Garry Tan on X - "If Vicha Ratanapakdee’s death shook you, now is the time to speak. His killer may be released soon. The court is accepting community impact statements before sentencing. Tell them what his death meant to you. 1–2 pages, respectful, personal. Send to justiceforvicha@gmail.com by January 26."
Kane 謝凱堯 on X - "It took less than two years for the man who assaulted (didn’t kill) Nancy Pelosi‘s husband to receive life without parole. @SFSuperiorCourt is about to release a man who killed an Asian senior citizen as a joke in broad daylight with zero post-verdict detention."
Thread by @SAshworthHayes on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "Shabana Mahmood, UK home secretary: her vision is a "panopticon" where "the eyes of the state can be on you at all times" Curiously the idea of a policy approach like "jail repeat criminals" is somehow less attractive than letting them predate on the public and using their behaviour as an excuse to engage in mass surveillance. Your rights end with serious criminal acts, like posting dissent online."
Collingwood 🇬🇧 on X - "For those who do not know, the 'Panopticon' was a plan for a 'perfect' prison. The cells were arranged in a multistory disc around a central guard tower. Because the guards would have a complete view into any of the cells at any time, but the guards in the tower could not be observed from the cells, the inmates would have no idea if they are being viewed or not, but know they could be at any time. Therefore, the theory went, they would be forced to act as though they were being viewed. Ultimately, the psychological effects of such living were considered too cruel for even prisoners to endure, and such a custodial facility was never built. Many indeed consider the entire concept of the Panopticon the foundation of the theory of totalitarian regimes in operation: if it could seek to arrange society so they every citizen may be watched at any time but cannot know whether they are being watched or not (e.g. the telescreens in Nineteen Eighty-Four's Oceania) a regime could force all citizens to act as though they were being watched at any given time. And this is what our Home Secretary—the office in charge of the police and MI5 and the justice system—wants to impose on us. This is her dream society. Not even joking or embellishing."
Andrew Kolvet on X - "NEW: Shocking details emerge in this triple homicide out of Florida Turns out Ahmad Jihad Bojeh shot up a Wawa in 2021 where one victim was shot several times and nearly died. A judge let him back out into the community on an insanity plea. The judge has the blood of three innocent people on his hands."
Elon Musk on X - "Finding someone “not guilty by reason of insanity” and then releasing them on to the street to murder innocent people is utterly insane"
7NEWS Melbourne on X - "Police are hunting a Melbourne jogger wanted over a homophobic outburst against three strangers in Kensington. One of the victims is leading efforts to track the culprit down and bring him to justice. @LauraTurner_7"
State of policing in Victoria : r/aussie - "Police putting more effort into catching a guy that said a mean word than they do catching people who carry around machetes and commit home invasions. Wish they put this much effort into catching the people who kicked my door in a robbed my house a few months ago while I was on holiday."
If you want the police to prioritise your case, just tell them you were the victim of a slur directed at a "minority"
John D. Macari Jr. 🇺🇸🗽 on X - "🚨NYC Council Wants NYPD Cops To Hesitate During Life & Death Encounters
NYC Council Member Mercedes Narcisse wants the NYPD to declare “Unholstering a weapon a use of force”. This bill like the others incompetently does not define what a “weapon” is. Is a firearm, a can of pepper stay, a night stick or asp considered a “weapon” ? Well we don’t know. When would “unholstering” said weapon be considered a “use of force” ? Do you have to point it at an individual or would just taking the weapon out be considered a use of force that must be documented and stay on the officers permanent record for all eternity ? Let’s say officers responds to a 911 call of an apparent burglary. The officers arrive on scene they observe a door kicked in an a burglar arm ringing. They put over the radio they have arrived, take their firearms out and do a sweep of the home to ascertain if the alleged perpetrators is still in the home. The search yields negative results. Do they have to fill out a “use of force” report ? Well according to this bill yes and then after a few of these each month the NYPD will deem them a “use of force recidivist”, place them on monitoring which will ultimately have cops seconding guessing themselves and lead to the unnecessary and avoidable death of an officer."
