• Re: Black animal Khalil Perry will spend 12 years in adult prison for a

    From Colin Skraping@21:1/5 to Gaetz on Sun Jul 2 22:34:17 2023
    XPost: alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, alt.niggers, talk.politics.guns
    XPost: wi.general

    Gaetz <[email protected]> wrote in news:su5tlk$16tgr$[email protected]:

    Say thanks to Barack Obama. He is directly responsible for unleashing
    these animals.

    WAUKESHA - Khalil Perry, who was convicted on three of the four felony
    counts he faced for a 2021 attack on an 87-year-old woman, will spend
    the next 12 years in prison and eight years on extended supervision.

    In addition, he may still be retried on one count of sexual assault, a
    decision still pending after a jury was unable to reach a verdict in
    early May.

    The now-16-year-old Waukesha youth will get credit for the 19 months he
    has already served in a youth detention facility while he awaited his
    four-day trial and subsequent sentencing, which was pronounced by
    Waukesha County Circuit Court Judge Jennifer Dorow on Friday.

    Perry was 14 on Nov. 30, 2021, when he confronted the woman in her car
    outside the Waukesha Public Library near the automated book return
    machine. He was initially charged in juvenile court and later in adult
    court with first-degree sexual assault, armed robbery with use of force, operating a vehicle without the owner's consent (with a dangerous
    weapon) and kidnapping (also with a dangerous weapon).

    He was convicted by a Waukesha jury May 5 on all but the sexual assault allegation, on which jurors deadlocked.

    The case took more than 18 months to resolve in part due to issues
    surrounding Perry's age. His public defender attorneys, particularly
    Nicole Ostrowski supported by Maura McMahon, pushed to have the case
    moved back to juvenile court, where the case started in December 2021
    before it was waived into adult court by Judge Maria Lazar. Ostrowski
    also twice challenged mentally competency reports after claiming Perry
    was not fit to aid in his own defense and sought to have another judge
    assigned to the case.

    Prosecutors stress violent act, but defense argues age as factor
    During the sentencing hearing, attorneys for the state and defense
    differed sharply on both the nature of the incident and the punishment
    that should go with it.

    Waukesha County Deputy Attorney Michael Thurston recommended Dorow
    incarcerate Perry for a total of 45 years (15 years per count), plus 10
    years extended supervision after release, arguing that each of the
    counts should be sentenced consecutively.

    "The subtleties we ought to consider is who is Khalil Perry and how
    dangerous is he," Thurston said.

    Perry's violent actions, using a switchblade held to the neck of the
    elderly victim and the "raging thoughts" that Perry said came into his
    head after he initially approached the victim's car ostensibly to help
    her with her books pointed to someone who is unpredictably dangerous,
    Thurston said.

    But Ostrowski painted Perry as a kind and responsible soul who was
    affected by a family racked by problems, including drug addiction, abuse
    and mental health issues, but still was a caring son who wanted to help
    his family.

    Perry's focus, to steal the victim's car, was that of a young teen mind
    seeking to satisfy a need without appreciating the consequences. "That's
    not how his 14-year-old brain thought," Ostrowski said, adding later
    "I'm not saying any of this is an excuse, but it does provide context."

    She argued for a sentence ending the day before his 18th birthday,
    amounting to another 3� years, including incarceration in a juvenile
    facility that could help treat and rehabilitate him in a way adult
    prison cannot.

    Judge recognizes need to protect public
    Not surprisingly, Dorow fell somewhere in the middle in deciding her
    sentence, but she sided with prosecutors' arguments about the violent
    nature of the charges and how, despite the jury's inability to reach a
    verdict on the sexual assault charge, Perry seemed motivated by sexual gratification nonetheless.

    Technically, her 20-year total sentence was specifically for the
    carjacking count. She also sentenced Perry to five years in prison and
    five years extended supervision for the other two counts, armed robbery
    and kidnapping, concurrently, but stayed those sentences with 10 years
    of probation.

    She excused the age argument as presented by Ostrowski.

    "At a very young age, you are taught, if only in school, to be kind, to
    be nice," Dorow said, adding "at your core, you know the difference
    between right and wrong."

    She also rejected the defense claim that Perry's focus was to steal a
    vehicle from an elderly woman because it might be convenient and easy.

    "I don't know what you intended when you woke up that morning, ... but
    if you truly only wanted a vehicle, you would have taken the vehicle and
    left (the victim) there. That's not what you did."

    Despite the jury's nonverdict on the sexual assault count, Dorow
    included a requirement for sex offender treatment while he is in prison
    and added a second requirement for sex offender reporting, a
    discretionary order which judges are permitted to issue based on the
    whole of the evidence.

    Source of Perry's anger never became clear
    It's unclear what led to the attack. The incident that took place after
    an unsuccessful day of looking for work, ending in a miles-long walk
    from Waukesha's northside to downtown. Perry told investigators that he
    became angry after initially trying to help the woman at the book
    return, but what set him off and prompted him to pull a knife on the
    victim was never revealed.

    Perry � who vehemently denied a sexual assault ever occurred but,
    according to the 2022 criminal complaint, acknowledged taking the car
    with the woman still inside � did not take the stand during the trial.

    However, in his statement before sentencing, he acknowledged he acted
    rashly and recklessly, but repeated that he never intended to hurt the
    victim. "Every time I fail, I learn a new lesson. ... I have learned I
    have an anger problem."

    The woman, who did testify and whose identity is protected in court
    records and by media, said during the trial she experienced intense fear
    as the incident unfolded. "I felt that he was going to kill me," she
    said.

    But in a brief statement to the court during the sentencing hearing, she
    spoke calmly, without anger. "All that I want to say to Mr. Perry is
    that I forgive you and for the pain and suffering you caused me and my
    family," she said, and also addressed Dorow by adding "I leave the
    (sentencing) decision absolutely in your hands."

    Perry will begin his prison sentence shortly, but his time in the
    courtroom may not be at an end. Prosecutors are still considering
    whether to convene another jury to consider the remaining unresolved
    sexual assault charge. An Oct. 9 status hearing was scheduled to
    consider the matter.

    Contact Jim Riccioli at (262) 446-6635 or [email protected]. Follow
    him on Twitter at @jariccioli.

    Our subscribers make this reporting possible. Please consider supporting
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    This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: Khalil
    Perry gets 12 years in prison for attack on woman in her 80s

    Yard Goat
    20 hours ago

    After 12 years hanging in the sweet jungle with his bros, this young
    buck will be full well prepped for round two. Immediate termination for
    car jackers is wiser.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
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