Iryna Zarutska, a Ukrainian refugee, was killed on a Charlotte commuter rail train by a crazed black man, Decarlos Brown, Jr. He sat down behind her, and then, for no obvious reason, pulled out a knife and began stabbing her in the throat. There was blood everywhere.
And there’s video, which the Charlotte town officials tried and failed to keep secret. But the national press is, as noted above, not simply downplaying it, but ignoring it.
They’re not even making excuses. They might say that violence on commuter trains isn’t news — though I don’t know if that’s true when you’re talking Charlotte instead of the Bronx. They might say that black on white violence isn’t news, though that’s kind of an iffy position. Everyone knows, and DOJ statistics demonstrate, that’s it’s much more common than white on black, but do they want to invoke that as a justification? Maybe they don’t want to encourage random violence by crazy people? But they cover that all the time.
The truth is, this story just hurts the narrative. The black-on-white angle hurts, but the real problem is that Decarlos Brown, Jr., is a repeat violent offender who has spun through the revolving door of the criminal justice system for years, a man with 14 arrests, many for violent crimes such as larceny, armed robbery, and violent threats. But despite being regularly arrested, he was repeatedly released.
Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles said that you can’t arrest your way out of these problems. Well, not if you keep letting people go, anyway:
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Lyles was keen to propose that “we will never arrest our way out [of] issues such homelessness and mental health.” That’s nonsense. The guy who committed this crime had been arrested over and over and over again — including for assault, breaking and entering, robbery with a dangerous weapon, and communicating threats. He had resisted arrest. He had failed to appear in court. He had been caught multiple times in possession of a firearm — which his status as a felon prohibited. If, instead of being out on the streets, he had been in prison, this would not have happened. Or, to put it another way: If the authorities had done their jobs, they could absolutely have “arrested their way out of” this murder.
Heck, they’re doing it now! Per local news, the killer has been arrested and “charged with first-degree murder in connection to Zarutska’s death.” Why? Obviously, because, given his proclivities, it is understood that he must be kept away from the general public. So why not earlier? Surely it cannot be the case that we can arrest our way out of murders only after a murder has been committed? We have other laws in this country than those against murder — laws that are supposed to be enforced in their own right, and that, when enforced, often serve to nip would-be repeat-offenders in the bud. During her remarks, Lyles made sure to confirm that, “I am not villainizing those who struggle with their mental health or those who are unhoused.” But, of course, that’s not what she’s being asked to do. She’s being asked to villainize — or, if she can’t bring herself to make moral judgements, to ensure that the criminal justice systems deal with — people who have rap sheets that look like this:
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Ann Althouse summary:
I write, prompting ChatGPT to respond to the NY Post column with the headline, “Horrid video of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska’s slaughter on Charlotte train is met with deafening silence from Dem leaders, media.”
ChatGPT’s answer can be read here, where you will also see that prompt was my second prompt.