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Message

re: Woman kidnapped while jogging in Memphis UPDATE:body found

Posted on 9/7/22 at 9:46 am to
Posted by jlovel7
NOT Louisiana
Member since Aug 2014
23798 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 9:46 am to
quote:

raped? Her body was found 1 place and her running shorts were found a mile away. I believe he has been charged with sexual assault.


Where’s the source on this? Horrible. Was hoping this wouldn’t end up the case.
Posted by NIH
Member since Aug 2008
119685 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 9:50 am to
Shouldn’t you be telling us about Grambling football or something on the MSB?
Posted by Riolobo
On the lake
Member since Mar 2017
5124 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 9:57 am to
Interesting how CNN will not show a picture of this piece of shite. Fox News has his picture on front page.
Posted by AnAmericanGirl
Member since Feb 2019
580 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 9:58 am to
quote:

Where’s the source on this? Horrible. Was hoping this wouldn’t end up the case.


Me too. I was hoping she fought like hell in that car and he had to kill her quick. He then dumped her body and her stuff in different locations. I know this is probably a pipe dream but I wanted this to be the case.
Posted by lsufball19
Franklin, TN
Member since Sep 2008
71225 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 10:01 am to
quote:

Interesting how CNN will not show a picture of this piece of shite

first article that popped up on CNN has his picture. Are you talking about on TV specifically?
Posted by lachellie
LALA Land
Member since Aug 2012
1124 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 11:59 am to
PREVIOUS LINK

quote:

I think to a large extent we’ve given up on using prisons to rehabilitate,” said Mulroy. “The shame of it is if we took the rehabilitation seriously, we would actually reduce the repeat offender rate over the long term.”

Mulroy says he also plans on working with the Shelby County Juvenile Court to bolster intervention for young offenders who may have a chance to change the direction of their lives. He says he plans to look at juvenile court models nationwide, including Nashville, for inspiration.

“Early intervention helps more than simply shipping people off to adult crime college where the data shows they’re more likely to re-offend,” said Mulroy. “That doesn’t keep us safer. That doesn’t help the victims.”

Tennessee’s Truth in Sentencing law, which passed earlier this year, requires inmates convicted of certain crimes to serve their full term. Mulroy says serving a full term doesn’t necessarily mean the prisoner won’t re-offend upon release.

“I think we have to look at all of the data, and all of the data says that it does balloon the prison budget and it’s not the most effective way to reduce crime.”


ETA: Hit submit too quickly.

I don’t disagree with this DA about reducing recidivism via rehabilitation on certain cases. But I doubt very seriously whether Abston could have been helped, given he was first arrested at age 11 and had committed homosexual rape before age 16. Something genetic or environmental or both went way wrong with this person.

I realize these quotes by DA must be from an earlier report and are not directly related to this case. Anyone from Memphis can give us a QRD on Mulroy? My apologies if I’ve missed it in this thread.
This post was edited on 9/7/22 at 12:04 pm
Posted by jlovel7
NOT Louisiana
Member since Aug 2014
23798 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 12:03 pm to
quote:

Mulroy says serving a full term doesn’t necessarily mean the prisoner won’t re-offend upon release.


Except they 100% won’t offend if they’re in jail. What about that?
Posted by lachellie
LALA Land
Member since Aug 2012
1124 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 12:06 pm to
I agree. His egregious juvenile record and the victim impact statement by Kemper Durand must have been what kept him in prison for more or less the full term (counting time served before trial).
Posted by beebefootballfan
Member since Mar 2011
20391 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 12:08 pm to
quote:

I think to a large extent we’ve given up on using prisons to rehabilitate,” said Mulroy. “The shame of it is if we took the rehabilitation seriously, we would actually reduce the repeat offender rate over the long term.”

Mulroy says he also plans on working with the Shelby County Juvenile Court to bolster intervention for young offenders who may have a chance to change the direction of their lives. He says he plans to look at juvenile court models nationwide, including Nashville, for inspiration.

“Early intervention helps more than simply shipping people off to adult crime college where the data shows they’re more likely to re-offend,” said Mulroy. “That doesn’t keep us safer. That doesn’t help the victims.”

Tennessee’s Truth in Sentencing law, which passed earlier this year, requires inmates convicted of certain crimes to serve their full term. Mulroy says serving a full term doesn’t necessarily mean the prisoner won’t re-offend upon release.

