mhaze
Well-known member
- First Name
- mhike
- Joined
- Jul 17, 2021
- Threads
- 5
- Messages
- 417
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- 451
- Location
- Texas
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- Tesla 3; Smartcar; F150 Raptor; Avalanche 2500 4x4
If you want to reply to my posts, go ahead. But answer the arguments I make. Don't waste my time by going off on some song and dance lecture. Just as a reminder, here is what I saidCynical speculation. In my experience the criminal justice system is particularly hard on diversion candidates. Many are subsequently picked up and jailed for noncompliance. A drawbridge operator in Palm Beach was just jailed for many years due to failure to comply with her pretrial diversion terms. This was a case where she lied about her role in the death of a bicyclist due to her criminal error in opening the bridge while occupied by the cyclist. The justice system had flaws but mostly gets to the truth and correct outcomes. The exceptions are what we see splashed across the internet and news. I get the anti-Soros sentiment and agree that stacking liberal judges and prosecutors is bad. But that is decidedly not what happened here. Right wing media (I am a conservative) has appropriated this incident as an example of lax prosecutorial discretion but it simply isn’t true. The headlines indicating the pro got off free are flat out lies. Don’t be taken in by either side. The outcome here is just.
'What you've done is essentially read and cited to us the paperwork. What you have not done and cannot do is look at the actual outcome. Right now nobody knows what that may be, because it is a future event.
But there's every reason to be concerned that after the publicity has wore out, this perp is let off with a "wink, wink and a smirk."'
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