《伊琳娜法案》以及使其成为必要的糟糕决定
'Iryna's Law' And The Bad Decisions That Make It Necessary

原始链接: https://www.zerohedge.com/political/irynas-law-and-bad-decisions-make-it-necessary

近期美国公共交通系统发生多起暴力事件——包括纽约、芝加哥和北卡罗来纳州的纵火和谋杀案——凸显了日益严重的治安危机。虽然每次袭击的情况各不相同,但一个共同点是:累犯,且有大量逮捕记录的人,由于法官和政策的宽容而屡屡被释放。 文章认为,仅仅增加执法是不够的,系统性改革至关重要。北卡罗来纳州的“伊琳娜法案”,限制无现金保释,增加精神健康评估,并可能恢复死刑,被认为是积极的一步。然而,作者强调需要更广泛的行动,包括更严格的移民执法——引用了一起涉及无证移民的案例——以及对一再释放危险分子法官的问责。 最终,文章呼吁对暴力犯罪*和*司法宽容采取“零容忍”政策,并建议弹劾作为移除危害公众法官的工具。它将当前局势与“废除警察”运动联系起来,并警告说,精英阶层青睐的进步法律改革正在加剧公共交通上的暴力事件。

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原文

Authored by Daniel McCarthy via The Epoch Times,

What will it take to get crime under control in our subways and public transit systems?

On Monday, Dec. 1, news broke of another passenger set on fire in New York City’s subway—although this story wasn’t all it seemed.

The homeless man who at first said he was the victim of an attack turned tight-lipped when police pressed him about what happened.

Had he set his own clothes ablaze to attract attention?

In the wild environment our subways have become, a malicious attack or a madman’s self-inflicted injury are both all too believable.

Most trips on the New York City subway or Washington’s Metro system don’t resemble a clip from “Mad Max,” but sooner or later anyone who rides the rails of our cities regularly encounters insanity, aggression, and the prospect of violence—or actual violence, including the murderous kind.

The life-changing and very nearly life-ending attack on Bethany MaGee, the woman set aflame on a Chicago Blue Line train last month, was no hoax.

Nor was the assault that killed Iryna Zarutska on a commuter train in Charlotte, North Carolina, this summer.

Nor was the burning alive of Debrina Kawam on the New York City subway in December 2024.

None of those women had any reason to fear for her life, yet a commute turned into unspeakable terror.

And it was predictable—not because these victims had anything special to fear but because everyone knows what’s allowed to happen in the tunnels and on the trains.

If a thug with 72 arrests to his name—such as the man who tried to immolate the 26-year-old MaGee in Chicago—or with “just” 14 arrests—such as Zarutska’s murderer—decides that this is the day to take an unsuspecting victim, what chance does the victim have?

Her fate was already decided by judges who chose to not lock up men who were a demonstrated threat to the public.

The killers and would-be killers are only half the problem.

The other half are the judges and lawmakers who put them on the streets in the first place, leaving them free to ambush unsuspecting victims on train cars, where they can’t escape.

(MaGee did try running, but her attacker caught up and torched her.)

Legislators in North Carolina, at least, are trying to stop this murderous chain of events before it begins, by putting men with criminal records like those of Zarutska’s killer in prison or mental institutions as soon as they start breaking the law.

“Iryna’s Law” restricts cashless bail, requires judges to order more mental evaluations, and makes it easier to involuntarily commit offenders found to be disturbed.

It also attempts to restore the death penalty in North Carolina, which has been blocked for nearly 20 years by legal challenges.

The law is a good start, and other states need similar reforms to incarcerate and institutionalize more of the people who commit horrors such as the subway attacks of recent months.

There’s a federal role in this, too, including rigorous enforcement of immigration law.

Sebastian Zapeta-Calil, the man charged with burning Kawam to death, is an illegal immigrant who should never have been in this country to begin with.

Yet more is needed: not only zero tolerance toward violent and repeat offenders, but also zero tolerance in the political process for judges who go easy on them.

Some states elect judges, and voters in those places can make known just how they feel about judges’ culpability for crimes committed by the lawbreakers they set loose.

And states have provisions for impeaching judges, just as the federal government does.

Where judges egregiously endanger the public with their leniency toward criminals, they should be impeached and removed from office.

It wouldn’t take many examples before soft-on-crime judges got the message.

Of course, judges themselves, where they aren’t elected by the public, are appointed by politicians who have to answer to voters—and those pols should feel the heat, too.

Five years ago, progressives were pushing, in all seriousness, to “defund the police” and “abolish bail,” meaning, in the latter instance, simply releasing a wider array of arrestees.

In most of the country, those slogans were not political winners, but advocates for these policies count more on elite sympathy, especially within the legal profession, than they do on ballot-box victories.

Their gamble is that most Americans pay no mind to the inner workings of state courts and legislatures, so what loses in an election can still win where laws and legal precedents are actually made.

This populist moment in national politics arises from the distrust our leaders have engendered among the public.

But leaders in states and cities have betrayed Americans’ trust, too, and their betrayal turns public transportation into scenes of public execution for innocents such as Zarutska.

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