6 months than all U.S. soldiers killed during the entire 10 years of the Vietnam War."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "Crime is rampant in our cities, stores are closing down due to Blue State & city D.A.'s no longer prosecuting theft, and citizens can no longer protect themselves."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The World is at war –– Russia invaded Ukraine; Hamas committed the greatest slaughter of Jews since Nazi Germany; ISIS & the Taliban are back in Afghanistan, and they took control of $Billions in U.S. military hardware that Biden left behind during his haste withdrawal; and China is stealing our technology unchecked."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "China released a manmade virus that killed Millions worldwide, potentially injured Billions, destroyed the World's economies, and the U.S. allowed China to get away with it."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "Biden is allowing China to buy up massive swaths of farmland in the U.S., some of which is adjacent to U.S. Military bases."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The Biden Administration FORCED people to take a jab which was KNOWN to be ineffective & toxic, and simultaneously and purposely suppressed information about safe & effective treatments for Covid . . . they even FALSELY stated that the shot would prevent Covid, even though the Pharma companies never even tested for blockage of viral transmission."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The Biden Family has been proven to launder money that was given to them as they sold influence of U.S. policies that benefit our sworn enemies."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The Biden Administration is continuing the policy of the 0bama Administration of allowing members of Congress to illegally 'Insider Trade'."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "There was massive voter fraud in the 2020 & 2022 elections. We have video documentation of this, voter distribution anamolies that are statistically impossible, and hundreds of sworn affidavits from Election Officials declaring that they witnessed outright fraud . . . . and worse yet, Biden has weaponized the DOJ to prosecute anyone challenging the election results, even though in 2020 Trump won 2 out of every 3 walk-in ballots whilst Biden 'won' 3 out of every 4 mail-in ballots; Trump won 18 of the 19 bellwether counties that have determined EVERY election since 1952; and 20% of people who mailed in ballots now admit to (illegally) submitting falsified ballots."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The Biden Administration is forcing us to adopt Green Energy policies, like the Electric Vehicle, which (A) actually does far greater damage to the environment than our gas-engine cars do, and (B) they are forcing Americans in the near future to purchase cars that can be remotely shut OFF at any time by some Bureaucrat in D.C., and (C) this is all to chase a HOAX called 'Climate Change' . . . and the only reason it's now called 'Climate Change' is because Climatologists couldn't get the Global Warming and Global Cooling models to agree with each other."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The Biden Administration wants to bail out student loan debt, thinking that college-age kids weren't old enough or wise enough to recognize that their useless degrees won't yield them jobs that can pay off their loans, but at the same time the Biden Administration IS declaring that 12-year old kids ARE old enough and wise enough to know if they're the wrong gender; hence, Team Biden is promoting hormone blockers and genital surgeries for kids, and some Blue States are threatening to remove kids from homes if the parents protest."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The Biden Administration is pushing for digital currency, where Gov't not only monitors every penny of every transaction that every American makes, but has also the ability to deny you access to your own money should you not, in their eyes, be spending YOUR money wisely."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "If an adult has child porn on their computer, that adult goes to prison . . . but if a Teacher shows porn to elementary school children, then that Teacher is exalted."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "Even though Governors, the CDC, the FDA, WHO, Fauci, and Biden were wrong about ...E.V.E.R.Y.T.H.I.N.G... related to Covid and the vax-jab, NY State just granted the Governor legal authority to remove, arrest, and detain anyone the Governor and/or her cronies determines is 'a health risk to the public,' with the person being quarantined INDEFINITELY without Legal Counsel, without Medical representation, and without even undergoing medical testing."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The Supreme Court of Colorado has just removed Trump's name from the ballots for the 2024 Presidential Election, even though Trump has NOT been convicted of any crime, thereby dismissing what has been the basis of our entire legal system since the birth of our nation, namely, the presumption of innocence –– you're 'innocent until proven guilty'! In other words, Blue State Judges are telling Americans, 'No, you don't get to decide who becomes President; WE do!' "
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "The Biden Administration & its DOJ suppressed all video evidence of Jan. 6th protestors being escorted into the Capitol by Capitol Police."
Liberals: "Other than that, show us some REAL proof."
Conservatives: "While the Biden Administration & its DOJ are violating the 1st Amendement by prosecuting those who are challenging the 2020 Presidential election, they are NOT prosecuting the Hamas Supporters on college campuses and in big cities who are calling for the mass slaughter of Jews."
Liberals: "Okay, yes, we grant you that all of that is true, but . . . but . . . but Trump said the word 'pussy'!! There is no way this nation can possibly survive another 4 years of Donald Trump."
****************
And THAT is the "dialogue" that we have with the Left at this sad point in U.S. history.
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atqh16 · 7 months
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Sasunaru bodyguard au PART 1/?
To say that life had been hectic for the past few weeks would've been an understatement. Something that tends to happen when you find yourself a witness to a murder and are told that your testimony has the potential to convict and put away one of the most dangerous criminals in Konoha. An effort made difficult by the fact that any witnesses they had before were either found dead or were too scared to testify and understandably so. But this time they had one ace up their sleeve.
The culprit knew there was a witness but they didn't know who.
It wasn't much but the prosecuting team would take what they could get but still, the DA and his associates weren't taking any chances. So when Naruto had been told about how they were going to proceed it hadn't been a surprise.
This is how he finds himself at an unfamiliar old-fashioned soba shop sitting cross-legged in front of one of the DA's associates. Their noodles and order of tempura arrive just as another man joins them.
A very, very familiar man.
Sasuke Uchiha barely spares him a glance. Instead, he busied himself with pulling out a thin folder from his backpack.
The associate slides his untouched bowl of noodles to the newcomer before standing up and giving Naruto a warm smile.
"You have my card Uzumaki-san. You can call me anytime you'd like. I'll leave you both to be acquainted "
He puts on his hat and makes his way to the entrance to the shop. Leaving Naruto wide-eyed and alone with his estranged best friend who he hasn't seen in almost a decade.
"Uzumaki-San-"
Uzumaki-San?????
"My name is Uchiha Sasuke, I'm a licensed PI from Taka-investigations - "
" I know", Naruto interrupted, brows creased but the other man didn't seem to notice.
"- I'm also registered as a personal protection specialist- "
"Yeah, I know. Itachi told me", Naruto added hotly. But the Uchina didn't even look up from the folder he'd brought. Lying open on the table and is currently being skimmed through by its owner.
"- I've collected some info on the current situation and on your daily activities that will hopefully aid me in protecting you as best as I can - "
"You know Sakura is going to kill you when she finds out you're back right?"
"- Are there any questions you might have?"
"Yeah, where the hell have you been?"
Finally the 'professional ' facade breaks.
"I'm surprised Itachi didn't tell you. He seems to have told you everything else"
"You asked him not to. You're still his little brother. He wouldn't break a promise to you for anyone. You know that"
Sasuke's typical unimpressed demeanor is broken, instead looks properly chastised. But as fast as the reaction comes it is smoothed over and his professional mask comes back. He busies himself with slipping the folder back into his bag and asks the lone waiter to package the noodles that had been ordered for him.
Naruto wishes he had something else to say about the matter. After all, a gap of 8 years allows a lot of time for conflicting emotions to accumulate. Naruto has even voiced some of these emotions to Itachi during one of his weekly visits to the older Uchina's home. But instead, he just feels...hollow. It's not like he is a stranger to Sasuke's callousness. They've known each other since kindergarten. But to be faced with it again after 8 years, it felt as if a hand had thrust itself into his chest and torn out his heart. He wonders if this is what it feels like to be rejected by someone you lov- cared deeply about. It sort of is, isn't it? It hadn't hurt as badly all those years ago when Sasuke had left. But in comparison that pain had been a growing burn. This was acute and brutal.
He can't stay here.
As the waiter places his tray on their table to collect Sasuke's dish, Naruto asks him to pack his own that were also untouched as well as the plate of tempura. Telling him to place them all in one bag.
"What are you- ", Sasuke starts but it's Naruto's turn to interrupt him
" You don't like Sunaba Soba", Naruto said, referring to the dish that the associate had ordered for him.
" I'm fine with it"
Naruto only shook his head, “You always said it was too sweet. Just give it to Itachi. I know he likes it. I ordered Mori Soba but I'm not hungry so you can have it"
And without another word, Naruto left.
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videbi · 3 years
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The Best Movies
These are the movies that appealed to a large audience and had wide social impact to 1) inform, 2) educate, and 3) entertain. More movies may be added or any movie may be taken out of the list at anytime.
