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‘Racial justice’ and ‘equity’ equal death in George Floyd country

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The same judge who sentenced Derek Chauvin to 22 years suspended the sentence of a violent criminal who went on to murder a white female last month.

Suppose the lies and obfuscations surrounding George Floyd’s death in May 2020 were true. Suppose Floyd really did die at the hands of a white police officer in Minneapolis and not as a result of an overdose of fentanyl and other drugs that led to cardiac arrest. Nevertheless, it is without question the case that for every black suspect killed by a white cop, far more white victims die at the hands of career criminals who happen to be black.

Consider the case of Meredith Martell, stabbed to death in her home last month by Jamel Hill-Moore before a police officer shot and killed him. There will be no marches demanding “justice for Meredith,” nor will there be any political pressure to lock up career criminals like Hill-Moore before they strike again.

But it’s a tragic fact that the same Minnesota judge who sentenced former Minneapolis police officer Derek Chauvin to 22 years in prison for Floyd’s death stayed Hill-Moore’s two domestic violence convictions earlier in the summer, leaving him free to butcher Martell.

All in the name of “equity” and “racial justice.”

The overwhelming majority of homicides in America occur at the hands of career criminals who had previously committed violent crimes but received lenient sentences.

That was clearly the case in Lyon County, Minnesota, where a police officer answered a domestic disturbance call on December 17 to discover Hill-Moore on top of Martell, stabbing her repeatedly. The officer first ordered the suspect to drop the knife. Then, he tried to taser the man. Finally, the officer fired two rounds at Hill-Moore, killing him.

During his speech before the National Judicial College, Judge Cahill claimed he barely slept during the Chauvin trial from the stress of the national spotlight. He should be losing sleep over Meredith Martell.

Hill-Moore was a habitual criminal with a penchant for exactly what he allegedly did the night of December 17: domestic battery. It turns out that Hill-Moore was charged first in January 2023 with felony domestic assault in Lyon County. A month later, he was charged with felony counts of domestic assault and violation of a no-contact order in Hennepin County…

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