Rafael A. Mangual on X - "As I’ve explained many times over the years, police officers, including members of the NYPD very rarely use force. But that reality conflicts with the “progressive” narrative, and we can’t have that. So, rather than adjusting their narrative to match reality, NYC Council leftists want to expand the definition of use-of-force to include merely unholstering a firearm…"
Libs of TikTok on X - "WTF. Tracy Davis, a Jefferson County Judge in Kentucky, has cut the jail sentence of Christopher Thompson IN HALF from 65 years to 30 years, after he was convicted of kidnapping, robbing, and R*PING woman. Her reasoning? Because Thompson is black and is a victim of society. You can't make this sh*t up."
memetic_sisyphus on X - "This one is almost too much to bear. He forced a woman in her own car with a gun, raped her, made her drive to an atm empty out the accounts, then raped her again. He had a history of crime, robbery gun charges etc, and during the trial he told the woman he raped that “I’ll see you in 20 years bitch” The judge said this is someone who just fell through the cracks"
NYC career criminal Germaine Parham arrested for rape of girl 14 in Stuyvesant Town Manhattan
memetic_sisyphus on X - "In November the judge finally threw the book at him. After 23 other felonies over his adult life he pulled a knife to rob a cvs. The judge had enough, this violent criminal would finally face justice. 30 days in jail! A few weeks later he’s arrested again for stealing $1500 worth of merch from another store. The judge releases him on a promise he’ll show up to court to get another stern talking to. He doesn’t. Instead he goes to the rich part of town and rapes a 14 year old."
The Post Millennial on X - "Florida prosecutor defends 2021 release of Ahmad Jihad Bojeh on insanity plea, now he's charged with killing 3 tourists"
Sean Fitzgerald (Actual Justice Warrior) on X - "The guy committed a mass shooting at a WaWa he fired at multiple people, wounded 1 all caught on video. He was found not guilty by reason of insanity, but instead of forcing him into a facility, which is normal. She released him, so he committed another mass shooting killing 3"
How many criminals spared jail because of "insanity" are just released so they can go on to commit more crimes, or even kill?
Our Own Nation on X - "Shaquille Taylor killed Lillian Ludwig, but his IQ is TOO LOW, so courts are debating if he can stand trial. This wouldn't be the first time this has happened."
Will Tanner on X - "If a criminal is too dumb to understand that murder is wrong, that should be an aggravating circumstance that inclines the court to capital punishment because it means he cannot be rehabilitated"
The only time left wingers believe IQ is real is when they're trying to get criminals off the hook for their crimes
Rockford man arrested for child sexual assault, faces multiple charges - "A Rockford man faces charges of predatory criminal sexual assault of a victim under 13 years old, according to police. Rockford Police announced the arrest of Doray Kitchen, Jr., 53, on Monday. Kitchen was the subject of an investigation that began on November 2, 2025, when the department was contacted to investigate a report of child sexual assault. Police said the victim and Kitchen were known to each other. On January 30, Kitchen turned himself in, police said. He was booked into the Winnebago County Jail on charges of predatory criminal sexual assault, aggravated criminal sexual abuse, and criminal sexual assault. He was released pretrial, with a notice to appear at a future court hearing."
Dapper Detective on X - "🚨BREAKING: Career thug arrested again and out on pretrial release under @GovPritzker “SAFE-T Act” in Illinois is arrested just hours later for raping a child under the age of 13."
Guy Benson on X - "New “SAFE-T act” victim is a child who was sexually assaulted by a released criminal. Congratulations to Illinois Democrats."
BAY AREA STATE OF MIND on X - "The Mexican President said she didn't want to use force against the cartels because it would violate their human rights. "Returning to the war against the narco is not an option. First, because it is outside the framework of the law.""
Online Sporting Director🇿🇦 on X - "I dont understand democratic governments, they’ll violate law abiding citizens rights every second/chance they get, but when it comes to criminals, suddenly they remember human rights."
End Wokeness on X - "Tavari Pearson hit his therapist with a rock to the head, strangIed her, r*ped her, and then dumped her in a ditch Prosecutors were seeking 20 YEARS Judge Ballou gave him 6 months"
Peter D’Abrosca on X - "Turns out the judge is currently suspended after twice defying a state Supreme Court ruling to appropriately sentence another violent criminal."
