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Friday, June 14, 2013

Hide The Key


The judge is right in this case. The family is in the courtroom on behalf of this callous killer. They might be bad seeds too. This reminds me of the Betty and Malcolm Shabazz case. . The boy did the same thing to his grandmother. They need to destroy this demon seed right now. Don't allow it to multiply. Even in the bible. God gave the order to Saul  to destroy the Amaleks completely. Even the newborn babies. So that makes the case for trying  this young man as an adult. Any ungrateful heathen that sets his mother on fire because he used his computer after he was restricted from using his cellphone. Doesn't deserve rehabilitation. They definitely don't need to reproduce. Lock him up and hide the key

6 comments:

  1. Anonymous6:40 AM

    They're trying to get this guy off on a technicality.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Anonymous3:58 AM

    - A man confessed to murdering his own grandmother at her Memphis home.

    Police said Sol Holland choked and stabbed Bobbie Edinbourgh, 74, in the 1100 block of Lexington Circle.

    Family members were in shock when they heard she suffered apparent stab wounds last week. Edinbourgh's son said he came to the house, noticed smoke inside, and then found his mother dead on the floor.

    The family prayed outside of the home as police investigated, trying to understand who would do this to their loved one.

    "She give you anything you want. She'd been my favorite aunt, I'm 48 years old," said nephew Albert Leake at the scene.

    Edinbourgh had just battled cancer. She lived in the home with her grandson.

    Holland was booked into the Shelby County jail on first-degree murder charges Thursday.

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  3. A Shelby County Juvenile Court judge transferred 14-year-old Jonathan Ray to adult court Tuesday on a charge of felony first-degree murder.

    Special Judge Dan Michael said he considered the fire that killed Ray’s mother in April a premeditated act by Ray, and said the teen learned to start fires at an early age from an abusive, alcoholic father. He said he was concerned that Ray seemed more worried about his court case than the death of his mother.

    The judge also denied bond for Ray, who collapsed to the floor inside the jail holding area after the judge announced his decision.

    “He is a child and cried like a child,” Ray’s lawyer said. “He knows he’s looking at 51 years in prison.”

    Ray had been deemed possibly suicidal and homicidal when he was committed for 10 days of treatment last year, Michael said.

    Prosecutor Dan Byer argued that the youth should be transferred to adult court on the charge that he killed his mother by deliberately setting fire to the family home in Hickory Hill.

    Gwendolyn Wallace, 45, died after she was trapped on the second floor of the house in the early morning blaze.

    Byer told the judge in a hearing Tuesday that the teen had threatened to kill other juvenile inmates and had hidden a fork in his sleeve since he had been at the juvenile jail following the fire April 5.

    The teen’s attorney, Robert Gowen, has said Ray doesn’t belong in adult criminal court, where conviction on the charge against him would bring an automatic sentence of life in prison. In court Tuesday, Gowen said the teen had responded to treatment for anger and depression the year before the fatal fire, but that the family had suddenly ended the treatment.

    Mental health counselor Demarcus Davis testified Monday that he treated the teen for depression and anger from May to June last year, and that he was responding well. However, the family abruptly stopped bringing Ray to treatment, missing a June 21, 2012, appointment, he said

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