Posted on 03/26/2022 1:55:13 PM PDT by E. Pluribus Unum
A 73-year-old woman was murdered in New Orleans on March 21. Linda Frickey died during a particularly horrific violent carjacking.
WBRZ-TV in Baton Rouge, La. reports:
Four juveniles are charged with murder after they allegedly stole a woman’s car and then drove off with her dragging behind the vehicle.
The crime happened early Monday afternoon in the Mid-City area of New Orleans. Witnesses said the attackers pulled 73-year-old Linda Frickey from her vehicle, but she became stuck as the car took off.
New Orleans Police Superintendent Shaun Ferguson said Frickey was dragged for a “significant distance” before her arm eventually detached from her body.

Linda Frickey
But Frickey was not just a victim of four young thugs bearing a depraved indifference to human life. She was killed by a criminal justice system that has deliberately been perverted to keep these thugs on the streets no matter how much carnage they may continuously cause.
WWL-TV in New Orleans shockingly detailed on March 24:
Of the four teenaged defendants who appeared in juvenile court Wednesday after being booked in the fatal carjacking of 73-year-old Linda Frickey, who was dragged to her death Monday afternoon in front of horrified witnesses, 17-year-old John Honore stood out.
Not only because Honore’s three co-defendants were 15-year-old females, but because of the number of times he has been in that court over the past several years.
WWL-TV obtained Honore’s criminal history showing at least seven prior arrests on more than 25 charges dating back his first arrest for criminal damage to property at age 12.
(Excerpt) Read more at worldtribune.com ...
FIRING SQUAD MATERIAL, IMO.
“WWL-TV obtained Honore’s criminal history showing at least seven prior arrests on more than 25 charges dating back his first arrest for criminal damage to property at age 12.”
I don’t know that Soros has any impact on crime in New Orleans. It has always been a sewer, feral blacks commit horrible violet crimes regularly. The whole of city government is corrupt, including the police.
I worked in the city for about 4 years at various hospitals. I pulled one shift at Charity Hospital and refused to ever go back there. It was like a third world $hit hole. Oh the stories I could tell.
John Honore is permanently stuck on stupid.
I was told by a former native, with many family there that Boby Jindal basically had the STATE do the prosecutions there, since the city judges equated jail to ‘slavery’. But now with a Democrat in charge...people who stay there roll the dice, and often lose.
Some people just need to be put down.
Ok, so you want to not incarcerate folks for petty drugs. Sounds ok, except these same people are also the purveyors of all sorts of mayhem, and not the funny kind in the commercials.
We won’t bust kids partying or folks on their porches maybe enjoying some weed. Makes sense to focus resources on bigger issues......
John Honore is a big fish, young but big.
Seven arrests. Probably not caught for 10 incidents for each one he was arrested for.
It’s always been a bad pace rife with crime and murder. A friend of mine killed by two black men in the 80s were released in the early 90s with the “Innocent Project”.
I remember a young, woman, not much older than me at the time was kidnapped, gang-raped, and then her body was thrown over an interstate bridge. I only knew about it after picking up a newspaper where it was a small story at the bottom of the page.
Hey! Don’t be badmouthing the New Orleans PD.
From our Mardi Gras visit there in 2018, I have three police-related stories. I’ll keep them as brief as I can, while including pertinent details to give a full picture of events.
In the first, I asked a smartly-uniformed police captain for directions while I was somewhat inebriated and had an open adult beverage in my hand in the middle of Tchoupitoulas Street near our hotel. He was more than cordial, even friendly, and it was probably the most pleasant interaction with an officer of the law that I’ve ever had. Looking back, he may have been slightly inebriated himself, because I was struck by how casual he seemed. At the time, I chalked it up to the festive atmosphere of Mardi Gras, but became suspicious later, because he was just a little too friendly for a cop, based on my past experiences.
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Second, it was Sunday night before Fat Tuesday on Bourbon Street. There were drunken and/or stoned and/or half-naked revelers as far as the eye could see, and they were reveling. Suddenly, right in front of me, literally brushing against me, is a line of about eight of New Orleans finest, in helmets and leather jackets, riding through the crowd on horses.
I like horses, so, in my inebriated state, as they passed I gave each horse a friendly pat upon the buttocks. About the fifth or sixth cop in the line took offense to this, grabbed me by the shoulder and gave me a shove backward without saying a word. He looked young and inexperienced. None of the other cops seemed to mind my equine buttock-patting at all, and the line rode on by.
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The next day, we happened by a police precinct station in a fairly impressive, older, stone building somewhere on the southwest edge of the French Quarter. Prominently displayed was a banner advertising “T-shirts for sale!”.
So, we went inside and I asked the hardened, veteran officer at the desk where these t-shirts might be. He directed me to a line of several vending machines in the corner against the front wall. Displayed on the wall above the machines were samples of all the shirts available. One of them was for the New Orleans Police Mounted Unit, with a smart logo on the back of a rearing steed framed by a horseshoe.
Given my experience of the previous night, being shoved by the mounted cop, I bought that one. It’s a Hanes Beefy-T, made of quality material, dark blue in color. I have only worn it a few times, and I respect and value that t-shirt. Twice while wearing it, I have been asked if I am a member of the New Orleans PD. I have to reply negatively, of course, but then I relate the story of why I bought that particular shirt, and a good laugh is had by all.
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I understand and believe your allegations of corruption, because I don’t trust government at any level, and I don’t particularly like cops at all. But, their presence is necessary to an ordered society. As far as the NOPD goes, I have nothing but good to say, even though that humorless bastard shoved me away from his horse.
Thank you to anyone who real all of this. It’s probably my longest FR post ever. But that weekend was a great time and myself and my girlfriend love to relate stories from it to whomever is even marginally interested. Mardi Gras weekend in the French Quarter is something everyone should experience at least once in their life, and once is probably enough.
can someone explain to me how weakening the US criminal justice system fits into soros philosophy?
He wants to transform America because we aren’t poor and compliant enough.
Perhaps it is time to fight Glo-Bull Warming by bringing back the old rowing Galleys to do local ocean trade without engines.
A few Biremes and triremes should fit the bill. We need ROWERS! “So Row Well and Die!”
George Soros. I cannot think of a person I abhor more than him. Except for Hitler, who Soros turned his fellow Jews over to.
“can someone explain to me how weakening the US criminal justice system fits into soros philosophy?”
It is another fork of the globalist population control agenda. Outlawing self defense while legalizing crime goes a long way towards population reduction.
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