Get angry. Look at her face. I won't post the video because I don't want to see it again. This is what America has become. It can be fixed. Don't let them gaslight you any longer. No more pandering.
And the Hits just keep coming...
Laken Riley, a nursing student in Georgia, was Brutally murdered by an illegal immigrant, Tren De Aragua gang associate, Jose Ibarra, and he just received a big break. His lawyers are arguing he wasn't mentally competent to stand trial. The judge ordered an evaluation.
He is competent enough to:
*Sneak into our country
*Commit crimes before murdering Laken and get off
*Stake out Laken, stalk, and kill her without immediate detection
*Dispose of evidence
C'mon....
Jose Ibarra shouldn't have even been in our country in the 1st place.
The monster is vying for a new trial based on his purported mental incompetence.
#IllegalAliens
#LakenRiley
JUSTICE FOR LAKEN RILEY! The Illegal who killed our beloved Laken Riley was just found GUILTY on all counts for his horrific crimes. Although the pain and heartbreak will last forever, hopefully this can help bring some peace and closure to her wonderful family who fought for Justice, and to ensure that other families don’t have to go through what they have. We love you, Laken, and our hearts will always be with you. It is time to secure our Border, and remove these criminals and thugs from our Country, so nothing like this can happen again!
It was 10 Leap Years ago today that my karate teacher and kidnapper, Jeff Doucet, was arrested for aggregated kidnapping. It would only be 16 days away before my father, Gary Plauche, would shot and kill him in front of a TV News Camera! 40th Anniversary
Day 165.
On March 7, 1993, my 30-year-old mom Lori Lee Malloy was found dead on the bathroom floor of apartment. Our front door was open. Clumps of her hair were scattered everywhere. A clump of light brown hair that looked, to one officer, as if it had “been pulled from someone’s head” was found in an athletic shoe on a table by the front door. The bathroom faucet was running. The full fridge was unplugged and slightly moved. There were two drinking glasses and a tub of some sort of “leftover food salad” on the kitchen table. My mom had bruises on the thighs of her naked body. Detectives arrived, and a homicide investigation began.
The case was abruptly closed thanks to a medical examiner who deemed her death to be of “natural causes.” He lost his license to practice several years later.
In 2021, RI’s Chief ME refuted the original autopsy and stated my mom didn’t die of natural causes. In 2022, an expert independent forensic pathologist agreed. After a two-year fight, the state petitioned the court to reopen the case. It was granted in November. On Feb 1 of this year, my mom was exhumed. Today is day 165 of awaiting results from her new forensic exam.
Back in 1993, at least one witness told police my mom had struggled with substance use and engaged in sex work from around 14 years old. As the stepmom of an 11-year-old today, that breaks my heart. Lori was a straight-A student and captain of her cheerleading squad until she dropped out of high school to travel the country by motorcycle with friends and learn to sled dog race in Alaska. “I just wished everyone understood me,” she wrote in 1981. She had wild adventures, before getting involved with a series of increasingly abusive men. At the time of her death, her divorce from one violent criminal was almost finalized, she was doing her best to make it as a single mom, and she was fighting with my father Tom over custody of me. “Tommy’s threats over Lauren will settle soon,” she wrote in July 1992. Tom was never interviewed by police about her death.
Early on in the investigation, I learned my family “always knew she was murdered,” but never fought to get justice out of shame for her lifestyle being made public and fear of the impact on me. For nearly 30 years, no one ever knew what really happened to Lori Lee Malloy.
As I think of the families of LISK victims, New Bedford Highway Serial Killer victims, Connecticut Bra Murder victims and more, I grieve and feel their pain. But I also feel hope. Not just that their cases will be solved, but that we as a society will begin to take cases like theirs seriously, will stop seeing victims simply as “sex workers” and “drug addicts” and will instead see them as daughters, sons, mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers — people.
I hope the LISK families know their loved ones’ losses are not in vain and realize the impact this case will have on how we handle others. I hope they know their loved ones’ lives matter.
I also hope all the killers who target vulnerable people know they are now the ones being hunted, and the tables are starting to turn.
Justice is coming.
#Day165 #TeamSledDog #JusticeForLoriLee #LoriLeeMalloy #JusticeForAllVictims
If anyone needs a little motivation today, call (707) 873-7862.
It’s a school project where kindergarteners give you a pep talk.
It’s so cute 🥹😅. And it’s automated!