Intolerance (1916, Griffith)
The Gold Rush (1925, Chaplin)
The General (1926, Bruckman, Keaton)
Sunrise: A Song of Two Humans (1927, Murnau)
City Lights (1931, Chaplin)*
Duck Soup (1933, McCarey)
King Kong (1933)
It Happened One Night (1934, Capra)*
A Night at the Opera (1935, Wood, Goulding)
Top Hat (1935, Sandrich)*
Modern Times (1936, Chaplin)
Swing Time (1936, Stevens)
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937, Cottrell, Hand, Jackson, Morey, Pearce, Sharpsteen)
Bringing Up Baby (1938, Hawks)
Gone With the Wind (1939, Fleming, Cukor, Wood)*
Mr. Smith Goes To Washington (1939, Capra)
Ninotchka (1939, Lubitsch)
The Rules of the Game (1939, Renoir)*
The Wizard of Oz (1939, Fleming)*
Rebecca (1940, Hitchcock)
The Grapes of Wrath (1940, Ford)
The Great Dictator (1940, Chaplin)
The Philadelphia Story (1940)
Citizen Kane (1941, Welles)*
Sullivan’s Travels (1941)
The Maltese Falcon (1941, Huston)
Casablanca (1942, Curtiz)*
Yankee Doodle Dandy (1942, Curtiz)
Double Indemnity (1944, Wilder)*
Mildred Pierce (1945, Curtiz)
It’s a Wonderful Life (1946, Capra)*
Notorious (1946, Hitchcock)
The Best Years of Our Lives (1946)*
The Big Sleep (1946, Hawks)
Out of the Past (1947, Tourneur)
Red River (1948, Hawks, Rosson)
Rope (1948, Hitchcock)
The Treasure of the Sierra Madre (1948, Huston)
All About Eve (1950, Mankiewicz)*
Sunset Boulevard (1950, Wilder)*
A Streetcar Named Desire (1951, Kazan)*
Strangers on a Train (1951, Hitchcock)*
The African Queen (1951, Huston)*
High Noon (1952, Finnemann)
Singin’ in the Rain (1952, Donen, Kelly)*
The Quiet Man (1952, Ford)
Roman Holiday (1953, Wyler)
Shane (1953, Stevens)
Stalag 17 (1953, Wilder)
Tokyo Story (1953, Ozu)
Dial M for Murder (1954, Hitchcock)
On The Waterfront (1954, Kazan)*
Rear Window (1954, Hitchcock)
The Night of the Hunter (1955, Laughton)
The Searchers (1956, Ford)*
12 Angry Men (1957, Lumet)
Funny Face (1957, Donen)*
Sweet Smell of Success (1957, Mackendrick)
The Bridge on the River Kwai (1957, Lean)
Witness for the Prosecution (1957, Wilder)
Touch of Evil (1958, Welles, Keller)
Vertigo (1958, Hitchcock)*
Ben-Hur (1959, Wyler)
North by Northwest (1959, Hitchcock)*
Some Like It Hot (1959, Wilder)*
La Dolce Vita (1960, Fellini)*
Psycho (1960, Hitchcock)*
Spartacus (1960, Kubrick)
The Apartment (1960, Wilder)
West Side Story (1961, Robbins, Wise)
Jules and Jim (1962, Truffaut)*
Lawrence of Arabia (1962, Lean)*
To Kill a Mockingbird (1962, Mulligan)*
8 1/2 (1963, Fellini)*
Hud (1963, Ritt)
The Great Escape (1963, Sturges)
Dr. Strangelove, Or: How I Learned To Stop Worrying and Love The Bomb (1964, Kubrick)*
For a Few Dollars More (1965, Leone)
The Sound of Music (1965, Wise)
The Good, The Bad and The Ugly (1966, Leone)
Who’s Afraid of Virginia Woolf? (1966, Nichols)
Bonnie and Clyde (1967, Penn)*
In The Heat of the Night (1967, Jewison)
The Graduate (1967, Nichols)*
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968, Kubrick)*
Oliver! (1968, Reed)
Once Upon a Time in the West (1968, Leone)
Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid (1969, Hill)
Easy Rider (1969, Hopper)
Midnight Cowboy (1969, Schlesinger)
The Wild Bunch (1969, Peckinpah)
MASH (1970, Altman)
The Conformist (1970, Bertolucci)*
A Clockwork Orange (1971, Kubrick)
The French Connection (1971, Friedkin)
The Last Picture Show (1971, Bogdanovich)
Cabaret (1972, Fosse)
Jeremiah Johnson (1972, Pollack)
The Godfather (1972, Coppola)*
American Graffiti (1973, Lucas)
The Sting (1973, Hill)
Chinatown (1974, Polanski)*
The Godfather Part II (1974, Coppola)*
Jaws (1975, Spielberg)
Nashville (1975, Altman)*
One Flew Over The Cuckoo’s Nest (1975, Forman)
All The President’s Men (1976, Pakula)
Network (1976, Lumet)
Rocky (1976, Avildsen)
Taxi Driver (1976, Scorsese)*
Annie Hall (1977, Allen)*
Star Wars: Episode IV - A New Hope (1977, Lucas)
The Deer Hunter (1978, Cimino)*
Apocalypse Now (1979, Coppola)*
Manhattan (1979, Allen)
Ordinary People (1980, Redford)
Raging Bull (1980, Scorsese)*
Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981, Spielberg)
Blade Runner (1982, Scott)*
Diner (1982, Levinson)*
E.T. The Extra-Terrestrial (1982, Spielberg)
Sophie’s Choice (1982, Pakula)
Tootsie (1982, Pollack)
Once Upon a Time in America (1984, Leone)
Platoon (1986, Stone)
Full Metal Jacket (1987, Kubrick)
Do The Right Thing (1989, Lee)
Glory (1989, Zwick)
Goodfellas (1990, Scorsese)*
Beauty and the Beast (1991, Trousdale, Wise)
The Silence of the Lambs (1991, Demme)
A River Runs Through It (1992, Redford)
Unforgiven (1992, Eastwood)
Farewell My Concubine (1993, Chen)
Schindler’s List (1993, Spielberg)*
Forrest Gump (1994, Zemeckis)
Pulp Fiction (1994, Tarantino)
The Lion King (1994, Allers, Minkoff)
The Shawshank Redemption (1994, Darabont)
Heat (1995, Mann)
Toy Story (1995, Lasseter)
Life Is Beautiful (1997, Benigni)
L.A. Confidential (1997, Hanson)
Titanic (1997, Cameron)
Saving Private Ryan (1998, Howard)*
The Sixth Sense (1999, Shyamalan)
Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon (2000, Lee)
Gladiator (2000, Scott)
A Beautiful Mind (2001, Howard)
The Lord of the Rings: The Fellowship of the Ring (2001, Jackson)
City of God (2002, Meirelles
The Pianist (2002, Polanski)
Finding Nemo (2003, Stanton, Unkrich)
Mystic River (2003, Eastwood)
The Incredibles (2004, Bird)
Million Dollar Baby (2004, Eastwood)
Pan’s Labyrinth (2005, del Torro)*
The Lives of Others (2006, Donnersmarck)*
No Country For Old Men (2007, Coen, Coen)
Gran Torino (2008, Eastwood)
Slumdog Millionaire (2008, Boyle, Tandan)
The Hurt Locker (2008, Bigelow)
The King’s Speech (2010, Hooper)
The Artist (2011, Hazanavicius)
* Disclaimer: Strong sexual and/or violent content not recommended below age 16. Personal discretion or parental guidance advised.+
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offender42085 · 9 months
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Post 1013
Rodney T Franck, Washington inmate 409506, born 1994, incarceration intake in 2020 at age 26, sentenced to 8.5 years, scheduled discharge date not available
Manslaughter
In January 2020, one of two men who beat a Vancouver, Washington man into a coma that lasted more than a year before he succumbed to his injuries was sentenced in Clark County Superior Court to 8 1/2 years in prison.
Rodney T. Franck’s guilty plea to second-degree manslaughter brings the nearly 5-year-old case to a close.
Chris Brewster died June 7, 2016, more than a year after the April 2015 beating by Franck and co-defendant Spencer A. Pell, 23, in Vancouver’s Hough neighborhood. He suffered blunt-force head trauma and never regained consciousness.
The deadly beating apparently began as an argument between Brewster and the men over a cigarette, according to court records.
Franck, 26, was facing second-degree felony murder; the charge was added after Brewster’s death. Pell was not charged with murder, however, and was subpoenaed to testify against Franck if his case went to trial. Pell pleaded guilty to attempted first-degree assault in 2017 and was sentenced to 7 1/2 years in prison.
Shortly after 11:30 p.m. April 23, 2015, witnesses near West 21st and Columbia streets saw two men kicking another man who was lying in the road. The assailants fled before Vancouver police arrived, according to an affidavit of probable cause.
Police found the men, identified as Franck and Pell, based on descriptions provided by witnesses, about a mile away. Senior Deputy Prosecutor Kasey Vu said Friday that they were both highly intoxicated at the time. Both men denied being involved in the beating.
Although Franck reportedly had bruising, cuts to his right eye and blood on his clothing, police didn’t initially arrest him. He was instead booked into the Clark County Jail on an unrelated charge. While in custody, detectives seized his clothing and tested the blood stains. They were found to be a match to Brewster’s DNA, court records say.
Franck also made self-incriminating statements during a phone call made from the jail on Jan. 5, 2016, according to a separate probable cause affidavit filed in the case.
Then, on Jan. 26, 2016, Pell came forward to talk to police.