Thread by @stanfordNYC on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "Decarceration activists have created an entirely new argument for the death penalty: if you don't execute murderers, liberals will crawl over broken glass to void their life-without-parole sentences and set them free. The brother of the victim pleaded for Tanzerious Anderson to remain in prison, pointing out that he was told at the time that Anderson would never be released. Anderson was convicted of first degree murder. These cases also tend to reveal the "progressive stack." The victim here was a Muslim immigrant from Lebanon. Maybe if the assailant had been a white supremacist, that would count here. But he was a black teenager and evident habitual criminal, which is a trump card. While serving a LWOP sentence, Anderson married Tania Fernandes, a Cape Verdean immigrant who served on the Boston City Council until her conviction on corruption charges last year."
I Meme Therefore I Am 🇺🇸 on X - "🚨UNREAL: Canadian Crown prosecutors believe that a Grande Prairie unhinged lunatic who identifies as a gender-fluid individual and stabbed his 8-year-old daughter and assaulted his 7-year-old son should serve just 5-1/2 years behind bars. The man, who goes by the name Alice Michael Atwood, was released on bail after pleading guilty to aggravated assault. He called the vicious attack on his children a “horrible error and a bad decision.” He currently lives in a van in British Columbia and Alberta and makes videos in which he says he “makes magic” by reading tarot cards and talking about his case. Here he is threatening people, saying they are breaking the law if they use his legal name, and claiming that they are putting his children in danger. After stabbing his children, he says he is afraid that if other parents talk about him to their kids, his children could be bullied. After the attack, his daughter was airlifted to a hospital for emergency surgery to repair her esophagus. She now faces months on a feeding tube, and the rest of the family must find ways to ensure their children’s safety."
I Meme Therefore I Am 🇺🇸 on X - "🚨The Crown prosecutors requested 7- and 8-year sentences for the 2 organizers of the Freedom Convoy truck protests in Ottawa. The Crown prosecutors are requesting 5 1/2 years for a man who stabbed his 7- and 8-year-old children. Let that sink in."
AF Post on X - "Former North Carolina governor Roy Cooper agreed to fast-track the release of 3,500 inmates as part of a racial equity settlement with the NAACP. The list included 51 convicts serving life sentences for murder or rape. Follow: @AFpost"
Alexandra Lavoie on X - "“I don’t know if I made the right decision or the wrong decision.” 35-year-old Michael Joseph Attwood—who identifies as “Alice”—stabbed his 7-year-old son and 8-year-old daughter in Grande Prairie, Alberta. 🇨🇦 The little girl’s esophagus was severed. Emergency surgery. Months on a feeding tube. He was charged with aggravated assault. Released on bail within days. Still free in 2026—living in a van painted “Every Child Matters,” posting online, admitting he’s unstable. Canada’s catch-and-release bail system puts citizens at risk by letting a man who stabbed his own kids—and questions if it was the “right” thing to do —walk the streets."
