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New "Drug Dealers Protection Law"

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EireannGoddess
(@eireanngoddess)
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Today, New Yorkers woke up to news that told them they can no longer expect protection from drug dealers and addicts. Judges have decided that to imprison them is "wrong", that there are other ways to 'punish' them, ie, "rehabilitation programmes". This, despite the well known fact that recidivism is high amongst drug addicts, and, with this new law, there's nothing left to deter drug dealers.

Although prosecuting attorneys are protesting this law, it's useless for by the time their protest reaches the state supreme court (if it gets that far), the crime rate in the meantime will become even worse, with more drug related robberies, muggings and murders - all three which have risen considerably as the Depression settles in for a long stay, and the newest victims are, more and more often, innocent Whites (who are assumed to have money) trying to go about their daily business. Most of the latest drug related muggings, beatings and murders, have occured during the day.

No other explanation is offered, but given that NY State is governed by a [literally] blind and stupid nigger, and NYC by jews, this is another strike against White communities that continue to exist in the State and City despite the odds against them.

The overwhelming majority of drug dealers are the new mexican cartel orgs , and those who work for them, as well as niggers and some criminal Whites - all are armed and dangerous. Watch the video included in the article, very revealing.

I am glad to have a CCW licence and all White New Yorkers should get one, it allows for more freedom when it comes dealing with being approached by these scum.

June 9, 2009
Posted: 2:22 am

State prisoners are cheering a new, more liberal sentencing guideline they say amounts to a "Drug Dealers Protection Law," a group of worried district attorneys revealed yesterday.

"Now I know I'm never gonna face no real time," an unidentified man awaiting trial on drug charges told a friend during a taped jailhouse telephone call on March 29 -- days before the new law was passed.

AUDIO: [NIGGER] CONVICT DISCUSSES NEW DRUG LAWS :

http://www.nypost.com/video?vxSiteId=a89dc16f-1771-485a-8c76-3ebbf3072361&vxChannel=PostUsFeed&vxClipId=1458_523447&vxBitrate=300

"It's called the 'Drug Dealers Protection Law,' " boasted the longtime criminal, who is in jail awaiting resolution of a felony case in which he is accused of selling drugs and possession with intent to sell.

"You know what they did, they just created the Beast. The Beast is coming home to be the juggernaut [expletive]," snickered the inmate.
"You know what I'm going to do with it. They said even if you have three or four -- no, four or five convictions, you're still going to be eligible for a program, and you know me, I got no sales on my record. All is possessions, so they got to give me a program.

"They just gave me the free-for-all. You know what that means? I'm burning the streets up when I go home," the inmate said.

"You know I'm doing it [expletive]. It's real now. "I'm going to do what I gotta do [expletive]. I'm going to do what I gotta do to wipe my a- -, man."

"The Beast is being created right now."

Staten Island DA Daniel Donovan played the jaw-dropping tape to call into question the wisdom of the law.

Beginning Oct. 7, it will allow judges to sentence certain drug defendants to treatment programs over the objections of prosecutors who want a prison sentence instead.

"This is scary stuff. This is very scary, and it's caused us to decide that someone has to monitor the impact this new law is having on society," said Donovan, president of the state DA's Association.

"This guy thinks this is his ticket to freedom, that he's going to get a treatment program even though he has a 27-page rap sheet, and that when he gets out, he's going to 'burn up' the streets.

"Some people need to go to jail for drug crime. Some people deal drugs for purely entrepreneurial reasons," he said.

Donovan has created a committee of 13 DAs -- including the top prosecutors of Manhattan and Brooklyn -- to monitor the effects of the law, which is part of an ongoing series of changes to New York's controversial Rockefeller Drug Laws.

Donovan would not identify the prisoner caught on the audiotape, but said the conversation shows he was "very up to speed on the law" within just three days of an announcement that the Legislature had reached agreement on it.

"It caused us to pause and say, 'If this is how one individual is thinking about this, in one county jail, I'm sure he's not alone,' " Donovan said.
State Sen. Martin Golden (R- Brooklyn) said, "This is exactly what we've been saying all along. It's a get-out-of-jail card, and everybody knows it -- including the bad guys."


 
Posted : 09/06/2009 10:08 am
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