Both men said they didn’t recognize Brewster from a photograph and said that they were intoxicated that night. However, Pell said he argued with a man over a cigarette and then the man punched him. Pell hit him back, but then he “blacked out,” he said, and didn’t remember kicking Brewster, an affidavit states.
Brewster was so badly beaten, Vu said, that his face was unrecognizable.
When it was his turn to address the court, Franck said, “There is a lot I want to say, but I know nothing I say at this point will help the family.” He added that he’s sorry for what happened.
He faced a standard sentencing range of 77 to 102 months in prison. Both the prosecution and defense recommended a sentence of 96 months, or eight years, to run concurrent with his sentence from a case in Pacific County.
Judge John Fairgrieve a sentenced Franck to the maximum under the sentencing range — 102 months.
3g
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hangozoe · 7 months
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3. 6, 10, 22, 23, 53, 54, 63, 74
3. Favourite Assistant?
Take a wild guess - Ema Skye. The girl who literally inspired my career. (Worth it, by the way. Majoring in forensic science was so much fun.) I have a soft spot for people whose detective careers are inspired by saving someone or wanting to correct an injustice from their past.
6. Favourite Antagonist (in the role of the antagonist! e.g Edgeworth in AA1 counts but only in AA1.)
Okay, I really like Edgeworth in AA1. A whole lot. I love how his trauma and his strong sense of justice manifest in antagonistic qualities to Phoenix, who also has a strong sense of justice but chooses blind faith over prosecuting criminals. Edgeworth is a good person but can't do what Phoenix does. "My father was taken from me, and you want me to defend criminals? I'm sorry, Wright, but I'm not that good of a person!"
I headcanon Edgeworth as autistic. I love seeing him being so elegant and dramatic in court, easily making a fool out of Phoenix, and then seeing him outside of court for the first time and realizing he's actually socially awkward. I love that this game makes you defend him and it's like pulling teeth to get him to agree. Just. AA1 Edgeworth is incredible.
10. Favourite trial from all the games?
Case 1-4. I watch an entire playthrough of it at least once a year on Christmas as tradition. I can recite the beginning dialogue from memory. As I said previously:
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22. Your OTP?
Not to steal your answer but Justicykes. Particularly because of the comics done by tumblr user shinyv, like these:
And the art done by tumblr user ticcytx:
I think their dynamic is incredible. So much chemistry going on. I really love energetic girl x more stoic guy pairings.
Runner-ups include Franmaya and Vanlock (mostly for their divorced vibes).
23. Your BROTP?
Sebastian and the girls chat.
I don't know if I can choose, but I really like Sebastian and Kay, Iris and Gina, and Susato and Iris (they're basically sisters). There's probably more I'm missing.
53. Your personal dumbest moment while playing?
In recent memory, I was playing the DLC case for Dual Destinies while my boyfriend was watching. There is a point about how far the victim fell. A witness claimed the victim died by being launched up into the air and then falling 30 ft into the pool full of water. The victim's autopsy report says he fell 65 ft. My logic was that he was launched up 30 ft + fell down 30 ft, and 60 ft is not 65 ft. ... My boyfriend had to remind me upward launch distance doesn't count toward falling down distance.
54. The moment you felt the smartest while playing?
There are a lot of times where I figure out the murder method pretty early on. I can't remember one in particular.
63. Favourite quote?
Herlock Sholmes: "Great detectives are wont to lie."
74. Character you would hug?
Most of them tbh. But if I had to choose one, Maya Fey. Girl has been THROUGH IT and rarely gets to be vulnerable because she's putting on a strong face for Pearl.
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Three weeks before Canada’s 2019 federal election, national security officials allegedly gave an urgent, classified briefing to senior aides from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s office, warning them that one of their candidates was part of a Chinese foreign interference network.
According to sources, the candidate in question was Han Dong, then a former Ontario MPP whom Canada Security Intelligence Service had started tracking in June of that year.
National security officials also allege that Dong, now a sitting MP re-elected in 2021, is one of at least 11 Toronto-area riding candidates allegedly supported by Beijing in the 2019 contest. Sources say the service also believes Dong is a witting affiliate in China’s election interference networks.
Three sources with knowledge of the investigation said Dong emerged as a successor to MP Geng Tan as the 2019 Liberal candidate in ways the service found suspicious. These sources spoke to Global News on the condition of anonymity, which they requested because they risk prosecution under the Security of Information Act. [...]
Continue Reading.
Tagging: @politicsofcanada
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beardedmrbean · 6 months
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DOVER, Del. — A suspected serial killer accused in the deaths of six people in Delaware and Pennsylvania in 2021 was convicted of murder and other crimes by a Delaware jury on Tuesday.
The jury deliberated for about six hours over two days before finding Keith Gibson of Philadelphia guilty of murder and robbery in the killings of Elsmere cellphone store clerk Leslie Ruiz-Basilio, 28, and Wilmington drug dealer Ronald Wright, 42.
Gibson, 41, was also convicted of attempted murder and robbery in the shooting of Wilmington store clerk Belal Almansoori, armed robbery of a drug store, assault, conspiracy, and gun crimes.
Gibson faces mandatory sentences of life in prison for the murder convictions. The judge did not immediately set a sentencing date.
Other killings
The Philadelphia district attorney, meanwhile, has approved murder charges against Gibson in the killings of his mother and a Philadelphia doughnut shop manager, as well as the deaths of two men found shot in the head at a store in Philadelphia’s Germantown neighborhood. Authorities have said they will pursue those charges after Gibson is prosecuted in Delaware.
Delaware prosecutors relied heavily on video surveillance footage showing the robberies and shootings of Ruiz-Basilio and Almansoori. They also argued that ballistics evidence linked the shootings of Ruiz-Basilio and Wright and tied them to a revolver recovered when Gibson was arrested.
Clothing and other evidence, including a bicycle belonging to Gibson found near the cellphone store, also pointed to Gibson as the gunman in each of the crimes, said prosecutors, who noted that a friend of Gibson identified him as the man seen in surveillance footage from the shooting scenes.
Defense case
Defense attorneys presented no evidence of their own and did not call any witnesses. Instead, they tried to poke holes in the prosecution’s case by cross-examining witnesses and pointing out that there was no DNA or fingerprint evidence linking Gibson to the crimes.
Surveillance footage from May 15, 2021, at the Metro PCS store in Elsmere, shows Ruiz-Basilio being confronted by a gunman, who takes her to the back of the store and shoots her in the head at point-blank range as her arms are raised. He then walks out of the store with stolen cash and cell phones and drives away in her SUV. The stolen vehicle was later recovered in Philadelphia near Gibson’s home.
Victim pretended to be dead
Almansoori, who was shot on June 6, 2021, lay on the floor of his store pretending to be dead after a gunman’s first shot missed him. After stealing several items, the gunman shot the prone teenager in the head. As he was leaving, the gunman turned and shot Almansoori again. Almansoori survived and testified in Gibson’s trial.
Almansoori was shot one day after Wright was killed in his Wilmington residence, which prosecutors said was a known “drug house.” Gibson was later found with a shoulder bag in which prosecutors said Wright kept his drugs.
Earlier on the same day Wright was shot, Christine Lugo, 40, was confronted by a gunman as she opened a Dunkin’ shop in north Philadelphia. Police say Gibson pushed her inside, took about $300 and shot her in the head, a killing that also was captured on surveillance video.
Violent rampage came after prison release
Gibson is accused of going on a violent rampage shortly after being released in December 2020 from a Delaware prison where he served about 13 years for manslaughter and possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.
After the cellphone store robbery, authorities arrested a man with one of the stolen phones. Data stored on the device included Gibson’s phone number.
Gibson was arrested on June 8, 2021, after the robbery of a Wilmington Rite Aid store, during which a clerk gave him a bundle of cash containing a GPS tracking device. When police arrested him, Gibson was wearing body armor and carrying unique ammunition that prosecutors said was consistent with bullet fragments found at the two murder scenes. A revolver that prosecutors say was used in the shootings was found hidden near the spot where police arrested Gibson.
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weiwithwords · 1 year
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The Sweetness of Things Forgotten
Sometimes, I want people to miss me.
That sucks.
That’s like saying, “I want people to like me so much they will suffer in my absence.” I can do better. Let me be better than that. Let me thrive in untamed wilderness. Let me flourish far from charted waters, apart from eyes and ears and memories. So what if no one remembers? I don’t remember the warmth of my mother’s touch when I was in the cradle, but that makes her no less loving. I don't remember all the jokes I’ve laughed at, all the music I've listened to, all the rainstorms I’ve cavorted in, all the sunsets I’ve appreciated, yet they are no less part of me -- just as I am no less part of them. Yes, I am the sum of countless precious things, precious because they are unremembered. Why should we tremble when we find overgrown temples to long-dead gods? I quake more at all the temples we will never find. I’ve heard it said: “Stand in the ashes of a trillion dead souls and ask the ghosts if honor matters. The silence is their answer.” I will stand in the ashes of a trillion dead souls and ask the ghosts why I should care about their opinion. Their answer? It's the same, so -- So what if they forget? I dance not to sycophantic drumbeats but to syncopated heartbeats. I am not some ' stillborn witness to myself, so let them forget -- I will have still ' borne witness to myself, and I will prosecute and perpetrate. I am a constellation peering through the telescope, the marble and the sculptor, carving out parts of me for my own sake, like -- this is not for you. I will leave some for you here, but I’m not asking you to take it. Do with it as you will, cuz -- So what if I leave no legacy? I still left tiny 8-year-old footprints in the snow as I rushed home to sip my mom’s hot chocolate, left breadcrumbs by the pond to feed the ducklings, left the ones I love to chase a future I only dreamt of, and if that is not enough for you? That's fine. I will not beg you to remember. Just -- breathe. (inhale, exhale) And be here with me now, in this gift we call "the present".