Clearly he only did it because of transphobia, so his son and daughter need to be jailed
A Hitman Killed a Cartel Money Launderer's Wife in Front of Him. A Canadian Judge Called It Punishment Enough. - "The morning of August 18, 2022, in a quiet southwest Calgary subdivision, Nakita Baron, 31, stepped into the family’s Bentley beside her husband — a money launderer for Mexican cartels linked to Ryan Wedding’s massive cocaine importation pipeline. Talal Fouani had been charged just two months earlier, in June 2022, as part of Project Cobra: Alberta’s largest drug bust, a sweeping federal investigation into a cross-border drug trafficking network tied to Chinese-supplied cartel labs that had flooded Canada with nearly one metric tonne of methamphetamine and six kilograms of cocaine, with a street value of $55 million. As Fouani began to back the Bentley out of his driveway, a man in a construction vest approached and waved for him to roll down his window. Then he opened fire. Nakita Baron was killed. Fouani was shot in the face and survived. This week, a Calgary judge said he could not send Fouani to jail, sentencing him instead to house arrest — ruling that the cartel’s murder of his wife constituted sufficient punishment for his role in one of Alberta’s most significant organized crime investigations. It is further corroboration of The Bureau‘s reporting on Canada’s broken legal system — the completion of a pattern of failures in the prosecution of Project Cobra and related cases involving the Sinaloa and Jalisco cartels and Ryan Wedding’s trafficking networks that, according to senior U.S. government sources, has allowed cartel violence to metastasize through Canada’s cities unopposed. The decision closes the last active prosecution arising from Project Cobra. Every other principal target walked free without a conviction. On Monday, Justice Greg Stirling of the Calgary Court of King’s Bench sentenced Fouani for laundering $800,000 in proceeds from drug trafficking... U.S. and Canadian policing experts say the impact of ineffective courts has filtered into federal and provincial police decision-making, with major cases often neglected because the outcomes are anticipated before investigations begin. Months before Monday’s decision, a senior U.S. government source who shared inside details on Project Cobra told The Bureau that the broader consequences of Canada’s legal and policing failures remain dangerously misunderstood by the Canadian public. “This is the biggest threat facing Canada,” the official told The Bureau in September 2025. “We’ve been talking to RCMP for years about this, but nobody really wants to take it head on.” The Bureau has previously reported in depth on the collapse of two of Canada’s most high-profile cartel prosecutions — Project Brisa in Ontario and Project Cobra in Alberta — and the structural legal failures that turned record-breaking seizures and triumphant press conferences into courtroom disasters, with all charges dropped, millions in taxpayer dollars wasted, and cartel networks left intact. In both cases, two Canadian legal mechanisms — the Jordan decision, which imposes strict timelines on how long a prosecution can take before an accused’s Charter rights are violated, and the Stinchcombe ruling, which compels the Crown to disclose virtually all investigative materials to the defence — were leveraged tactically by defence counsel to collapse cases that had taken years and millions of dollars to build... police leaders urge Ottawa to reform an outdated system unable to counter the sophistication and lethality of transnational criminals now overwhelming Canada’s institutions."
Donald Trump is the biggest threat to Canada!
Meme - Arthur MacWaters @ArthurMacwaters: "Keep in mind that instituting a strikes rule would eliminate 50+% of all crime Think about that. Really think about it. We would more than halve crime if we stopped letting people out after their crime. It's not hard. Your judges and DAs despise you."
*"Prior arrests of persons admitted to state prison in 34 states in 2014*
Elon Musk on X - "Empathy for the victims requires that repeat violent offenders be incarcerated"
Left wing "empathy" is highly selective and weaponised. Only "minorities" get empathy. Everyone else must suck it up
We have normalized delinquent, disorderly behaviour in our cities for too long - The Globe and Mail - "For years, a vocal minority of social activists have effectively dictated public policy in Canadian cities. Homeless encampments in parks and beside playgrounds have not simply been tolerated, but recharacterized as legitimate neighbourhoods to be protected. Indeed, drive around Toronto and you’ll see signs that read “I support my neighbours in tents” outside million-dollar homes, where the families who sleep inside ostensibly have private backyards to enjoy. (Lower-income families without backyards, by contrast, actually have to share public outdoor spaces with those “neighbours in tents.”) In the East York area of Toronto, there’s an encampment in a small park across from a subway station, and right next door to a daycare. The collection of tents has been there, with one brief interruption, since the summer, when parents and daycare staff first began alerting the city about open drug use, discarded needles, and loud altercations occurring at the site. One daycare worker reported someone from the encampment yelling at the toddlers playing in the daycare’s outdoor space. The staff no longer take the children on neighbourhood walks. The city’s response so far has been to send a police officer to the daycare to “offer safety advice,” and also to erect a sign that says tents are not allowed