Discussion:
Charges say black felon Myon Burrell, who had life term commuted, resisted arrest and was cuffed
(too old to reply)
woke fails again
2023-10-23 03:34:47 UTC
Permalink
This animal should be taken on a plane ride and kicked out the
door at 36,000 feet.

The charges say police found a loaded handgun, meth, marijuana and
ecstasy pills in his vehicle.

Felony weapon and drug charges were filed Friday against Myon
Burrell, the man whose life sentence for the murder of an 11-year-
old girl in Minneapolis was commuted in late 2020 after he served 18
years.

Burrell, 37, was charged in Hennepin County District Court with
illegal weapon possession and fifth-degree drug possession after
being pulled over late Tuesday morning by a Robbinsdale police
officer who said Burrell's SUV was traveling erratically on N. 42nd
Avenue. Police say they found a loaded handgun in the front center
console and illicit drugs.

The Dakota County Attorney's Office is handling the prosecution to
allow prosecutors in Hennepin County to avoid a potential conflict
of interest. Burrell was a paid member of Mary Moriarty's campaign
staff in 2022, when she successfully ran for Hennepin County
attorney.

In December 2020, Burrell left Stillwater prison after the Minnesota
Board of Pardons voted to immediately release him from a life
sentence in connection with the 2002 fatal shooting of Tyesha
Edwards, who was killed when a stray bullet penetrated her
Minneapolis home while she was doing her math homework at her dining
room table. Burrell has always declared he had nothing to do with
Tyesha's killing.

Gov. Tim Walz, a member of the Board of Pardons, proposed commuting
Burrell's life term to 20 years and requiring him to serve the
remainder of the time — two years — on supervised release. That
supervision expired in December. At the time, Walz noted that the
board's commutation was not a determination of guilt or innocence,
but that it was motivated by the "exceptionally long" sentence
Burrell received as a juvenile.

"Like in so many criminal cases things may not be what they appear
to be," Burrell's attorney, Paul Applebaum, said Friday. "I am
particularly interested in the circumstances surrounding the initial
traffic stop. We look forward to seeing the State's evidence and
will respond accordingly."

Burrell appeared in court Friday afternoon and remains jailed in
lieu of $50,000 bail ahead of an Oct. 17 court appearance.

Shortly before 11 a.m. on Tuesday, according to the charges, a
police officer spotted Burrell's SUV going over the 30 mile per hour
speed limit.

The charges say the officer pulled over Burrell and smelled a strong
odor of burnt marijuana when the driver's side window was rolled
down. He also saw "marijuana remnants" in the center console. He
noticed that Burrell's eyes were red, glassy, and his pupils were
dilated.

Burrell was ordered out of the SUV, and a field sobriety test
indicated a degree of intoxication.

He objected when the officer told him his vehicle was going to be
searched for marijuana and started walking away when told to sit in
the squad car. The officers "took [Burrell] by the arm to sit in his
squad, and [Burrell] pulled away and began to actively resist the
officer," according to the charges.

Burrell was placed in handcuffs and led into the squad car.

The officer located in the center console a loaded 9-millimeter
handgun with an extended magazine and a backpack in the back seat
that had two bags of marijuana and 21 clear capsules of a crystal-
like powder with the "appearance of a controlled substance." Sixteen
of those capsules tested positive for methamphetamine.

Another bag held 16 suspected ecstasy pills. Also in the backpack
were more bags and a digital scale.

Police filed a search warrant affidavit to have Burrell's blood or
urine tested for drug or alcohol use.

https://www.startribune.com/myon-burrell-whose-life-term-for-
murder-of-girl-was-commuted-is-charged-with-weapon-and-drug-
counts/600301463/
Harold Esmond
2023-10-23 03:46:22 UTC
Permalink
Post by woke fails again
This animal should be taken on a plane ride and kicked out the
door at 36,000 feet.
The charges say police found a loaded handgun, meth, marijuana and
ecstasy pills in his vehicle.
Sounds like another Trumper being punished by the justice system.

Don't you wish Republicans would have the courage to come down hard on
child sex abusers? No? Then you're one of them!

Republicans Enabling Child Sex Abusers




Republicans would do well to catch up to the rest of the culture on the
issues of sex assault and child sex abuse. They are quickly being outpaced
by a society that no longer is willing to wink at the rapist or child
abuser.