------
youtube
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dreaminginthedeepsouth · 11 months
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[The Daily Don]
* * * * *
An indictment to preserve the rule of law.
June 9, 2023
ROBERT B. HUBBELL
          A Miami federal grand jury issued an indictment against former president Donald Trump on June 8, 2023. According to early reporting, the indictment includes seven counts, including willful retention of national defense documents, making false statements, conspiracy, and obstruction of justice (possibly for witness tampering). Trump claims he will appear in federal court in Miami next Tuesday to enter a plea.
          Indicting Trump is the right result. Indeed, it was necessary to protect the rule of law and preserve the Constitution. Trump is entitled to the presumption of innocence (in court) and a fair trial, but the publicly known facts strongly suggest that Trump is guilty. Failing to indict Trump would have undermined public trust in fairness, justice, and equality under the law in the US.
          The indictment of Trump is no cause for celebration, but it is cause for relief and gratification that the organs of justice in the United States are up to the task of holding a former president to account. As Larry Tribe and Dennis Aftergut wrote in The Bulwark, “The long-anticipated charging of the former president shows a Justice Department worthy of its name.”
          It was not a foregone conclusion that special counsel Jack Smith would seek an indictment or that a grand jury would issue one despite substantial evidence to support probable cause. Others before Jack Smith walked to the precipice of holding Trump to account and blinked. Smith did not. And Merrick Garland did not exercise his right to overrule Smith’s decision to seek an indictment. For that, we should be grateful.
          It is sobering and disappointing to know that a former president of the United States would stoop to obstruction of justice, lies, conspiracy, and unlawful retention of defense secrets because he believed (wrongly) that he was above the law. Trump is not the first president to abuse his power or break the law, but Trump’s indictment will dissuade future presidents tempted to do so. That is the point. If we do not enforce the law when the facts demand it, the law is a mockery.
          The June 8th indictment should also provide all Americans with hope that Trump will be indicted for his attempted coup and incitement of the insurrection on January 6th. Though the charges regarding retention of defense secrets are serious, those charges are subject to confusion and false equivalency because Vice President Pence and President Biden both inadvertently retained classified documents when they completed their respective terms as vice president. Although those cases are easily distinguishable, nuance is not a strong suit of viewers of Fox News (an insight that is critical to Fox’s success).   
          Prosecuting Trump will be an ordeal for the nation. So be it. The only thing worse for the nation than prosecuting Trump is not prosecuting Trump. Failing to prosecute Trump would be a dereliction of duty from which the nation would not recover. So, as we endure Trump's effort to turn his prosecution into a spectacle that is equal parts circus and cage match, we should be confident that the ordeal is worth the effort. America is bigger than Trump and will abide long after Trump becomes the American icon for corruption.
          We will hear dozens of times over the next year that Trump is “entitled to a presumption of innocence.” That is a true statement but applies to the jury that weighs the evidence of his guilt. See Manual of Model Jury Instructions, 1.2 The Charge—Presumption of Innocence | Model Jury Instructions. But we are not jurors and are entitled to form opinions based on facts known to the public. The issuance of the indictment does not strip us of our First Amendment Rights or our ability to make reasoned judgments. The evidence strongly suggests that Donald Trump is guilty of unlawful retention of national defense documents—a felony for which others in his position have been sentenced to three years in prison.
          Jack Smith’s selection of Miami as the venue for Trump's trial suggests that Smith’s objective is to obtain a conviction that will be upheld on appeal and result in a prison sentence for Trump. The details regarding the selection of Miami as a venue are complicated and not worth explication at this point. Smith has made his choice of venue, a choice that signals his intent to obtain a conviction that will stick.
          An underreported detail is that five sealed cases were filed in Miami federal court within minutes of one another on Thursday. See Anna Bower on Twitter (attaching a copy of the PACER listing for Southern District of Florida). One sealed case is presumably against Trump; it is reasonable to infer that the other four sealed cases are against Trump's co-conspirators. If true, the filing of five cases by Jack Smith suggests that he is serious about prosecuting everyone who violated the law.
          After I reviewed the above paragraphs with my Managing Editor/wife, she said, “That’s fine, but you haven’t told your readers how you feel about the indictment.” Since my Managing Editor’s advice is unerring, here is how I feel about the indictment:
          For the last four years, I have felt frustrated, upset to the point of anger, and incredulous that Trump has managed to escape accountability despite his public, manifest corruption. Those feelings have been exacerbated by the gleeful, bad-faith defense of Trump by his GOP minions who were more interested in “owning the libs” than in “protecting the Constitution.” It was revolting. Indeed, there is a universal human revulsion to being placed in an unfair situation where everyone knows the situation is unfair but there is no remedy to the unfairness. That is how I have felt over the last four years—a feeling shared by tens of millions of Americans.
          Tonight, I feel a sense of relief and vindication. I want Trump to be held accountable after a fair trial. He deserves to be convicted. He deserves to be sent to prison. Indeed, if he were anyone other than a former president, he would already be in prison (or in jail as he awaits his trial date without benefit of bail). I am disgusted that the media has already turned to the question of “What are the political implications of the indictment?” To be sure, that is a serious question worthy of discussion. But the fact that a former president has been indicted under the Espionage Act is more than a set up for speculation about 2024.
          I am gratified that the tide has turned against Trump. He will be indicted in Georgia for election interference. He will stand trial in Manhattan in March 2024. And the odds are that he will be indicted for attempting a coup and inciting an insurrection. He deserves all that and more. And he will continually incriminate himself—as he did during the CNN townhall and his post on Truth Social on Thursday evening. The knowledge that every word he utters makes his conviction more certain will make the next two years more bearable.
          But my overwhelming feeling on Thursday night is that the center has held—as I believed it would. My faith in the Constitution and the rule of law has been rewarded. None of this means that I will let down my guard or assume victory. But a win every once in a while, especially on important matters, can renew our faith and reinvigorate our will to win.
          That’s how I feel tonight. Speaking of “securing a win every once in a while,” read on!
Supreme Court rules that Alabama racial gerrymandering violated Section 2 of Voting Rights Acts.
          In a surprise to Court watchers, the US Supreme Court ruled 5-4 that racial gerrymandering by the Alabama legislature violated Section 2 of the 1965 Voting Rights Act. John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh joined the Court’s three liberal justices to preserve the last remaining section of the Act that was gutted by John Roberts in Shelby County v. Holder.
          For a detailed discussion of the holding, see Mark Joseph Stern in Slate, John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh saved the Voting Rights Act. Per Stern,
The Supreme Court’s 5–4 decision in Allen v. Milligan on Thursday, which found that Alabama’s congressional map violates the Voting Rights Act’s ban on racial vote dilution, sends two clear messages. First, a bare majority of the court—Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Brett Kavanaugh, and the three liberals—believes that the VRA still plays a meaningful role in maintaining a multiracial democracy (or is willing to defer to Congress’ judgment on the matter). Second, that same majority of the court does not look kindly upon red states’ race to shred decades of precedent in an effort to wipe out the voting power of Black Americans.
          The good news is that the decision means that Alabama must create a second congressional district in which the voting power of Black voters is not diluted by gerrymandering. It is likely that Alabama will add a second Black Democratic representative to its congressional delegation.
          The even better news is that the holding in Allen v. Milligan will likely boost the prospects for plaintiffs in cases across the nation challenging racial gerrymandering by GOP legislatures. See Democracy Docket, How the U.S. Supreme Court’s Decision in Allen v. Milligan Will Impact Ongoing Redistricting Litigation. It is possible the effect of the ruling in Allen v. Milligan is a net gain of six Democratic seats in the House in 2024.
          Why did John Roberts and Brett Kavanaugh switch sides to join with the liberal justices? One theory (with which I agree), is that Roberts and Kavanaugh understand that their ruling in Dobbs has inflicted a grievous wound on the Court’s legitimacy and they are attempting to limit the damage. Whatever the reason, the ruling is a major victory for advocates for voting rights. As I said above, a win every once in a while, especially on important matters, can renew our faith and reinvigorate our will to win. We should all feel good tonight!
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boricuacherry-blog · 1 year
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Before his untimely passing, Aaron Carter had publicly called out his brother as being a 'serial rapist.' Comparing his brother to Jeffrey Epstein, he had urged authorities to investigate him.
