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Meet the Chicago DEI judge who let 15 time felon go free — who later set woman on fire.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 12:56 pm
Posted on 11/26/25 at 12:56 pm
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:08 pm to loogaroo
Frick this woman. From her own words in the video: "I looked at the African-American court deputy and we nodded at each other. I thought to myself: That's right! We are doing this!"
Who is we? People with multiple chins? People who have necks that look like a tube sock with a meatball inside of it?
Who is we? People with multiple chins? People who have necks that look like a tube sock with a meatball inside of it?
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:10 pm to loogaroo
She felt comfortable saying all those things out loud.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:13 pm to loogaroo
If only these judges would suffer the wrath of their totally political decisions.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:13 pm to loogaroo
Muh Democrat diversity and compassion.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:17 pm to loogaroo
It needs to start affecting their families
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:28 pm to loogaroo
Wild that a judge/prosecutor can even get away with talking so openly about skin color having an affect on how they prosecute.
This post was edited on 11/26/25 at 4:41 pm
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:29 pm to lsusteve1
This is perhaps a controversial legal argument but I would consider suing this judge individually
The legal argument to be made is that there are guidelines for sentencing somebody with 72 convictions and I'm not sure a release would be on that list
She acted extra judicially outside of her powers in releasing this person given the sentencing guidelines that probably existed
Again it is a novel argument but it certainly would make her suffer and make other judges think
The legal argument to be made is that there are guidelines for sentencing somebody with 72 convictions and I'm not sure a release would be on that list
She acted extra judicially outside of her powers in releasing this person given the sentencing guidelines that probably existed
Again it is a novel argument but it certainly would make her suffer and make other judges think
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:30 pm to loogaroo
Where is the bar? Where are the judges who impose punishment on bad judges? Scared, white libtards.
These hacka just judges should be stripped of their lawn degrees
These hacka just judges should be stripped of their lawn degrees
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:35 pm to SeeeeK
article from Chicago Tribune (behind paywall so I pasted in here)
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/25/editorial-blue-line-attack-lawrence-reed-tim-evans-cook-county-judges-electronic-monitoring/
quote:
The saga of Lawrence Reed, the 50-year-old accused of pouring gasoline over a young woman on a CTA Blue Line train and setting her on fire, represents a nightmare for advocates of criminal justice reform and more specifically the SAFE-T Act.
The Illinois statute, first enacted in 2021, famously eliminated the use of cash bail for those accused of crimes, violent or otherwise, and awaiting trial. In its place, the law established a system where prosecutors would be tasked with asking judges to detain defendants deemed a flight risk or a threat to public safety. Judges would have the final say on whether to imprison them as they awaited their day in court.
Before he allegedly attacked the 26-year-old woman, Reed, with more than 70 past arrests and a history of mental illness, had been accused of another violent crime — aggravated battery — and had been released in August over the objections of a Cook County prosecutor by Cook County Judge Teresa Molina-Gonzalez. At the time, the judge said, “I can’t keep everybody in jail because the state’s attorney wants me to.”
Those are likely to be words Molina-Gonzalez very much regrets when she next faces voters.
But what happened after Molina-Gonzalez made her fateful decision is what’s most on our minds right now. Thanks to strong and thorough reporting by crime news site CWB, we have a comprehensive look at just how badly our system failed the woman who reportedly remains in critical condition as we write.
Just before the attack took place the night of Monday, Nov. 17, Reed had been out of his home in violation of his curfew for much of the immediately preceding weekend, according to a court filing by pretrial personnel in the office of Cook County Chief Judge Timothy Evans. (The chief judge’s office now has sole authority over the county’s electronic-monitoring program, under which those subject to pretrial home confinement rather than imprisonment are tracked.)
Reed wasn’t where he was supposed to be beginning 6:31 p.m. Friday, Nov. 14, until 6:21 a.m. the next morning, according to the CWB report.
Two days later, on the day of the attack, Reed was away from home in violation of his release conditions for virtually the entire day. Evans’ office reported receiving the first notice of Reed’s violation at 9:13 that morning. It got an “escalated alert” three hours later, at 12:13 p.m., and another “escalated alert” 12 hours later, at 12:13 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18. That second escalated alert occurred about three hours after the woman was set on fire.
Reed was on pretrial release after having been accused of hitting without prior provocation a female attendant at a mental health facility so hard in the face that she lost consciousness. In other words, he is not the sort of criminal defendant who should be roaming Chicago streets at all hours.
