- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
Landry regarding Mall shooting blames the Judges and the Parents and he's RIGHT
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:01 pm
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:01 pm
First of all, the entirety of law enforcement in BRLA congratulating itself on its response to this horrific gang shootout at a f$cking mall has made me want to pull my hair out. All I want to know is what “teens” were involved and when we can send all of them to jail. Forever.
Landry stresses me out, but his suggestions during his address beginning at about minute 49 are solid.
He suggests warrant sweeps in the neighborhoods where these dumbass thugs who decided to engage in a shootout in the middle of the fricking mall.
He also wants legislative reforms regarding the judiciary and will name and shame judges engaging in releasing these animals back into the public. I agree with him.
Everyone is presumed to be innocent, but if they are found guilty or pled so, they don’t need to be let off the hook and overridden by dumbasses like Ebony Rose (biggest moron on the bench who should have been defrocked if not disbarred by the LASCT for that shite she pulled) and Gayle Horne Ray (also moronic and crazy).
WAFB video of PC today
Summary of Moron Judge Gayle Horne Ray:
Gayle Horne Ray
Summary of Eboni - WHO SHOULD NOT EVEN HAVE A LAW LICENSE
Landry stresses me out, but his suggestions during his address beginning at about minute 49 are solid.
He suggests warrant sweeps in the neighborhoods where these dumbass thugs who decided to engage in a shootout in the middle of the fricking mall.
He also wants legislative reforms regarding the judiciary and will name and shame judges engaging in releasing these animals back into the public. I agree with him.
Everyone is presumed to be innocent, but if they are found guilty or pled so, they don’t need to be let off the hook and overridden by dumbasses like Ebony Rose (biggest moron on the bench who should have been defrocked if not disbarred by the LASCT for that shite she pulled) and Gayle Horne Ray (also moronic and crazy).
WAFB video of PC today
Summary of Moron Judge Gayle Horne Ray:
Gayle Horne Ray
Summary of Eboni - WHO SHOULD NOT EVEN HAVE A LAW LICENSE
This post was edited on 4/24/26 at 6:17 pm
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:06 pm to Wednesday
If it looks like a zebra, walks like a zebra, and has stripes like a zebra… then it’s a zebra.
The PC police is what is killing this nation.
The PC police is what is killing this nation.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:20 pm to BearCrocs
Gail Horne Ray has no business around a bench. It is ridiculous how she even got backing
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:22 pm to BearCrocs
Delete, double post
This post was edited on 4/24/26 at 6:23 pm
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:33 pm to Mr Boogedy
She’s an utter idiot. But honestly the Eboni thing makes me furious beyond measure. Tiffany Foxworth got kicked off the bench for shite that was totally unrelated. I’m firmly convinced that whichever Johnson spawned her made a deal with the commission to swap out Roberts for Eboni.
I’m sorry, deciding to make up crimes bc you don’t like cops and white people should get you disbarred, not just defrocked. This moron got neither.
I’m sorry, deciding to make up crimes bc you don’t like cops and white people should get you disbarred, not just defrocked. This moron got neither.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:41 pm to Wednesday
“But suppose the ox had a reputation for goring, and the owner had been informed but failed to keep it under control. If the ox then kills someone, it must be stoned, and the owner must also be put to death.” - Exodus 21:29 NLT
It is not enough to point solely to the offender. While they must be held accountable for their actions, those who had the authority and the duty to prevent foreseeable harm cannot be absolved. Judges, parole boards, prosecutors, and policymakers who knowingly permit the release of habitual violent offenders must also bear the weight of their decisions, especially when those decisions result in tragedy.
Each act of violence committed by a known repeat offender does not happen in a vacuum. It follows a series of deliberate choices: to grant parole, to reduce sentences, to dismiss charges, or to overlook warning signs in the name of leniency, political pressure, or flawed ideologies. These choices are not without consequence. They are direct contributors to the circumstances that allow violence to be repeated.
Consider a parole board that releases an individual with a documented history of sexual assault, only for that person to reoffend within months. Can we truly say that the only one to blame is the assailant? Or does culpability extend to those who ignored the red flags, who gambled with public safety, and who chose hope over hard evidence?
If a mechanic knowingly sends a faulty car onto the road and someone is killed, they can be held liable. If a doctor ignores test results and a patient dies, they face consequences. Why, then, should those who knowingly unleash violent offenders onto the public face no responsibility when lives are lost?
Justice demands more than punishment. It demands accountability at every level. To ignore this truth is to devalue the lives of victims, and to accept a system where the gatekeepers of justice bear no burden for the outcomes of their decisions.
Those who hold the keys to freedom must also hold the weight of its consequences. Anything less is a betrayal of public trust and a sentence carried out on the innocent.
It is not enough to point solely to the offender. While they must be held accountable for their actions, those who had the authority and the duty to prevent foreseeable harm cannot be absolved. Judges, parole boards, prosecutors, and policymakers who knowingly permit the release of habitual violent offenders must also bear the weight of their decisions, especially when those decisions result in tragedy.