Article:
Aaron has claimed that Nick "abused" him throughout their lives, sharing a clip of an incident in which he claims his brother broke his nose. He claims he's seen his brother abuse ex-girlfriend Paris Hilton when they dated some 15 years ago. (Nick denied the claims at the time.) Aaron claims he "witnessed the abuse to Paris from my brother. I was there." He also claims that Nick beat him up in front of Paris, even tagging her on Twitter:
Listen. @ParisHilton knows what's going on. Trust me. She doesn't need to be dragged into anything. Cause my truth is my truth and I witnessed the abuse to Paris from my brother. I was there. After what he did to Paris I should've never trusted him and me that day. He beat me up in front of her.
Aaron's assistant, Dawn Rzeznik, responded and claimed Nick and wife Lauren were being "petty" with their restraining order, when according to her, they had previously tried to sell footage of Aaron doing drugs to the media.
Aaron responded by writing:
And I'm so 'crazy' right. Exactly. I was also doing drugs then and got myself help. Lauren and Nick allegedly tried to buy a video of me from my assistants Dawn and Gwen of me huffing duster to sell to the media. Dawn and Gwen, my other executive assistant, have both been with me for ten years.
Aaron also claimed that his late sister, Leslie, sexually abused him "from the age of 10 to 13."
He said she suffered from mental illness and that her medicine made her do "things that she never meant to do." He also said he was abused by two of his backup dancers, but didn't elaborate, writing:
My sister Leslie suffered from bipolar and took lithium to treat it. She never liked the way it made her feel and when she was off of it she did things that she never meant to do, I truly believe that. I was abused sexually not only by her but by my first two backup dancers when I was 8 years old. And my brother abused me my whole life.
Aaron's twin sister Angel had joined Nick in seeking the restraining order. Aaron wrote:
I am so deeply disappointed in my sister Angel who was doing so well after her arrest for shoplifting on xanax...she has had therapy for many many years, and I'm sorry to see her be bought off and lie. P.S. Angel you are smoking weed while you're breastfeeding your infant.
Several times he has shared a clip of Nick giving him a pie to the face at the Kids' Choice Awards in 2001. He has said that Nick broke his nose during the incident - one of several times he allegedly broke it. He said Nick has been "an abusive human to me my whole life."
Aaron wrote:
I have never been accused of rape multiple times and I wasn't accused of beating @ParisHilton so who's violent??
This was directed at Nick, who denied physically abusing Hilton in 2004 after the socialite was photographed with a fat lip and bruises on her arms. Page Six reported at the time that Hilton told a friend that Carter had hit her. The pair, who were on and off for 10 months, split for good.
Hilton hasn't publicly replied to Aaron's tweets.
As #MeToo unfolded Melissa Schuman, who was in the girl group Dream, accused him of rape.
At the time of Schuman's allegation, it also surfaced that he was accused of sexual assault in 2003 by an unidentified minor, who was 15 at the time, but the case was never prosecuted. Aaron has suggested that the restraining order his brother filed against him was retaliation for Aaron siding with Nick's accusers.
Aaron mentioned Ashley Repp, who claimed she was the unidentified minor from the 2003 police report. In addition to naming Repp, Schumer and Hilton, he also cited singer Kaya Jones (from the Pussycat Dolls), Willa Ford and makeup artist Tanya Jane as other victims of Nick's.
Aaron had also taken out a restraining order against ex-girlfriend Lina Valentina the previous month, saying she had threatened to stab him.
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dankusner · 11 days
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Grifting griffin
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[name’s karin...] for a reason.
FACTBOX
Who are the jurors in Trump’s hush money trial?
Media limited in what details can be reported
Donald Trump will be judged in his historic New York criminal trial by 12 jurors selected last week after a painstaking search for people who could be fair and impartial to the Republican former U.S. president in Manhattan, the Democratic stronghold where he made his name as a real estate tycoon decades ago.
Here’s a look at the panelists.
To protect their safety, the judge overseeing the case has limited what the media can report about them, including their employers and any identifying information that was not explicitly stated in the record, such a gender or age.
Juror 1
Originally from Ireland, the first juror and foreperson lives in West Harlem and has worked in sales for 28 years. The juror attended some college, and they said they get their news from the New York Times, Daily Mail, Fox News and MSNBC. The juror said they have heard about Trump’s three other criminal cases, to which Trump has pleaded not guilty.
Juror 2
An investment banker who lives with a spouse in Hell’s Kitchen in Midtown Manhattan, Juror 2 has a master’s degree in business administration and gets most of their news from the social media platform X.
The juror follows former Trump lawyer and prosecution witness Michael Cohen on social media, as well as Mueller She Wrote, a popular anti-Trump account.
Juror 3
Juror 3 is one of two corporate lawyers on the panel. They live in the upscale Chelsea neighborhood but are originally from Oregon. They said they are not “super familiar” with the other cases against Trump and do not follow the news closely but occasionally read the New York Times and Wall Street Journal.
Juror 4
A California native who lives in the West Village with a spouse and three children, Juror 4 has worked as a security engineer for the past 25 years. They have a high school degree and attended some college. They do not use social media and get their news from various sources.
Juror 5
Juror 5 is a self-identified person of color and lifelong New Yorker who lives in Harlem. They have a master’s degree in education and have been an English teacher for the past eight years. They said they “do not care for the news” and get most of their information from Google and TikTok.
Juror 6
Another New York City native, Juror 6 has a bachelor’s degree and works as a software engineer for a large media and entertainment company. They said they get their news mainly from the New York Times and TikTok.
Juror 7
Juror 7 is an attorney for a large corporate law firm who is originally from North Carolina but has lived in the Upper East Side for 12 years. They have a bachelor’s degree in business and a law degree.
The juror has many friends and relatives who work in finance and law, including the juror’s spouse.
Juror 8
Originally from Lebanon, Juror 8 has lived in the Upper East Side since 1980. The juror is retired but previously worked as a wealth manager for a major financial firm and still consults with some clients. They get their news from the New York Times, Wall Street Journal, BBC and CNBC.
Juror 9
Juror 9 has lived on the Upper East Side for three years but grew up in New Jersey. They have a bachelor’s degree and a master’s degree and have worked as a speech therapist for five years. The juror said they do not follow the news closely but occasionally listens to New York Times and CNN podcasts.
Juror 10
An Ohio native who has lived in the Murray Hill neighborhood for six years, Juror 10 works for an eyewear company and lives with an accountant. They have a bachelor’s degree.
Juror 11
Juror 11 has lived in upper Manhattan for 15 years but is originally from California. They have worked as a product development manager for a multinational apparel company for 20 years. The juror said they do not follow the news closely except through Google and some industry-specific publications.
Juror 12
Juror 12 has lived on the Upper East side for nearly three years and previously lived in Minnesota and several other states. They have a bachelor’s degree and a doctorate in physical therapy and have worked as a physical therapist for 15 years. The juror gets their news from the New York Times, USA Today and CNN, and they also listen to podcasts about religion and sports.
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truecrimeandtrials · 1 month
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Trigger and content warnings: infuriating yet amusing incompetence, death, physical abuse, general cringe, repeated disrespect for the judge, prosecution, and others, swear words (fuck, bitch), child death, physical injuries, possible terrorism
Disclaimer: I have done my best to summarize the testimony from the Darrell Brooks trial. I linked a playlist for the trial so you can go watch it if you wish to get all of the information and form your own opinion.
Defendant Darrell (pronounced Duh-rell) Brooks was charged with killing 8-year-old Jackson Sparks, 52-year-old Tamara Durand, 52-year-old Jane Kulich, 71-year-old LeAnna “Lee” Owen, 79-year-old Virginia “Ginny” Sorenson, and 81-year-old Wilhelm Hospel and injuring over sixty other individuals during the Waukesha Christmas Parade in 2021. The incident allegedly followed a domestic dispute. Mr. Brooks decided to represent himself during the trial and claimed sovereign citizenship.
State’s Opening Statement
District Attorneys Sue Opper, Lesli Boese, and Zachary Wittchow represented the State of Wisconsin. Attorney Wittchow gave the opening statement. The Waukesha Christmas parade started off normally on November 21st, 2021. There was joy all along the parade route. However, Darrell Brooks killed that joy and replaced it with trauma and terror. He was fleeing from another crime scene when he decided to drive through the parade. He repeatedly used his red Ford Escape as a battering ram, ultimately killing six people and injuring dozens more. Attorney Wittchow said that him and his colleagues intended to “avoid undue hardships” for the victims. He went through what they expected to present and what witness testimony would be.
Sergeant David Wanner’s Testimony
Sergeant David Wanner has been a patrol sergeant at the Waukesha County Police Department (WCPD) for eighteen years. He was working on the day of the attack and described how the parade was prepared and the route they were supposed to take. His job was to make sure that the other officers were where they were supposed to be and that everything was in order. Sergeant Wanner heard that squads not assigned to the parade were responding to a knife fight. He didn’t hear about any vehicles that were associated with that incident. He then saw a red SUV traveling toward him at “a high rate of speed”. He estimated that the vehicle was going over 40 miles per hour, which is approximately 64 kilometers per hour. The speed limit on the street the parade route was on was 25 miles per hour or approximately 40 kilometers per hour. Sergeant Wanner waved his hands over his head to get the driver’s attention but to no avail. The driver didn’t stop and entered the parade route. He used his radio to notify other officers along the route. He later heard “horrible sounds” and requests for backup.
