[“black man Arrested for Murdering Asian Woman in New York City Subway; yahoo ‘news’ Changes the Crime to ‘Yanking,’ and Forbids Reader Comments (but WEJB/NSU Doesn't!).”]
By Eahilf
Sunday, November 28, 2021 at 6:12:00 A.M. EST
Don’t tell me, maybe another “botched robbery™” perpetrated by a beloved Platinum American™?
Perhaps if Blumpf is elected in 2024 he can get a Second Step Act passed so more unfairly incarcerated Platinum Americans™ can take advantage of our great economy – just in case, the Second Step Act could include money to teach them how to rob people without “botching™” it.
“Cops Nab Murder Suspect Sought in Botched Subway Station Robbery
These “journalists” just can’t help themselves – when an opportunity to use “botched” presents itself, they jump on it.
The apparently hothead Robinson allegedly targeted Htwe and her son as they left the Canal Street subway station because he believed the younger man had thrown trash at him, prosecutor Lindley Round told Judge Paul Goetz.
[Uhh, I think it should be either apparently hotheaded, or the apparent hothead Robinson—but apparently hothead Robinson is not correct.)
And anger management could be added to the curriculum.
Or maybe how to lie better.
(Take a look at Robinson; he looks like a BIG man – I have no idea what the dead woman's 22 year-old son looks like, but does it really make sense that some skinny Asian kid would throw trash at someone who looks like Robinson?)
David Robinson, 53, was charged with manslaughter and held on $100,000 bail Saturday in the July 21 death of Than Htwe, 58.
So even with three bylines, the nyp story is a [bleeping] mess – normally if a victim dies during or as a result of the commission of another felony, like robbery, a perpetrator will also be charged with some degree of murder – but here he’s only being charged with manslaughter, which perhaps means it was more a case of “pedestrian rage™,” or a “perceived slight™” crime, i.e., not a robbery.
Who the hell knows?
And there is some resemblance to the basketball player David Robinson.
On second thought (or maybe it's the third; I lost track) maybe this should be categorized as a Chance Encounter Gone Wrong™.
ReplyDelete