Context for rape and child abuse no longer matters: The people are sick of
child sex abuse and sex assault, period, whether it occurs in the
religious, sports, school, university or family arena. Smart politicians
are seeing that this is a scourge with no political preference.

Yet, too many Republicans—with rare exceptions like Representative Jason
Spencer of Georgia and Representative Deborah Hudson of Delaware—are
responsible for blocking simple legislative change that would identify the
hidden predators and provide justice to victims. And they are doing it for
all the wrong reasons.
Subscribe now for just $1 per month
A Case Study: Ken Starr's Spectacular Fall from Grace

The spectacular fall of Ken Starr, in the wake of an ugly Baylor
University scandal involving the coverup of sex assault by football team
players, needs to be studied by ambitious and currently powerful
Republicans. This is not like the Dennis Hastert scandal, where everyone
could pretend his problems from the past don't affect Republicans now.
Sign up for NewsletterNewsletter
The Bulletin
Your daily briefing of everything you need to know

Starr, the son of a minister, was a literal star in the Republican
firmament: He clerked for Chief Justice Warren Burger, was appointed a
federal appellate judge on the powerful Court of Appeals for the District
of Columbia (1983-89) and then served as the solicitor general (1989-93).
During that time he was on President George H.W. Bush's short list for the
Supreme Court, though the appointment eventually went to David Souter.

Starr has been a distinguished litigator for Kirkland and Ellis and also
served as independent counsel (1994-99) investigating the scandals
surrounding the Clintons, including the death of Vince Foster and then-
President Bill Clinton's dealings with Monica Lewinsky, which led to the
historic House vote to impeach Clinton in 1998.

The investigation was politically charged, and Starr was criticized
heavily. He even later expressed regret for having taken on the Lewinsky
assignment. Still, in 2004, he landed softly as dean of the Pepperdine
University School of Law (2004-2010).

As dean, he continued to take on headliner cases, including the defense of
billionaire Jeffrey Epstein against statutory rape charges involving
numerous girls brought to his home. Epstein eventually pled to one charge
of soliciting sex from a minor and served minimal time in jail near his
home in Palm Beach, Florida.
Related: Ugly cover-ups and intimidation in sexual assault cases
Sign up for Newsweek’s daily headlines

In 2010, Starr accepted the position of president of Baylor University, a
private and distinguished Baptist university. Five years later, the
criminal trial and conviction of a former Baylor football player for
sexual assault led the university to hire the Pepper Hamilton law firm to
do a private investigation.

It turned out that the 2015 conviction was not the football team's first
conviction for rape; another former player had been convicted in 2014. The
report led Baylor to demote Starr in May to chancellor and law professor.

But that was not the end of the scandal for Starr, who resigned as
chancellor the next month. Only months later, in August, he left the law
school. The football coach, Art Briles, also lost his job.

Numerous women have joined a Title IX lawsuit against the university for
creating the environment that led to their sexual assaults. Still, Starr
was recently quoted saying, "I personally have doubts that there were gang
rapes."

I would posit that Ken Starr's career is a case study for Republicans. You
can land one prestigious post after another within the Republican
firmament, but the United States now draws the line at a failure to stop
sexual assault.

Three factors are at play: First, sex assault victims no longer accept the
silence that society once imposed on them. Second, the internet tore apart
the social fabric of the media and powerful figures that kept a lid on
such claims, informed each survivor she (or he) is not alone and educated
the rest of us. Third, self-interested institutions are figuring out that
presiding over the coverup of sex assault and child sex abuse leads to no
good end.

Now, some may counter this reasoning by pointing to Donald Trump's
election to the United States presidency despite his own admission that he
liked to grab women's genitals and his association with sex offender
Jeffrey Epstein.

But his election is a product of the Electoral College. He was soundly
beaten in the popular vote, by close to 3 million votes. For every other
politician, the popular vote is what matters.
Statute of Limitations Reform: Republicans Are the Primary Barrier

The leading edge for law reform to reverse the rape culture is statute of
limitations reform for child sex abuse victims. Largely led by Democrats,
a significant number of states in recent years moved to eliminate these
SOLs and/or to revive expired SOLs, as these maps show.