Kori Runkle’s Testimony
Kori Runkle met Erika Patterson at the Waukesha women’s shelter in October or November of 2021. She couldn’t remember which month. Miss Runkle and Miss Patterson, along with a man named Nick, hung out together at a park on the day of the attack. They later split up. Miss Patterson went to meet up with Darrell Brooks. She had mentioned her ex-boyfriend to Miss Runkle before. She later got a call from Miss Patterson, who said that Mr. Brooks was beating and following her. She and Nick ran to help their friend out. This all happened right before Mr. Brooks ran through the parade.
Erika Patterson’s Testimony
Erika Patterson was Mr. Brooks’ ex-girlfriend and the mother of his fifteen-year-old daughter. The two had met when she was fifteen. Miss Patterson said that she was testifying on her 32nd birthday. She identified the defendant as her ex-boyfriend. She described what she remembered happened on the day of the attack. Mr. Brooks was angry and punched Miss Patterson’s left eye, leaving a black eye. Miss Runkle was mad at her for meeting up with him, but they still returned to the women’s shelter together. She talked to the police after the parade attack.
Detective Steven Guth’s Testimony
Detective Steven Guth has been a detective at WCPD for seven out of his twenty years at the department. He had questioned Miss Patterson about her fight with Mr. Brooks. She showed him where the two of them went. Detective Guth was unaware if Miss Patterson talked to any other officers.
Officer Jeremy Philipps’ Testimony
Officer Jeremy Philipps has been an officer at WCPD for fourteen years. He was not assigned to the parade, so he was on general patrol. He was dispatched to Frame Park at approximately 4:52 p.m. to an alleged knife fight. Officer Philipps looked around the area for potential victims and perpetrators. He was talking to Miss Patterson and her friends when he heard the requests for backup over his radio. He decided that the requests were more serious, so he responded to them. Officer Philipps attempted to render as much aid as he possibly could to those who were hit by Mr. Brooks.
Kyle Edwards’ Testimony
Kyle Edwards attended the Christmas parade with his wife and two kids. They were on their way when they first encountered Mr. Brooks in his red SUV. He later saw the defendant enter the parade route. Mr. Edwards has basic medical training after serving in the military for seventeen years. He made sure his wife and kids were safely on their way home before returning to the route to help. Later that night, he called the non-emergency line to report the possible connection between the SUV that rammed through the parade and the SUV he almost collided with. He was 95 percent sure they were the same vehicle. Mr. Edwards gave his statement to the police several days later.
Holly Berg’s Testimony
Holly Berg attended the Christmas parade on November 21st, 2021. Beforehand, she had dropped her boyfriend’s daughter off at the staging area so she could get ready for the parade. On her way to rejoin her boyfriend, Miss Berg witnessed the same thing that Mr. Edwards did. Later on, at the parade, she saw people “fly” when Mr. Brooks hit them. It clicked in her mind that he was the same man from the gas station incident. Miss Berg’s boyfriend tried to render help to people, but she told him to go find his daughter.
Detective Thomas Casey’s Testimony
Detective Thomas Casey has been a detective at WCPD for twenty-five years. He was assigned to help control traffic during the parade. Eight of the sixty-seven units that took part in the parade were impacted. Detective Casey was 1,000 percent sure that Mr. Brooks was driving the SUV.
Officer Bryce Butryn’s Testimony
Officer Bryce Butryn has been an officer at WCPD for approximately five years. He was assigned to the parade on the day of the tragedy. He heard a driver honk his car horn several times. Officer Butryn tried to stop the vehicle before running after it on foot, trying to stop the vehicle. He never saw the driver pull over and check on the person they hit.
Officer Sonia Schneider’s Testimony
Officer Sonia Schneider has been an officer at WCPD for two years. She was assigned to the parade at the same location as Officer Butryn. Unlike him, she never heard a car horn. She unsuccessfully tried to direct the vehicle off the parade route. Officer Schneider then guarded one of the deceased Dancing Grannies.
Battalion Chief Tim Haakenson’s Testimony
Battalion Chief Tim Haakenson has been the chief at the Waukesha Fire Department for six out of his twenty-two years there. He was on duty on November 21st, 2021. He received an alert at 4:39 p.m. regarding a vehicle versus pedestrian incident. At first, only Battalion Chief Haakenson’s station was dispatched, but eventually, every other station in Waukesha was sent to the scene. The last of the seventy-three total patients was in transit to the hospital by 5:35 p.m.
Nicole White’s Testimony
Nicole White was walking with the Re/max group when she was struck from behind. This was the first time she knew something was wrong. She never saw the vehicle stop and never heard a car horn, either before or after being struck. Several people helped Miss White get to safety before later being transported to the hospital by a police officer. She suffered a torn ligament in her right knee, two compressed vertebrae, and a tailbone injury. Miss White approximated that the vehicle was going about twenty miles per hour or thirty-two kilometers per hour.
Sarah Wehmeier-Aparicio’s Testimony
Sarah Wehmeier-Aparicio has been the band director at Waukesha South High School on and off for ten years. She was walking with the school band when Mr. Brooks drove through the parade. At first, Miss Wehmeier-Aparicio thought that it was an emergency vehicle until she saw people flying. Then she thought it was an accident until she saw the driver’s face. He was attentive and wasn’t looking for a way to exit the route. Miss Wehmeier-Aparicio didn’t hear a car horn, but she believed that she would have. It would’ve been an unexpected sound and would stand out. She didn’t notice anything amiss beforehand.
Kyle Jewell’s Testimony
Kyle Jewell attended the Christmas parade. The high school band was going by when he saw the red SUV strike and run over people. He didn’t hear a car horn and didn’t see the driver stop. Mr. Jewell wasn’t comfortable making a police report, but did anyway after being advised to.
Thomas Greene’s Testimony
Thomas Greene attended the parade with his wife and three children, two of whom were hit and injured. They were nine and eleven at the time.
Kelly Grabow’s Testimony
Kelly Grabow and her daughter Adelia were both walking with Burst Logistics when they were hit. Like any good mother, Miss Grabow made sure her daughter was taken care of before getting treatment for herself.
Jeff Rogers’ Testimony
Jeff Rogers is the president and a coach for the Waukesha Blazers Youth Baseball Program, of which Jackson Sparks was a member. He was walking with the group with three of his four children. He pulled his daughter Maya out of the way but was unable to get to his other two children before they were hit. Mr. Rogers’ son Cayden had a bruised right elbow, while his daughter Riley had cuts, bruises, and scrapes on both legs.
Joshua Kraner’s Testimony
Joshua Kraner was also a coach for the Blazers Youth Baseball Program. He was struck but didn’t see anyone else get struck. He looked for his son, who was luckily uninjured.
Alyssa Gajewski’s Testimony
Alyssa Gajewski used to teach the elite group at Xtreme Dance Group, which she was walking with. Several of her girls were hit and she described the injuries that she observed on them. Miss Gajewski had blacked out, saying that she heard people getting struck but wasn’t able to see it happening.
Jaimie Sutton’s Testimony
Jamie Sutton also taught at the Xtreme Dance Group and walked with the girls. She gathered the girls who had not been hit and reunited some of them with their parents. She took those who weren’t reunited into Chef Pam’s Kitchen when she heard about an active shooting. Miss Sutton thought the vehicle was experiencing brake failure due to how fast it was going. However, she didn’t see any physical damage to the vehicle.
Detective Mike Carpenter’s Testimony
Detective Mike Carpenter has been a detective in the computer forensics unit at WCPD for twelve out of twenty years. He reviewed a surveillance video from Bosco’s to conduct a speed analysis. Detective Carpenter found that the red SUV was going between thirty-three point-seven and thirty-four point-six miles per hour. That equates to fifty-four point twenty-three and fifty-five point sixty-eight kilometers per hour.
Debora Ramirez’s Testimony
Debora Ramirez attended the parade with her family. Both she and her son Isaac were hit. The two went to Urgent Care in Pewaukee the next day, as they didn’t need immediate attention like others did.
Stefanie Bonesteel’s Testimony
Stefanie Bonesteel is the head of marketing at Citizen’s Bank. She was tasked with assembling her co-workers to march in the parade, one of whom was Jane Kulich. She was walking with her kids when she saw the red SUV coming for her. She wasn’t hit since the SUV had swerved. However, Mrs. Bonesteel did see it strike someone. She found her kids, who were luckily uninjured. Despite it being three to five feet away from her, the fear and shock kept her from identifying the color of the SUV.
Adam Bonesteel’s Testimony
Adam Bonesteel volunteered to drive the float for Citizen’s Bank. The six-year-old daughter of one of his wife’s co-workers was next to him in the passenger’s seat. He saw Jane Kulich get hit by the SUV. At first, Mr. Bonesteel didn’t know who it was but knew that she was part of the Citizen’s Bank unit. He later checked on Jane and immediately knew she was gone.
