• Re: Second Amendment Roundup: Court Seems Disposed to Rule for S&W and

    From Pluted Pup@21:1/5 to All on Mon Mar 10 13:37:40 2025
    XPost: talk.politics.misc, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    Of course China can supply Mexican cartels with all
    the guns and heavier weapons they want ... not even
    sure why they get any from the USA at all.


    Trump and the gun lobby say all the illegal guns come from China because we have gun laws against that here. Same with Canada, all Chinese guns and
    not even an illegal round entering through the good ole USA.

    Everyone's saying it.

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  • From Gay Pedo Pride Month.@21:1/5 to All on Sat Jun 7 23:13:26 2025
    XPost: md.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc
    XPost: sac.politics, alt.war.civil.usa

    https://media12.s-nbcnews.com/i/mpx/2704722219/2023_09/1695815437556_tdy_news_7a_ikeda_tech_ceo_230927_1920x1080-0vluwo.jpg

    The man accused of handcuffing and raping a woman at her Baltimore
    apartment days before police said he beat and killed Pava LaPere, a
    26-year-old tech entrepreneur, had been released early from prison,
    despite having a violent past that included a conviction for a sex
    offense.

    Jason Billingsley’s criminal history dates back to 2009 and includes
    charges of attempted rape, armed robbery and false imprisonment. In
    2015, he was sentenced to 30 years in prison after a woman told police
    that he had held her at knifepoint, strangled her and forced her to
    perform oral sex on him, according to court documents.

    Under a plea agreement, however, 16 of those years were suspended,
    leaving Billingsley to serve 14 years behind bars. Then in October 2022,
    five years ahead of his scheduled release, he walked out of prison a
    free man.

    Billingsley was let out of prison under Maryland’s diminution credit
    system, a policy that allows inmates to reduce the term of their
    incarceration through such things as good behavior and completing
    educational courses. Thirty-eight states have similar programs on the
    books. The violent and repetitive nature of Billingsley’s crimes,
    however, have left many wondering why he was eligible for the credits
    and if he should have been released at all.

    Baltimore police also initially did not tell the public about the rape
    days before LaPere’s killing, prompting even more questions about
    whether her death could have been prevented.

    "Rapists shouldn’t be let out early. Period," Baltimore Mayor Brandon
    Scott said at a news conference Thursday, where he also called
    Billingsley a "sociopath." "When you rape someone — no matter if it’s someone’s daughter, son, their wife — you should not get out early,
    period, for that kind of offense."

    The crimes
    On Wednesday night, less than a year after his release, Billingsley was arrested in the slaying of LaPere and the sexual assault of another
    woman. LaPere was found Monday at her Baltimore apartment strangled and viciously beaten with a brick, court documents state. Her body was half-clothed, according to the documents, which did not offer details
    about the nature of the crime.

    Days earlier on Sept. 19, Billingsley allegedly raped a woman multiple
    times and slit her throat before dousing her and a man with liquid and
    setting them on fire, documents state.

    But that wasn’t Billingsley’s first run-in with the law.

    In 2013, a woman told police that she had gotten into an argument with
    her boyfriend and was walking down the street in Baltimore when she
    stopped to sit on some steps, according to the court documents. She said
    a man she knew as “Jason” approached her and asked what was wrong and if she had a place to stay.

    “When she told him she did not, he offered to let her stay with him at a nearby location,” the documents state. “She agreed to go with him and
    the two walked to an unknown house.”

    The woman said she and Billingsley sat and talked in a bedroom,
    according to the documents. When he said he wanted to have sex with her,
    she stated that she wanted to leave. Billingsley then hit the woman in
    the face, started to choke her and threatened to shoot her if she didn’t
    do what he said, the documents show. Billingsley, armed with a knife,
    forced the woman to perform oral sex on him before stealing $53 from her wallet, according to the documents. He then told her to leave.

    Billingsley faced several charges, including first-and second-degree
    assault, attempted first-degree rape, armed robbery, false imprisonment
    and theft of less than $100, court documents show.

    In 2010, Billingsley was also accused of punching an ex-girlfriend in
    the face, pinning her down and stealing her phone, other court documents
    state. He pleaded guilty the following year to assault.