in the park. The sign, at time of writing, hung impotently above a collection of tents: a perfect metaphor for the municipal paralysis that has allowed delinquent, disorderly and unlawful behaviour to effectively mandate that toddlers must be kept inside. It is plainly madness – but then, it’s a special brand of madness, because to call out the deleterious effects of these behaviours has been to invoke the ire of those aforementioned activists. You don’t support a safer consumption site metres from a school? Well then, you must be okay with drug-users dying. You want encampments forced out of parks? How would you like to be forced out of your home?... as long as there are shelter spaces, there should not be encampments in public parks. If there are not enough shelter spaces available, then municipalities must enact emergency measures – as the city of Barrie, Ont., did back in September, to positive early results – to urgently provide resources to get people off the streets. It is not simply a matter of restoring the use of public spaces for everyone, but restoring a sense of order, of social cohesion, of faith in the institutions of governance. Because the longer visible signs of social decay are allowed to fester, the more inclined those with means will be to simply check out – figuratively and literally – leaving those without the ability to relocate to deal with playgrounds littered with drug paraphernalia. No one wants to live in a place where they perceive the rights of those breaking the law to take precedence over those who have chosen to abide by them. City councillor and Toronto mayoral candidate Brad Bradford presented a motion to Toronto City Council last week that would see any encampment located 200 metres from schools, daycares or playgrounds removed within 48 hours. Council amended the motion, shortening the distance to 50 metres and creating a “three-strikes” rule whereby anyone residing in those encampments would be offered a shelter space no more than three times before the city could go in and remove them. It is unclear why city councillors believe an individual who has twice refused a shelter space would be amenable to moving into a shelter if offered a third time. It is also unclear why anyone should believe that this rule would be enforced, when there has been virtually no enforcement of the existing rules for months, or years. The inertia on the part of law enforcement and municipalities has been outwardly endorsed by activists, and tacitly permitted by everyone else – many of whom are worried about being labelled heartless or cruel for demanding action on social disorder."
Brian Rosenwald on X - "Tell me you weren't alive in the 1990s without telling me. The concept — lock up people with long rap sheets who commit lots of crimes makes sense. But the implementation, where you had people stealing $10 items and getting life sentences, was a disaster. Or addicts who could be rehabilitated getting life sentences when what they needed was rehab. There needs to be a common sense middle ground where judges can/do consider someone's rap sheet when sentencing & can hand down long sentences to chronic recidivists w/o laws removing discretion & forcing foolish, unjust outcomes."
wanye on X - "Imagine how careful you’d be if you already had two strikes and knew that a third one would mean life in prison. Somebody could offer you $5000 to shoplift a $10 item and you wouldn’t do it. I mean, you probably wouldn’t do it, anyway, which is why you’d never have two strikes in the first place. But imagine you had two strikes. Just think about how careful you’d be. But criminals cannot be careful in that situation, because they are disordered, because they are impulsive, because they can’t control themselves. We’re talking about extremely dangerous and unpredictable people. Anybody who would steal a $10 item in this situation is raising their hand and saying, “hello, it’s me who you want to lock up forever!”"
LDP Respecter on X - "The "life in prison over stealing $20" is never just them stealing $20 dollars. Like the Ora Riley case is presented as a man sentenced to life over $20 and a pack of cigarettes, leaving out that this was a knifepoint robbery. He already decided a life was worth less than $20."
Thread by @xwanyex on Thread Reader App – Thread Reader App - "Liberals do this very weird thing where some deranged, violent criminal sticks a gun in your face and demands your wallet, but the wallet only has $20 in it, so from then on they’ll minimize the crime by describing it as, “stealing only $20.” This is so fundamentally dishonest and the amount so obviously irrelevant, that on some level I actually find it shocking. To the extent that the amount is relevant, it’s actually in service of an argument in the other direction, which is to say that this is a criminal so obviously disordered and unstable that they’re willing to commit heinous crimes for even small gains, which makes them way less trustworthy in ordinary society than would be the case if they were at least more conventionally responsive to incentives."
NobodyImportant on X - "Back in the 80’s, my uncle was on a jury for a guy that shot two people to death while stealing $16 from them. They gave him the death penalty. Before he was FINALLY executed, a newspaper described it as “man to be executed over $16 robbery”, no mention of the dead couple."
Mark Elevate on X - "It's worse than that. They reduce it to "stealing $20" when it was: crime 1: armed robbery, carjacking crime 2: assault and battery, felony domestic violence crime 3: armed robbery, but the victim only had $20 in her purse This criminal is a danger to society. It's not $20."
