Rape victim k!lled her rapist after his release.
She got arrested and her statement was -
“He raped me, not the State. Who gave you the right to forgive him without consulting me?”
Do you agree with her,
Yes or No?
@TrumpsHurricane She is not one of the brighter people. She really has no idea what it means to be American. All she has been taught is how to cheat the system.
If it wasn’t for x you wouldn’t know about it at all. This catastrophe should be on every single news outlet world wide. Praying for all Venezuelan citizens! 🙏
USAID sounds nice.
US AID.
As in the US is aiding the poor in need.
That’s not what USAID was.
It was the US Agency for International Development.
Which funded and installed violent Left regimes.
It spread Communism.
It wasn’t about feeding the poor.
It created the poor.
Spotted a woman inside Trader Joe’s wearing a mask.
Stepped outside to load my groceries and there she was, mask on in 100° weather with nobody else around.
At this point, it has to be a mental illness, would you agree?
🚨BREAKING: Debbie Wasserman Schultz says Americans will pay even higher prices for groceries, healthcare, housing & childcare if TPS Haitians get deported....What a liar
THOUGHTS?
This is Kendrick Castillo. He was born on March 14, 2001, in Denver, Colorado, USA. He was a senior at STEM School Highlands Ranch, just days away from graduation.
On a normal Tuesday afternoon, Kendrick was in his British literature class watching The Princess Bride.Suddenly, an 18-year-old named Devon Erickson walked in with a gun and told everyone, “Don’t move.”
Kendrick was sitting close to Devon, and without thinking twice, he jumped up and charged at the shooter to stop him. After Kendrick was shot, three other students also rushed at the gunman, trying to stop him while the rest of the class escaped. One of them, Brendan Bialy, checked on Kendrick after they brought Devon down. Sadly, Kendrick wasn’t moving. Other students tried to stop the bleeding, pressing on his wound, but it was too late.
He cared so much about people that he would do something like that,” said his father, John Castillo. “I wish he had run and hidden, but that wasn’t who he was. He always wanted to help and protect others.”
“Kendrick Castillo died a legend. He died a trooper,” Brendan Bialy said. “I know I’ll carry his memory for the rest of my life.”
"Be selfless. That’s what my son was. And it got him killed, but he saved others,” John Castillo said.
"I know that because of what he did, others are alive, and I thank God for that. I love him. He is a hero, and he always will be.”
In a moment of fear and chaos, Kendrick didn’t hesitate. He risked his own life to save his classmates. Sadly, he didn’t survive. But if he hadn’t jumped in, who knows how many more lives would have been lost?
Kendrick Castillo (2001–2019).
You are remembered and honored as a hero by millions around the world. Rest in peace.
The real problem is victims get screwed with no justice. When a local DA like Travis County’s José Garza won’t prosecute serious cases, whether it’s dropping charges against repeat offenders, missing indictment deadlines, or reducing felonies to misdemeanors, dangerous criminals walk free and often reoffend.
Take Kay Smith’s murder in Austin last year: her killer had a long criminal history, but the system kept letting him out. Her sister said if they’d kept him locked up, Kay might still be alive.
Same pattern shows up with guys like Octavius Brown, who had dozens of cases, many dismissed, and kept breaking into apartments to assault women.
Without a backstop, families lose closure, communities stay unsafe, and the law only applies to some zip codes. Abbott’s statewide prosecutor idea is meant to fix exactly that, step in when locals won’t do the job.
We don’t have a precise statewide number for Texas that isolates how many repeat offenders are back on the street solely because prosecutors dropped or refused their cases. The data just isn’t tracked that cleanly, dismissals happen for lots of reasons, including weak evidence, witness problems, or overloaded courts, not just politics.
What we do know from court stats: In Texas district courts handling felonies, around 30-31% of disposed cases get dismissed. In lower county courts for misdemeanors, it’s closer to 46-50% in recent years. Some counties are much higher, critics point to places like Harris County where claims of 60% dismissals float around.
For repeat offenders specifically, Texas recidivism (rearrest or reincarceration) runs about 20-30% within three years for most releases, but that’s after they’ve already been through the system. The real frustration on the right is the cycle where career criminals rack up multiple arrests that never stick, missed deadlines, no-billed cases, or outright declinations.
A clear example is Travis County under DA Garza, where his office missed the 90-day indictment deadline 263 times in 2024 alone, leading to releases of people facing serious charges.
Many of those defendants had prior records. That’s the exact problem Abbott’s statewide prosecutor push aims to fix, giving the state a way to step in when locals won’t or can’t prosecute the worst offenders.
The people that resist audits are stealing.
The people that push censorship are lying.
The people that fight election Integrity are cheating.
Everyone clear?