I write "true crime for survivors." That's a very complicated subject in America, because all of our conversations about justice are so twisted here. Basically every conversation has to involve everybody's personal craziness in their professional capacity. We have to worry about the sexual or other criminal urges of every police officer we interact with. They all work for mayors -- and I recently wrote about them being a new plague on society. Then there's no telling how insane the judge will be. That can be a disaster for both a defendant and a person who was harmed. I can't possibly even blog all the ways.
Last week I blogged about woman arrested outside a bar in Georgia with her titty popping out. She refused to identify herself. The police officer said she punched him in a melee. Whatever the case, she's disgraceful in the bodycam, intoxicated and belligerent. Completely impossible to deal with. She's doing the most cringey version of "DO YOU KNOW WHO I AM?" with him, demanding that he call someone from the county and have that person identify her by her voice. She seems to expect that to be some big reveal moment, like on TV, where they're going to be like, OMG, she's a judge?!? "Sorry ma'am, we'll take off these cuffs and drive you home right now," with their heads hanging in shame, while lightning bolts flash all around her and dark winds whip up her dress, perfectly accentuating her legs. But those cops don't even work for the county. And that's not how arresting people works. Because she's drunk. So watching her bawl her eyes out here, while they go over the 30 -- count them 30 -- counts of judicial misconduct she did, her capricious, mean-spirited, punitive self-serving bullshit, tossing people in jail, demanding to be treated like royalty, so satisfying. No more stomping around shouting, "Off with their heads!" for you, ma'am. She's another one like Tiffany Henyard, who expects African-Americans to be proud of her even when she's screwing and shaming them. You're nothing to be proud of, ma'am. Especially since she did all of this nonsense with the police after the judicial misconduct hearings. And then she had the audacity to go on TV with her lawyer and cry victim, even after having been resoundingly stomped off the bench by the voters. Bless her heart.
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AuthorTeresa Giglio writes true crime for survivors. Archives
December 2024
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