    And in 2009, he was arrested following allegations that he and another
    suspect robbed a man of $10. Court records state that the alleged
    victim’s nose was bleeding when he spoke to police. Billingsley pleaded guilty in that case, the documents state, noting that he later violated
    his probation.

    Under the system that let Billingsley out of prison early, inmates
    receive “good conduct credit” automatically at intake “subject to the inmate’s future good behavior,” a 2020 state report says. The credits
    are described as a “behavioral incentive” and a way to reduce
    overcrowding in prisons.

    The other credits are earned throughout the prisoner’s incarceration
    period. Inmates who have satisfactory progress in or complete various
    courses and therapy can receive monthly education credits, the report
    says. Those who participate in assigned job duties can get monthly work credits. Inmates can also shave off time by earning credits for
    participating in “special selected work projects or other special programs,” the report states. It’s not clear what type of credits Billingsley had earned.

    Stacey Lee, a professor of law and ethics at the Johns Hopkins
    University Carey Business School, said the policy makes sense, in
    theory, because prisons are overcrowded and understaffed.

    “However, if you are a violent offender your access to the number of
    credits you can get is supposed to be limited,” she said.

    Given Billingsley’s past, Lee doesn’t think he should have ever been eligible to receive credit for an early release, despite not violating
    any of the provisions that would make him ineligible.

    “To me, he didn’t seem like a good candidate,” Lee said.

    Under the current guidelines, criminals sentenced for first- or
    second-degree rape or a sex offense against a victim under the age of
    16, or repeat offenders who committed a third-degree sex offense against
    a victim under 16 are not eligible. An inmate who violated lifetime
    sexual offender supervision is also ineligible.

    “I get that it allows us to empty the prisons a little faster, but when
    it results in them being readmitted and causing more harm once they’re released, I have a problem with that,” Lee said.

    David Jaros, a criminal law professor and faculty director of the Center
    for Criminal Justice Reform at the University of Baltimore School of
    Law, also supports the system. He thinks the credit system allows
    inmates to “take part in programming and work programs that actually contribute to their rehabilitation.”

    “And it contributes to the safety of the prisons themselves,” he said. “The safer they are, ultimately the safer the public is because the more
    we traumatize people while they’re inside, the more likely dangerous
    people are going to be coming back out onto the streets.”

    Jaros said he understood that the diminution credit system will now come
    under intense scrutiny because of the horrific nature of what happened
    but doesn’t think it should affect the policy.

    “It is easy to say that this is someone who should never see the light
    of day, but we don’t know who that person is that should never see the
    light of day. There are people who get out and are rehabilitated who
    then become active members of their community,” he said. “I think the
    wrong takeaway here is that the problem is diminution credits.”

    https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/violent-sex-offender-now-accused-rap e-pava-laperes-murder-got-prison-e-rcna118093

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  • From Gay Pedo Pride Month.@21:1/5 to All on Sun Jun 8 01:03:17 2025
    XPost: md.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh, talk.politics.misc
    XPost: sac.politics, alt.war.civil.usa

    https://encrypted-tbn0.gstatic.com/images?q=tbn:ANd9GcSvrSsN3LcRsAPqZBOXw WiVCtdraqrwOq8AJw&s

    BALTIMORE (WJZ)-- A Baltimore County man accused of rape, was arrested
    Monday at Baltimore Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport
    after flying in from Toronto, Canada.

    U.S. Customs and Border Protection officials say 30-year-old Paul
    Kahungi Njoroge, a Kenya native, now U.S. citizen, was arrested at BWI
    Airport after authorities from Toronto notified BWI officials that
    Njoroge had a warrant for his arrest in Baltimore County for
    second-degree rape.

    CBP officers say Njoroge, a Rosedale resident, took a flight from
    Pearson International Airport in Toronto and authorities matched him to
    an outstanding warrant and notified BWI agents, where he was taken into custody.

    "This arrest illustrates the close collaboration between stateside and
    overseas Customs and Border Protection stations to bring fugitives to
    justice to face their criminal allegations," said Adam Rottman, CBP
    Acting Port Director for the Area Port of Baltimore. "This collaboration
    is another example of how CBP contributes its unique border security
    authority to help keep our communities safe."

    https://www.cbsnews.com/baltimore/news/baltimore-co-rape-suspect-travelin g-toronto-arrested-bwi-airport/

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