There is much more to be done for child and adult victims, and the worst
states in the United States offer some insights into the politics of rape
and abuse.

The four worst states in the United States for child sex abuse victims
are: Alabama, Michigan, Mississippi and New York. The legal reason is that
for those whose SOLs have expired, the only option is to file a civil
lawsuit to shift the cost of the abuse from the victim to the ones who
caused it. In these four states, the archaic civil SOLs expire long before
virtually any victim is ready to come forward.

Politics is destiny for the rape victims in these four states. In all but
New York, the Republicans control the statehouse and the governor's office
by a large majority. In dysfunctional New York, a Democratic governor is
in power, but Republicans control the Senate through a coalition with
seven Democrats who call themselves the "Independent Democratic
Conference."

There is no question that the Republicans are the reason no movement has
happened in New York for the decade in which advocates, including myself,
and many others have been making the case for justice.

Typically, what happens with SOL reform when Republicans are in control is
that leadership refuses to release it from committee and so no vote on the
floor can occur. This has happened in state after state in recent years
including New York and Michigan. (Alabama and Mississippi are so far
behind on the prevention of rape that SOL reform bills don't even get
filed.)

The reason Republicans bottle it up in committee is because no member
relishes voting against rape victims in public, right there in front of
the press and voters. Therefore, if a bill increasing justice for child
rape victims can get beyond a committee to the floor and the light of day,
typically it will pass, and pass unanimously.

What this tells us is that Republican leadership is at least savvy to the
optics of voting against justice for child rape victims. Leadership is not
so savvy about the appearance of caring, as Republican leaders like
Senator John J. Flanagan in New York refuse to even meet with the victims
and advocates seeking justice for child rape victims.

What Republican leadership is failing to grasp in these four states, and
plenty of others including Pennsylvania, is that there is an irrefutable
logic in the culture to increase the power of victims to name their
perpetrators and to shift the cost of abuse to the perpetrators and
institutions that caused it. It's just the right thing to do.

Powerful institutions are engaging in self-inflicted wounds when they side
with rapists, as Ken Starr, the Catholic bishops, USA Gymnastics and USA
Volleyball officials and many others can inform Republicans.

So why do Republican legislators block SOL reform in these states? No one
knows each of their private motives, but the political landscape indicates
slavish pandering to religious leaders who have much to hide, whether they
are Catholic or Baptist.

Yet, the lobbying against victims and in protection of pedophiles is
hypocritical in the current culture of extreme religious liberty, and
Republican politicians need to do some soul-searching of their own on this
issue.
Complicity with Sex Offenders

Catholics and Baptists have united since the Affordable Care Act was
passed to argue that it is a violation of their religious liberty rights
to be made "complicit" in the use of contraceptives by their employees or
to deal with LGBT or same-sex marriages.

Republican-appointee judges have been more than willing to hand the
religious claimants wins on the complicity argument in the courts. Indeed,
this complicity theory has been the can opener that released the Religious
Freedom Restoration Act's power to undermine women's rights to
reproductive choice and to foment discrimination based on sexual
orientation, as evidenced in the reasoning of Burwell v. Hobby Lobby and
Zubik v. Burwell at the Supreme Court, and the reasoning of Judge Reed
O'Connor in recent opinions here and here.

Their complicity reasoning, however, has to work both ways. The argument
is that when they make decisions that affect others' choices involving
abortion, birth control or sexual orientation, they are complicit in those
very choices. It is not that they themselves would be engaging in
abortion, birth control or dealing with LGBT individuals, but rather that
they are complicit when others make those choices following their actions.

So the Little Sisters of the Poor were complicit in their employees' use
of birth control if they permitted birth control to be a part of their
overall health plan.

On the very same reasoning, every time a bishop or a Baptist pastor fails
to protect a child from rape or sex abuse in his organization, he is
complicit in the abuse. The bishop is not the perpetrator, but rather is
complicit in the perpetrator's actions after he fails to block the sex
abuse.

The same is true for university presidents and Republican politicians.
There is a stark choice being offered by the SOL reform movement:
predators or children, and their own theory of responsibility nails their
culpability.

For each SOL reform bill Republicans block, they are choosing to protect
predators and endanger children. In their own religiously determined
universe, that means they are complicit with rape and sex abuse. That is a
path to failure. Just ask Ken Starr.

Loading...