Daily Stormer
May 9, 2015
You know, this whole Mosby thing could well be the final straw, when masses of Americans wake up and say “wait a second here… these Blacks are completely ridiculous!”
I mean, this is literally a public officially openly violating basic laws for the purpose of fomenting a racial revolution. She views herself as taking back what the White man stole, like Jamie Foxx in that horrible movie.
The people just can’t go along with this much longer. It is just too overwhelmingly silly.
The next thing the Blacks are going to do is accuse these defense lawyers of racism for using logic on a defenseless Black female.
Attorneys for Baltimore police officers charged in the death of Freddie Gray filed court papers Friday arguing that the city’s top prosecutor should be removed from the high-profile case because of conflicts of interest.
The broad attack on State’s Attorney Marilyn Mosby’s credibility takes shots at her personal and professional life, alleging in more than 100 pages that she has a close relationship with the Gray family’s attorney and that her husband’s job as a City Council member from the district where Gray was arrested clouded her judgment.
“Rarely in the history of any criminal case has a prosecutor so directly maintained so many conflicts of interest,” the attorneys wrote in their motion that was filed at the close of business Friday in District Court.
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The filing is an indication that the defense is mounting an early and aggressive bid to preempt the charges even before the officers are indicted and the case is moved to Circuit Court. Rarely are such motions filed at the District Court level.
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In announcing the criminal charges, Mosby told residents, “I heard your call for no justice, no peace. To the youth of this city, I will seek justice on your behalf. . . . You are at the forefront of this cause, and as young people our time is now.”
The motion filed Friday calls those statements proof of her bias. The defense also questioned Mosby’s conclusion that a folding knife Gray carried is legal, and that he never should have been arrested. The officers contend the type of knife Gray had was an illegal switchblade as defined by city code.
In the motion, the defense argues that Mosby’s husband had a “personal interest in the need to eliminate the rioting,” and that she had an interest in “accommodating the needs of her husband.”
The motion, which has not been ruled on, describes Murphy, the Gray family lawyer, as a “close friend, financial supporter and attorney for Mrs. Mosby.”
It notes that Murphy served on Mosby’s transition team after she was elected and represented her before an attorney grievance commission last year. Mosby was accused of violating rules of professional conduct by saying during her campaign for state’s attorney that someone had committed a crime based solely on news accounts. The commission took no action against her.
Attorneys also argue that Mosby, on her first day in office, dropped criminal charges against one of two Baltimore police officers accused of killing a dog after it bit a pregnant woman. The officer her office cleared was represented by Murphy. His action of lassoing the dog was ruled the likely cause of death, according to the motion. The other officer had slit the dog’s throat.
The defense team also focused on statements made by a prisoner who was in the van with Gray. According to a search-warrant application, the man told police that he heard Gray banging against the walls and thought Gray was trying to hurt himself. That sealed court document was first reported on by the The Washington Post.
Two television reporters and The Post later interviewed the man, identified as Donta Allen.
The defense said that when a local television reporter aired the first interview with Allen, his “story had changed” and he said he heard “light banging” and never thought Gray attempted to harm himself.
The officers are also threatening to sue the crazy bitch.
The Baltimore police officers being prosecuted over the death of Freddie Gray threatened on Friday to sue the city’s top prosecutor, Marilyn Mosby, for arresting them, as they demanded that she step down from their case over alleged conflicts of interest.
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In an extraordinary 109-page motion, the officers’ lawyers said all six may sue Mosby and mayor Stephanie Rawlings-Blake for arresting and detaining them unless the city pays them tens of thousands of dollars in damages. They accused Mosby in sharply personal terms of breaching the US constitution, the Maryland declaration of rights, and her professional code.
The question now is not “will these officers be indicted?” as there is virtually no chance of this whatsoever. A much better question at this point is “will Mosby be indicted?”
What she has done here is clearly several different type of felony, possibly including treason. It may not even be possible for her to be properly prosecuted in the United States; I would support turning her over to some sort of international tribunal.