By A Longtime Reader
Fri, Dec 27, 2019 5:08 p.m.
"Suspect in Tessa Majors' Killing Spotted Coming out of NYC Law Office" NYPost
The NYPD and this POS's lawyers knew where he was all the time - and did nothing.
Why? To allow the bite mark/wound that Tessa Majors inflicted on her attacker time to heal.
A police commissioner with spine and morals would have turned the city upside down in the days after this girl's murder to find ALL the killers - and anyone "connected" to the crime, like the "family" providing him safe harbor.
How the current occupant of this fine position can look at himself in the mirror - and face the parents of this girl - one can only guess.
A search of "Tessa Majors suspect" will give page after page of hits with the following:
"boy connected to Tessa Majors robbery located in Bronx released without charges" - the 'without charges' consistently emphasized.
His legal representation even admits that he "handled the knife connected to the robbery."
This whole shitshow is nothing but an obscenity.
If you are the correct hue, you can kill another human being in this city (or be a DIRECT accessory to it), be protected by your "family," your attorneys, even law enforcement - and smirk and laugh your way home to spend the rest of the "Holidays" - with your victim in the ground barely two weeks.
Anyone who thinks this punk will ever see the inside of a jail cell - for any appreciable time - is a fool.
4 comments:
A wound from a bite that drew blood, which it did per reports (?), that was inflicted on 11 Dec would still be detectable on 27 Dec, the date of the article about him being seen -- presumably he was taken into custody earlier (a NY Post story from 26 Dec reports that he is in custody).
Anyone who thinks this punk will ever see the inside of a jail cell - for any appreciable time - is a fool.
Wait for the results of the DNA and other forensic tests -- also, there is still a possibility he will be tried as an adult (for murder).
I would still like more info on the Neighborhood Defender Service of Harlem, which, as I recall, employs almost 60 lawyers --> link
Where does all that money come from? -- certainly not from "clients" like this kid and his family.
"I handled the knife." But that is all. OH, believe me,that is all I did.
RE: 'A wound from a bite that drew blood, which it did per reports (?), that was inflicted on 11 Dec would still be detectable on 27 Dec, the date of the article about him being seen -- presumably he was taken into custody earlier (a NY Post story from 26 Dec reports that he is in custody).' Let's review:
- it was revealed that Ms Majors bit one of her attackers - no mention anywhere on whether the bite 'drew blood' - without capture and examination of the suspect, impossible to know.
- the suspect was on the run from the date of the attack - Dec 11 - until he was brought into the 26th Pct for a DNA sample Dec 26th - the same day of the Post article cited.
He was not 'in custody earlier'. That's a total of 15 days.
- any normal person who works with his hands will cut them many times during the year - no bleeding cut takes longer than approx ~ 7-10 to heal completely.
Only an untreated deeper wound - requiring stitches (but not getting them) - would be still be apparent after two weeks.
Any idiot can see why he was given shelter that entire time - are these people going to be charged for harboring a murder suspect?
If he was brought in for questioning within a few days of the murder - as the NYPD had EVERY right to do given his direct involvement in the crime - that bite mark would have been visible AT THE TIME. Not a chance after two weeks.
A 13/14 yr old 'tried as an adult' in NYC? Not a chance. Troll Much?
I was in a public library today and glanced at the current National Review. In the Periscope section, there was a paragraph on the Tessa Majors murder. Want to know what National Review calls it? According to the Great Magazine of Conservative Intellectualism it was:
"A robbery gone bad."
The rest of the MSM is following a template used for the Knoxville Horror whenever they noticed it. Namely, the "racist reaction" is worse than the murder itself. Today another NY Times called a "racist" tweet about the murder "the worst thing I ever heard."
Post a Comment