Matthew Harris’s Testimony
Matthew Harris attended the parade with his family. The Dancing Grannies just went by when the SUV went through. He would’ve run after it, but he noticed that his seven-year-old daughter was injured.
Heather Ricciotti’s Testimony
Heather Ricciotti was attending the parade with her three children when a maroonish-red SUV passed them. Her five-year-old son Owen was hit. After dropping her other two kids off at home, Miss Ricciotti took Owen to Waukesha Memorial Hospital. He had a gash above his right eyebrow, which required six stitches.
Daniel Knapp’s Testimony
Daniel Knapp attended the parade with his family and three other families, totaling nineteen people. His three kids were eleven, seven, and three. He saw an SUV driving toward them and striking his three-year-old daughter Kelsey (approximate spelling). He saw no one else struck, as his daughter was his sole focus. He ran to her side and noticed all of the blood on her face. Kelsey was conscious but didn’t understand what was going on. Mr. Knapp made sure the rest of his group was okay before taking her to the hospital. She had a broken nose, a torn spleen, a road rash, and cuts to her face. He only saw the driver inside the vehicle, who he described as a black male whose “eyes were completely wide open”. He identified the defendant as the driver.
Laura Thein’s Testimony
Laura Thein is part of the Dancing Grannies. She didn’t hear anything unusual because the music vehicle was right behind her. She was not struck but went into shock when she saw all of the bodies. Miss Thein went over who else was a part of the Dancing Grannies and who all was hit. Two of the grannies and someone who was helping them were killed. She said that she thought that she was in a war because of how many bodies there were.
Hope Evans-Jansen’s Testimony
Hope Evans-Jansen attended the parade with her family. Her ten-year-old daughter recorded the parade on her iPhone and captured the Dancing Grannies getting struck. Mrs. Evans-Jansen sent this video to the police.
Trooper Michael Smith’s Testimony
Trooper Michael Smith has been a reconstructionist with the TCU at Wisconsin State Patrol since 2004. He has been with the State Patrol as a whole since 2000. Trooper Smith recreated the scene in a controlled environment and subsequently created a scale diagram.
Doctor Amy Sheil’s Testimony
Doctor Amy Sheil has been the associate medical examiner at the Waukesha County Medical Examiner’s Officer for seven and a half years. She autopsied Leanna Owens, Virginia Sorenson, and Jackson Sparks. Doctor Sheil went over their injuries and causes of death.
Doctor Lynda Biedryzycki’s Testimony
Doctor Lynda Biedryzycki has been the medical examiner at the Waukesha County Medical Examiner’s Officer for twenty-five years. She autopsied Tamara Durand, Wilhelm Hospel, and Jane Kulich. Doctor Biedryzycki went over their injuries and causes of death.
Matthew Widder’s Testimony
Matthew Widder is a Catholic pastor and walked in the parade with the Catholic community. He went over who in their group was struck.
Detective Lukas Hallmark’s Testimony
Detective Lukas Hallmark has been a detective at WCPD for approximately fifteen years. He was walking with the Catholic community. He initially thought the red SUV was a lost motorist until he saw how fast it was going. Detective Hallmark approximated the speed to be between thirty and forty miles per hour or forty-eight to sixty-four kilometers per hour. He and his two sons Elliot and Benjamin were hit.
Craig Liermann’s Testimony
Craig Liermann attended the parade with his family. He got a good look at the driver, who he described as a light-skinned black male in his mid to late thirties with facial hair and long dreadlocks. Mr. Liermann saw the driver stick his head out of the window and look back, seemingly excited. He made sure his family was okay before checking on others.
Ralph Salyers’ Testimony
Ralph Salyers attended the parade with his family. On his way home, he saw the defendant get out and examine his car. He allegedly yelled “fuck” before grabbing items from the car and running. Mr. Salyers estimated this to have happened between ten and twenty seconds.
Bryce Scholten’s Testimony
Officer Bryce Scholten has been an officer at WCPD for approximately seven and a half years. He is currently assigned to the criminal investigations department but was a police officer at the time. Officer Scholten was assigned to the end of the parade route. He shot at Mr. Brooks three times but missed all three times.
Christopher Moss’ Testimony
Officer Christopher Moss has worked at WCPD for fourteen years. He was a part of the color guard for the WCPD unit. He clocked into work after he finished walking in the parade when he heard requests for backup. Officer Moss quickly finished getting dressed and responded back to the parade. He was attempting to help two elderly women when Officer Scholten approached and told him what he did. He was then told by a Hispanic man where the suspected vehicle was, which he secured, and found that it was registered to Dawn Woods, who is Mr. Brooks’ mother. Officer Moss helped write the search warrant that allowed the police to search the vehicle.
Carlos Arechiga Nolasco’s Testimony
Carlos Arechiga Nolasco was at home when he heard a screech from outside. He looked out his window and saw someone jump over the hood of an unknown damaged car and run away. Mr. Nolasco asked his downstairs neighbors if they knew anything about the car. They didn’t and were also confused.
Sean Backler’s Testimony
Sean Backler was working outside his house around 4:49 p.m. when he heard noises around his garage. He found the defendant and asked who he was. The defendant asked Mr. Backler to call him an Uber, but he refused and asked him to leave his property. Mr. Brooks hesitantly complied. Mr. Backler called the non-emergency line and described what the defendant was wearing when they met.
Domanic Caproon’s Testimony
Domanic Caproon was putting water jugs into his truck when he was approached by Mr. Brooks. He allowed him to use his phone to call an Uber.
Erin Cordes’s Testimony
Erin Cordes attended the parade with her husband and two children. They saw Officer Scholten fire at the red SUV. Mrs. Cordes and her family were on their way to their car when they were approached by Mr. Brooks, who she said wasn’t dressed appropriately for the weather. She hesitantly let him use her phone to call his mom.
Anthony Winters’ Testimony
Anthony Winters was driving for Lyft, which is a similar service to Uber. He got a ride request from someone named Dawn at 550 Elizabeth Street, the address of Aries Industries. Mr. Winters was told by the person who requested the ride that it was for someone else and was given a description. No one showed up, so he left the address.
Daniel Rider’s Testimony
Daniel Rider lives across the street from Aries Industries and was home alone when Mr. Brooks rang his doorbell around five p.m. He said that was homeless and needed to check on where his Uber was. Mr. Rider allowed him inside to use his phone and warm up. He also made Mr. Brooks a sandwich, seeing how he was under the impression that he was homeless. Mr. Brooks was thankful for Mr. Rider’s kindness and willingly left when he was asked to. He was arrested on the porch. Mr. Rider gave footage from his ring camera over to police.
Officer Rebecca Carpenter’s Testimony
Officer Rebecca Carpenter is an officer at Big Bend PD, a patrol officer in East Troy, and an assistant chief in Eagle. She was on duty but was not assigned to the parade. She was one of the officers who arrested Mr. Brooks. Several items were found in his pockets, including the sandwich that Mr. Rider made for him. Officer Carpenter found the sandwich while a different officer found the other items.
Officer Garrett Luling’s Testimony
Officer Garrett Luling is an officer at WCPD and was one of the officers who arrested Mr. Brooks.
Officer Draelon Leija’s Testimony
Officer Draelon Leija has been an officer at WCPD for two years. He reported to Memorial Hospital, where he met with Detectives Jay Carpenter and Stern. Officer Leija was tasked with transporting Mr. Brooks to the Muskego Police Department from the hospital.
Detective Jay Carpenter’s Testimony
Detective Jay Carpenter has been a detective at WPF for five of his eighteen years. He was a part of the color guard as well. He reported to Elizabeth Street after going on duty. Detective Carpenter interrogated Mr. Brooks twice. The FBI was present during the first interrogation, as it wasn’t clear if the attack involved terrorism. The recordings for both interrogations were played with prior bad acts excluded pursuant to a prior ruling made by the judge.
Juan Marquez’s Testimony
Juan Marquez was a defense witness who was called out of turn due to the scheduling of the translator that he needed. His testimony interrupted Detective Carpenter’s testimony because of this. Mr. Marquez was walking in the parade with his wife and son in the Catholic community. He heard no horn, so he didn’t see anything unusual when he was hit from behind. He was interviewed by an FBI agent.
Detective Jay Carpenter’s Continued Testimony
Detective Jay Carpenter resumed his testimony after Mr. Marquez. The first interrogation he had with Mr. Brooks happened at Memorial Hospital. The second happened at the Muskego Police Department, which was their temporary base while the main building was under construction.
Steven Schlomann’s Testimony
Steven Schlomann is the IT director for the Waukesha school district. He reviewed and handed surveillance over to the police.
Robert Stone II’s Testimony
Robert Stone II lives in Waukesha. He has security cameras on his house that caught Mr. Brooks go by. He provided the footage to police.
Andrew Amerson’s Testimony
Andrew Amerson lives in Waukesha. He has security cameras on his house that caught Mr. Brooks go by. He provided the footage to police.