Each act of violence committed by a known repeat offender does not happen in a vacuum. It follows a series of deliberate choices: to grant parole, to reduce sentences, to dismiss charges, or to overlook warning signs in the name of leniency, political pressure, or flawed ideologies. These choices are not without consequence. They are direct contributors to the circumstances that allow violence to be repeated.
Consider a parole board that releases an individual with a documented history of sexual assault, only for that person to reoffend within months. Can we truly say that the only one to blame is the assailant? Or does culpability extend to those who ignored the red flags, who gambled with public safety, and who chose hope over hard evidence?
If a mechanic knowingly sends a faulty car onto the road and someone is killed, they can be held liable. If a doctor ignores test results and a patient dies, they face consequences. Why, then, should those who knowingly unleash violent offenders onto the public face no responsibility when lives are lost?
Justice demands more than punishment. It demands accountability at every level. To ignore this truth is to devalue the lives of victims, and to accept a system where the gatekeepers of justice bear no burden for the outcomes of their decisions.
Those who hold the keys to freedom must also hold the weight of its consequences. Anything less is a betrayal of public trust and a sentence carried out on the innocent.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:44 pm to BearCrocs
quote:
If it looks like a zebra, walks like a zebra, and has stripes like a zebra… then it’s a zebra.
The PC police is what is killing this nation.
This would get you perma banned from reddit if you posted this in the Baton Rouge, New Orleans or Louisiana sub.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:49 pm to Wednesday
Only partially right. Blame the big city DAs for not prosecuting vigorously. But that’s how the blacks like it so they keep electing them.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:50 pm to Wednesday
When someone has multiple charges and isn't in jail where they should be and they're out committing crimes, the names of the judges that were too lenient on them should be blasted all over the place.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:51 pm to Wednesday
A majority of black men aren’t fathers. About 20-25% of black men are having most of the kids with most of the black mothers. They are sharing fathers.
This post was edited on 4/24/26 at 6:52 pm
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:52 pm to Wednesday
quote:
She’s an utter idiot. But honestly the Eboni thing makes me furious beyond measure. Tiffany Foxworth got kicked off the bench for shite that was totally unrelated. I’m firmly convinced that whichever Johnson spawned her made a deal with the commission to swap out Roberts for Eboni.
I’m sorry, deciding to make up crimes bc you don’t like cops and white people should get you disbarred, not just defrocked. This moron got neither.
There should also be some nepotism laws involving judges. Shouldn't have 3 members of the same family sitting on a 15 judge panel where approx. 1/2 million live. INSANE
Posted on 4/24/26 at 6:59 pm to Wednesday
Blames the parent, singular. Everyone knows these in flight missile mechanic’s don’t have fathers. They all about that respek except when it comes to raising kids.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 8:31 pm to Wednesday
This problem will never be fixed. Baton Rouge is lost and nothing can be done about it. Political correctness has ruined our country and it will not allow Baton Rouge to be fixed.
You might not like this statement, but this would not happen in china.
You might not like this statement, but this would not happen in china.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 8:43 pm to Wednesday
The Legislature should reform bail.
They should codify certain things about guns, possession of guns in certain areas (like schools), and felons in possession of guns get no bail.
Bail is a check against tyranny, but it’s too open-ended and subject to the whims of judges. We need to rein it in for certain charges and take some discretion away from judges.
They should codify certain things about guns, possession of guns in certain areas (like schools), and felons in possession of guns get no bail.
Bail is a check against tyranny, but it’s too open-ended and subject to the whims of judges. We need to rein it in for certain charges and take some discretion away from judges.
This post was edited on 4/24/26 at 8:51 pm
Posted on 4/24/26 at 8:45 pm to Wednesday
Wish La would be first in the Country in something like punishing fu**ing criminals very harshly
Like to the point that they’d want to gtfo of La
Like to the point that they’d want to gtfo of La
Posted on 4/24/26 at 8:46 pm to Wednesday
Seems to be a common denominator in a lot of these judges....old Bocephus proven right again
Posted on 4/24/26 at 8:49 pm to Wednesday
If accountability for judges existed this stuff would stop. If you let an animal out that strikes again the judge should have recourse.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 9:32 pm to Wednesday
No bail for all violent offenses, no ability to plead down violent offenses, mandatory minimums for violent crime.
Posted on 4/24/26 at 9:45 pm to Wednesday
I had my radio on in my office when the broke in with the press conference. When Landry started off with his spiel about "I'm going to say something unpopular, something I shouldn't say," I thought "yeah right."
Then he dove right into "this is the fault of the parents." No testing the waters, no half-assery, just jumped in with both feet and laid it out (multiple times). I'm not a big Landry fan, but he definitely caught my attention in a positive way today.
Then he dove right into "this is the fault of the parents." No testing the waters, no half-assery, just jumped in with both feet and laid it out (multiple times). I'm not a big Landry fan, but he definitely caught my attention in a positive way today.
Popular
Back to top


19