CWB asked the chief judge’s office what their normal protocol is in a situation like Reed’s. The answer was disturbing, to say the least. Effectively, when there are curfew violations, the assigned officer will prepare a report with the details and share it with the assistant state’s attorney and defense attorneys on the case. At the defendant’s next court date, the judge will be notified of violations.
What about cases involving “escalated” alerts? Same answer.
That’s it. No request to Chicago police or the sheriff’s office to find the violator and ensure they’re where they’re supposed to be. No apparent physical intervention of any kind to ensure compliance.
When Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart’s office ran the part of the county’s electronic-monitoring program applied to those charged with the most violent and other serious offenses — a responsibility Dart handed over to the chief judge’s office earlier this year — sheriff’s officers often would intervene. They would call those who weren’t in their designated locations or would go out to locate the individuals. Unlike the sheriff, the chief judge’s office doesn’t have sworn officers at its disposal, but Dart at the time of the handover said his office would be available to help at the request of the chief judge’s office in cases where defendants abscond. The sheriff’s office tells us it’s unaware of any such ask since the chief judge took over the program, and in no event did it happen in the Reed case.
Cook County State’s Attorney Eileen O’Neill Burke said at the time of the change that she didn’t believe the chief judge’s office was prepared to run the program safely. The case of Lawrence Reed sure makes it look like she was right.
We believe the public at large is generally unaware that there’s now effectively no timely enforcement for those who violate or ignore conditions of release under the EM program. Given that EM has become the main alternative to incarceration under the SAFE-T Act when judges opt not to detain those accused of serious crimes, the currently lax state of EM enforcement obviously is a serious threat to public safety.
Evans, a fierce proponent of criminal justice reform and the SAFE-T Act over his 24 years as chief judge, will be chief judge only until the end of the month, having been defeated in September in his bid for reelection by Cook County Judge Charles Beach.
At the top of Beach’s list of priorities when he takes office on Dec. 1 must be an overhaul of the EM program to ensure that dangerous people who violate their terms of release face timely repercussions.
The Nov. 17 horror on that Blue Line train was preventable.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/11/25/editorial-blue-line-attack-lawrence-reed-tim-evans-cook-county-judges-electronic-monitoring/
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:35 pm to loogaroo
Time to make some new rules. You release repeat offenders, you house them at your residence until trial. Violent repeat offenders get full control of the wifi and TV remotes.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:36 pm to loogaroo
There should be a privately funded program where when a judge lets a felon out, that felon should be given a free house as close to that judge's house as possible. Find out all the offending judge's addresses, then purchase homes as close as you can get to their house. It may be expensive for some of these judges but you can make sure you can rent the homes to as many felons as you can fit in there.
Would be sad for the neighbors but if you want to make an omelet, you gotta break a few eggs.
Would be sad for the neighbors but if you want to make an omelet, you gotta break a few eggs.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:51 pm to loogaroo
Should put her in a cell with these 3
There seems to be a pattern, but I can’t quite see it
There seems to be a pattern, but I can’t quite see it
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:57 pm to loogaroo
Go post this on the OT. Those fricking retards LOVE DEI and will defend it.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 1:59 pm to loogaroo
If she’s qualified to be a judge then I’m fricking overqualified for the LSU head coaching job!
Posted on 11/26/25 at 2:01 pm to loogaroo
DEI is great!
Clowns still support that garbage.
Clowns still support that garbage.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 6:36 pm to Jbird
It's uncanny how 100 percent of the time these 'crazy' habitual offenders 'randomly' kill someone, it's a 118-pound white woman.
You never see them stab or pour gasoline on a former college middle linebacker.
You never see them stab or pour gasoline on a former college middle linebacker.
Posted on 11/26/25 at 7:21 pm to loogaroo
It wont be long that people are going to start going Law Abiding Citizen on these judges, and i wont feel the least bit bad for them
Posted on 11/26/25 at 9:23 pm to Funky Tide 8
quote:
Reed wasn’t where he was supposed to be beginning 6:31 p.m. Friday, Nov. 14, until 6:21 a.m. the next morning, according to the CWB report. Two days later, on the day of the attack, Reed was away from home in violation of his release conditions for virtually the entire day. Evans’ office reported receiving the first notice of Reed’s violation at 9:13 that morning. It got an “escalated alert” three hours later, at 12:13 p.m., and another “escalated alert” 12 hours later, at 12:13 a.m. Tuesday, Nov. 18. That second escalated alert occurred about three hours after the woman was set on fire.
Sounds a lot like the guy who was waiting trial in St. Louis and then made a teen volleyball player a paraplegic and ended our DAs career.
We don’t have to live like this.
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