Leonard Miller’s Testimony
Leonard Miller lives in Waukesha. He has security cameras on his house that caught Mr. Brooks go by. He provided the footage to police via email. He was on his way to look at Christmas lights when he saw a SWAT team in front of his home.
Kyle Becker’s Testimony
Kyle Becker is a specialist at WCPD, but I didn’t hear what he specializes in. He was part of the team that searched for Mr. Brooks’ discarded items, which were his sandals and hoodie.
After Mr. Becker’s testimony, the jury went to view the red SUV before they were released for lunch.
Justin Rowe’s Testimony
Detective Justin Rowe was also part of the search for Mr. Brooks’ items. He also obtained surveillance videos.
Ryan Schultz’s Testimony
Ryan Schultz is a reconstructionist with the Wisconsin State Patrol. He examined the red SUV.
Chris Johnson’s Testimony
Chris Johnson is a crime scene analyst at the state crime lab. He also examined the red SUV.
Trevor Naleid’s Testimony
Trevor Naleid was the senior forensic scientist in the DNA analysis unit at the state crime lab. He tested the DNA from the car.
The State rested.
Defense’s Opening Statement
Mr. Brooks deferred his opening statement until the beginning of his case. He said that there are always two sides to a story and that it’s easy to forget the other side of the coin. Although tragic, this attack wasn’t planned or intentional and there was a lot of suffering because of it.
State of Wisconsin’s Testimony
Mr. Brooks attempted to call the State of Wisconsin to the stand, which was quickly shut down.
Nicholas Kirby’s Testimony
Nicholas Kirby was the second witness Mr. Brooks called during his case, or the third witness if you include Mr. Marquez. He was walking with Miss Runkle and Miss Patterson, whom he advised not to meet up with Mr. Brooks. He said that he had a bad feeling that something would happen if they did. And he was right. Both Miss Runkle and Mr. Kirby ran to help her. He informed an officer they ran into on their way to help. He believed that the involvement of a knife was a miscommunication, as he had a knife injury from a previous incident that was unrelated to Mr. Brooks.
Heather Riemer’s Testimony
Heather Riemer attended the parade with her husband and three of their friends. She heard honking, but she wasn’t sure if it came from the red SUV or another vehicle. No one in Mrs. Riemer’s group was injured.
Douglas Kolar’s Testimony
Douglas Kolar attended the parade with his daughter, who was in the parade. He grabbed his daughter after Mr. Brooks drove through and hurried her to their car. Neither was injured.
Detective Steven Guth’s Testimony
Detective Steven Guth was recalled as a defense witness. He said that he was originally off duty on November 21st, 2021.
Erika Patterson’s Testimony
Erika Patterson was recalled as a defense witness. She said that she first met Mr. Brooks in Reno, Nevada. She said that she called Mr. Kirby’s phone because Miss Runkle’s phone kept going to voicemail.
Deanna Aldrich’s Testimony
Deanna Aldrich was home when she heard a noise. She saw a car that was “smashed to smithereens” when she looked outside. She saw someone running away but was unable to get a clear description since she didn’t have her glasses on.
Christopher Bertram’s Testimony
Christopher Bertram was taking his mother’s car to a mechanic friend when he saw a smashed-up car and the driver. He didn’t remember the description of the driver he provided to law enforcement.
Jason Hayes’s Testimony
Jason Hayes attended the parade with his daughter. He heard a horn, but didn’t see anyone get struck.
Abel Lazcano’s Testimony
Abel Lazcano attended the parade with his wife and daughter. He was the Hispanic male who reported the location the SUV was found.
Kathleen Yourell’s Testimony
Kathleen Yourell’s four children participated in the parade, all of whom were hit. She thankfully never saw them get hit. Mrs. Yourell described the injuries that her children had.
Katrice Babiasz’s Testimony
Katrice Babiasz has been a law enforcement dispatch supervisor for sixteen years. She attended the parade with her family. They were set up near the beginning and saw the SUV enter the parade route. Mrs. Babiasz heard the driver honking the horn and gesturing. She said that he seemed to look “through” her, which was very frightening for her. She was struck, but she didn’t tell anyone since no one asked. Although Mrs. Babiasz never saw anyone get struck, it seemed to her that the driver was trying to strike people.
Judge Dorrow closed Mr. Brooks’ defense case for him.
State’s Closing Argument
District Attorney Sue Opper delivered the closing argument for the State. She expressed gratitude towards the jury from the prosecution team. Because Mr. Brooks kept asking witnesses about it, she said that they represent the plaintiff, which was/is the State of Wisconsin. Attorney Opper said that it is their job to enforce when the laws that people set up are violated. She asked them to obey Judge Dorrow’s instructions before going over the charges, evidence, and witness testimony. They only included those who were hit by the defendant in the charges to keep things more efficient.
Defense’s Closing Argument
Despite being told not to, Mr. Brooks immediately tried to bring up jury nullification, which, according to FindLaw, is the jury’s power to acquit a defendant despite finding them guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. He reiterated from his opening that this wasn’t intentional. Mr. Brooks then tried to sympathize with the jury, saying that he never got to meet his newborn grandson and that he believes in Jesus. He implored the jury to “do what’s right”.
State’s Rebuttal Closing Arguments
Attorney Opper called Mr. Brooks out during her rebuttal arguments, saying that it doesn’t matter that he “profess[es] to be the finest man under God that you can be” after he ran over children.
Mr. Brooks’ Conduct During the Trial
Mr. Brooks interrupted Judge Jennifer Dorrow several times during the trial. Judge Dorrow was very calm and patient with him. She gave him several chances on multiple occasions throughout the trial to get his act together before having him removed to another courtroom. He appeared over video conference, where Judge Dorrow could mute him if need be. During one of these times on the first day, Mr. Brooks had a tantrum and took his shirt off. When questioning the witnesses, Mr. Brooks would ask them about the plaintiff and who they were. It came across as if he didn’t understand how the state of Wisconsin could be the plaintiff in his case. However, according to Wikipedia, it is a tactic sovereign citizens use during trial. Judge Dorrow admonished Mr. Brooks on day three, saying that his not understanding of the law was no longer an excuse now that they were at trial. Mr. Brooks seemed to be more intimidated by the male witnesses than the female witnesses. This seems to be deep-rooted misogyny. Something he said that might prove this is “Remember, non-response is consent”. This doesn’t necessarily pertain to Mr. Brooks’ conduct during the trial, but there was a tornado warning on the fifth day, so Judge Dorrow stopped his cross-examination of Daniel Knapp to take an early lunch break so that everyone could stay safe during the warning. He was able to continue afterward, then court went into recess for the day so everyone who lived in the area could make sure their properties and loved ones were safe. On day thirteen, while he was in the other courtroom, Mr. Brooks kept making box forts with his evidence boxes and at one point could be heard yelling, despite being muted. He kept mispronouncing words. I know that some of it was African American Vernacular English or AAVE, but there were some words that he just plain old butchered. The most common was the word “tacit”. It is pronounced “Tas-it”, but he kept saying “tack-it”. He also kept saying “substain” instead of “sustain”. He said it so much that I caught myself writing “substain” while I was taking notes. On day six, Mr. Brooks went on a fifty-minute rant about some SovCit BS. He brought up that Judge Dorrow knew someone who was involved with this case and asked her why she would have their phone number if they had a “strictly professional relationship”. There are several reasons as to why co-workers may exchange phone numbers. The first thing that comes to mind for me is maybe one of them got into a car accident and needs a ride to work or something. During sentencing, Judge Dorrow disclosed that Mr. Brooks had previously been diagnosed with antisocial personality disorder, which is commonly associated with psychopathy and sociopathy. A doctor wrote in her report from a pre-trial evaluation that she found nothing that could corroborate that he was exhibiting “signs of impaired reality” before the incident. Mr. Brooks said “grounds” seven hundred and forty-four times, “lawful law” twenty-one times, “objection” one thousand five hundred and twenty-one times, and brought up subject matter jurisdiction eighty-three times.
Verdict and Sentencing
1st Degree Intentional Homicide (6 counts): guilty
1st Degree Recklessly Endangering Safety (61 counts): guilty
Hit and Run–Involve Death (6 counts): guilty
Bail Jumping–Felony (2 counts): guilty
Battery (1 count): guilty
Battery (1 count): dismissed
Homicide by Veh. Use–Control. Substance (6 counts): dismissed
Darrell Brooks was sentenced to six consecutive life sentences plus seven hundred sixty-eight and a half years. He was also ordered to pay restitution.
Personal Opinions
These are just my opinions. Feel free to disagree, but keep it as respectful as possible. I believe Darrell kept objecting just as an excuse to disrupt and/or stall the proceedings. However, for someone who had no knowledge of the law, I’m surprised that a few of his objections were sustained. In my opinion, Officer Moss kinda looks like Lin Manuel Miranda. Also, Daniel Rider was very kind to let Darrell into his house, even though it was under false pretenses. I also believe that he inadvertently stalled him long enough for the police to find and arrest him.
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