Videos WhatFinger

Friday, November 29, 2019

When Does Gross Incompetence or Negligence by Judicial Authorities Become 'Accessory to a Crime?'

The case against qualified immunity.

(Aniah Blanchard (front center) with her family.)

Over at TOM, Robert Stacy McCain obliquely makes the case for the latter by doing yeoman's work to detail the horrific abduction and murder of 19 y.o. Alabama college student, Aniah Blanchard, outside an Auburn convenience store, on Oct. 23 this year.
"Blanchard is the step-daughter of UFC fighter Walt Harris, and on Nov. 7, police arrested suspect Ibraheem Yazeed, 29, who had fled to Pensacola, Florida. As I reported on Nov. 9 (“Why Wasn’t Ibraheem Yazid in Jail?”), the suspect had a lengthy record of violent crime and yet had been released on bail after a near-fatal attack on an elderly man in January. On the night she went missing, Aniah reportedly told a friend that she was going to meet a guy she had connected with via a dating app, and now police say they have recovered her remains about 30 miles from where she disappeared:"
The earlier article referenced above, "Why Wasn’t Ibraheem Yazid in Jail?", prompted my headline "When does gross incompetence or negligence by judicial authorities become 'accessory to a crime?'"

McCain details some of Ibraheem Yazeed's seemingly endless one-man crime wave here, yet the most agregious aspect of gross incompetence or negligence by judicial authorities is cited by McCain after Police Arrest Ibraheem Yazeed, 29, in Disappearance of Aniah Blanchard, 19:
"Yazeed was already awaiting trial in an unrelated kidnapping, robbery and attempted murder in Montgomery that left a 77-year-old man “near death.”
Still, he was freed on a combined $295,000 bond, set by a magistrate when the warrants were initially signed, the day after his arrest in February, and that prompts many questions. Who posted the bond, and why? Where did a friend or acquaintance of Yazeed get that kind of money? More importantly, why would a magistrate even option a bond release of a habitually violent convicted felon?

The family and friends of murdered 19 y.o. Alabama college student, Aniah Blanchard, want answers. We all want answers.

When does gross incompetence or negligence by judicial authorities become 'accessory to a crime?'