“I think we have to look at all of the data, and all of the data says that it does balloon the prison budget and it’s not the most effective way to reduce crime.”





A dog who bites always bites.

Until they fix the bad father problem these problems will always exist.
Posted by beerJeep
Louisiana
Member since Nov 2016
37687 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 12:12 pm to
quote:

Forgive my ignorance, but how do you start a FB page while in prison?


SS used a booty phone to post while in prison.
Posted by kywildcatfanone
Wildcat Country!
Member since Oct 2012
135745 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 12:22 pm to
quote:

Until they fix the bad father problem these problems will always exist.


The (D)estruction of the family unity over the past 60 years had destroyed the black community, and is well on it's way to do the same for non black communities.
Posted by Lunchbox48
Member since Feb 2009
932 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 12:38 pm to
quote:

Anyone from Memphis can give us a QRD on Mulroy? My apologies if I’ve missed it in this thread.


I don't know his complete background. But he is a "civil rights" attorney who has been a professor at U of M Law for a long time. He's a big proponent of fixing the incarceration problem in Shelby County by increasing pretrail diversions for first time offenders (expanding to juvenile violent offenders) and offering more options for Juvenile offenders.

Some of those tactics work for some offenders. They do not for most because the crimes that plague Memphis stem from unstable homes and a lack of accountability for decisions. His entire strategy admits that rehabilitation is not happening in the jail, so we need to put less people in jail and maybe they won't commit more crimes.

TL:DR - he wants to reform incarceration, more programs, less jail. No acknowledgement of the root issue.
Posted by SlowFlowPro
With populists, expect populism
Member since Jan 2004
465448 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 12:42 pm to
quote:

Except they 100% won’t offend if they’re in jail.

Not true.

There is a reason more men are raped in the US than women each year.

Crime in jail is common
Posted by footswitch
New Market
Member since Apr 2015
4636 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 12:43 pm to
quote:

Anyone from Memphis can give us a QRD on Mulroy? My apologies if I’ve missed it in this thread.


Is a ridiculous progessive. a huge step back from what they had. Truth
Posted by lachellie
LALA Land
Member since Aug 2012
1124 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 1:10 pm to
quote:

No acknowledgement of the root issue.


Looks like he just got a big dose of this thrown in his face. But there are none so blind as those that will not see.
Posted by Hoops
LA
Member since Jan 2013
7885 posts
Posted on 9/7/22 at 1:18 pm to
quote:

he wants to reform incarceration, more programs, less jail. No acknowledgement of the root issue


frick him and frick anyone that thinks we need less jail and/or more lenient judges.
Posted by Lobo Apple Sauce
Member since Sep 2014
393 posts
Posted on 9/9/22 at 9:19 am to
quote:

They are hunting us

Chain Gangs

It's not rocket science to reach the conclusion that city mayors shan't try to balance the budget for taxpayers, by enacting chain gangs to perform city labor, a huge cost.
What do taxpayer$ get in exchange for providing a bed, shower, three meals a day, and a/c to jail birds?
Posted by Bourre
Da Parish
Member since Nov 2012
23000 posts
Posted on 9/9/22 at 9:35 am to
He’s not the only one. The Republican governor is just as responsible. I started a thread on PT asking if Gov Bill Lee had commented on his failure to protect innocent people from repeat offenders. The governor made criminal justice reform a priority in his admin, including signing 2 bills to reduce the prison population and opposing the Truth in Sentencing Bill passed by the GOP lead legislature. Blood is on his hands too.

LINK
Posted by pussywillows
Member since Dec 2009
6441 posts
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:51 pm to
this piece of garbage has been charged with additional charges of aggravated kidnapping, aggravated rape and unlawful carrying or possession of a weapon NOT RELATED to Eliza Fletcher...according to a poster on websleuths who has accessed the case information, it dates back to 9/21/2021, but he has just been charged...

foxnews link
Posted by Icansee4miles
Trolling the Tickfaw
Member since Jan 2007
31833 posts
Posted on 9/9/22 at 10:58 pm to
quote:

Something genetic


When will we have this conversation. It’s pretty clear by the statistics that a large portion of a certain demographic seems predisposed to crime. Yet the Left and the MSM almost 100% blame it on environment. Maybe it’s time to study whether those whose ancestors were imported from tribes constantly at war have carried that gene. We aren’t talking about all that many generations.
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