In 2018, Darian Lee McWoods of Portland, Oregon, was convicted of murdering his own 15-month-old daughter.
The coroner found the poor little girl had cracked ribs, a lacerated liver, and meth in her system. The monster was convicted and sentenced to life in prison.
That is, until this week.
Why is this murderer getting released?
Because a woke lesbian judge didn't like the fact that McWoods' jury was all-white.
For real!
Meet Judge Josephine Mooney, the judge who made this insane ruling. She looks exactly how you'd expect:
In her decision, she wrote:
Racial discrimination in the selection of jurors is harmful.
What about letting a child murderer go free? Is that harmful?
From the Statesman Journal:
Presiding Judge Josephine Mooney found that Multnomah County Senior Deputy District Attorney Amanda Nadell offered race-neutral reasons to strike both prospective jurors, but those arguments were only a 'pretext.'
Mooney wrote that the state did not seek to strike similarly situated jurors who were not Black.
That's right: This woke judge is accusing the Portland-area DA, another white liberal lady named Amanda, of being racist because Amanda excused two black jurors, even though Amanda gave "race-neutral reasons" for why she got rid of the two black jurors during jury selection.
But no matter. Judge Mooney felt it was suspicious that the DA would excuse two black jurors - there couldn't POSSIBLY be any other reason, right? - so even though she has zero evidence and the DA gave her an alternative explanation, Mooney feels it was racist.
Feelings are what will give a murderer a sweetheart deal that allows him to walk free in 18 months.
In an interview with the International Association of LGBTQ+ Judges, Mooney said:
I'm firmly committed to following the rule of law in a way that supports a diverse and open society. And when I say that, and when I use those words that are sometimes buzzwords that start to lose their meaning over time, when I use the words 'diverse' and 'open,' I mean genuinely and honestly diverse and open. I believe that enforcement of the rule of law allows us to have an orderly society and allows us as individuals to actually respect each other for our differences and to appreciate each other for those things that we have in common, but that goes both ways.
This is what "diversity, equity, and inclusion" looks like, folks.
I'll leave you with my final thought:
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