• California police officer shot in back by criminal who should have been

    From Democrat Crime Wave@21:1/5 to All on Thu May 9 16:51:04 2024
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.law-enforcement, alt.los-angeles
    XPost: sac.politics

    A known gang member with a long violent criminal history accused of
    shooting a Los Angeles County Sheriff's deputy could have been kept
    behind bars if not for soft-on-crime policies by the region's top
    prosecutor, his election opponent said.

    Raymundo Duran, 47, who allegedly shot Deputy Samuel Aispuro in the back
    at a stop light while he was sitting on his marked sheriff's department motorcycle on April 22 in West Covina, California, has been involved in
    a number of violent crimes, including two felony assaults that he
    committed while serving an 11-year sentence for manslaughter, according
    to court records.

    Aispuro, a nearly 20-year veteran of the department, was wearing his bulletproof vest and survived the unprovoked attack.

    In 2021, Duran was arrested after leading authorities on a car and foot
    chase in which he was charged with committing a hit-and-run, resisting
    arrest and fleeing from a police officer. Authorities were forced to
    collide with Duran's vehicle to stop him before he briefly ran from the
    scene, authorities said.

    Los Angeles County District Attorney George Gascón, a Democrat, could
    have had Duran imprisoned, but he was instead sentenced to probation as
    part of a plea deal, according to Gascón's election challenger.

    "Raymundo Duran, by all accounts, is a sociopath who has committed
    violent act after violent act for decades," Nathan Hochman, a former
    federal prosecutor running as an independent to unseat Gascón, told Fox
    News Digital. "Unfortunately, the sentences that he's received haven't
    deterred him from committing additional violent conduct."

    "So, when George Gascón has his chance to deal with Mr. Duran and make
    it so he won't be able to victimize others, he decides to go for the
    lowest sentences," he added.

    Gascón has faced harsh criticism from his own prosecutors as well as law enforcement and elected officials over his progressive criminal justice policies.

    Jason Lustig, a deputy district attorney for Los Angeles County, said prosecutors have been demoralized after nearly four years under his boss.

    "Everybody has just really been sickened over it," he told Fox News
    Digital. "We have a front-row seat to seeing more victims adding up. We
    see it every day."

    At the time of his 2021 arrest, Duran was a four-time convicted felon
    wanted for a parole violation. He also has a 1996 conviction for
    domestic violence. In 2002, he was sentenced to 11 years in prison for
    stabbing his boss at a Jiffy Lube to death as part of a plea deal,
    Hochman noted.

    In 2003, a year into his prison term, Duran assaulted a guard at Salinas
    Valley State Prison. He pleaded no contest in Monterey County Superior
    Court, court records state.

    On Nov. 9, 2009, Duran stabbed another prisoner with a "shank," a
    makeshift knife. He was sentenced to another four years after pleading
    guilty to assaulting a prisoner in a manner likely to cause great bodily injury.

    After his release, he violated his parole, and in February 2022, he was arrested for unlawful possession of a firearm by a felon. The crime was punishable by six years in prison, but prosecutors entered into a plea
    deal with Duran, who was sentenced to two years, four months.

    "In 2021, had he actually gotten a six-year sentence or longer, he
    wouldn't have been in the place to have shot the gun at the deputy in
    West Covina," Hochman said.

    Fox News Digital has reached out to Gascón's office.

    Duran, who was in a 2008 Toyota Camry, was arrested in San Diego County
    hours after the ambush shooting. He is charged with first-degree
    attempted murder of a peace officer, assault against a peace officer,
    and being a felon in possession of a firearm.

    "The senseless and unprovoked shooting of Deputy Samuel Aispuro is a
    stark reminder of the dangers our law enforcement officers face daily,"
    Gascón said days after the shooting. "Our office is committed to
    vigorously prosecuting the offender to the fullest extent of the law.
    Our thoughts are with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department and
    Deputy Aispuro as he recovers from this tragic incident."

    https://www.foxnews.com/us/california-police-officer-shot-in-back-criminal-who-should-have-been-jail-progressive-das-challenger

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