Saturday, May 30, 2020

Diane Dimond stokes the flames of vigilante violence in poorly worded editorial calling murder a "public service"

Perhaps some of you might have been thinking Diane Dimond was actually a resonable reporter, given her recent skepticism of sex offense registries. Yet, she still refers to a registrant as a "convicted pedophile," and since we all know that there is no crime called "pedophilia" nobody can be a "convicted pedophile."

Her article also shows us that the narrative Fairbanks's victim deserved what he got because he was allegedly "ogling kids while pretending to wash his car" has take hold and is not questioned. How does anyone know Fairbanks didn't make that shit up as an excuse to kill? After all, the media spent a week focused on a dilapidated children's playset in Condoluci's backyard before the Omaha Turd-Herald wrote that it belonged to the landlord of the rental property, not Condoluci.

There are lots of irresponsible people spreading lies on the Internet but it is worse when it is a syndicated columnist.

https://www.creators.com/read/diane-dimond/05/20/murder-as-a-public-service

Murder as a Public Service?
By Diane Dimond
May 30, 2020  5 Min Read

On the evening of May 14, 2020, in Omaha, Nebraska, James Fairbanks went to the home of Mattieo Condoluci and shot him dead. Condoluci, 64, was a twice convicted pedophile, and Fairbanks, 43, had spent years working with troubled kids in the Omaha Public School system.

After the body was discovered, the dead man's daughter, Amanda Henry, was quoted saying, "Murdering my dad was a horrible thing, but children are much safer now."

Fairbanks is now charged with first-degree murder.

During an emotional phone call with Henry, she told me of her father's death: "I was relieved. It finally happened. It's over. It has been hell."

And then Henry told me what life had been like with Mattieo Condoluci.

"I was beaten and raped by my own father for years," she said. "The man who was supposed to protect me instead belittled, humiliated and tortured me until I finally escaped at age 19." This, she told me, is why she is now supporting the man who killed her father.

"James Fairbanks answered a 27-year-long prayer for me," Henry said. "He was there when the police weren't there. He did something when the police didn't."

Henry described how her mother had fought valiantly to maintain custody of her 2-year-old daughter but lost touch when Condoluci took off with the toddler.

While Henry has tried to block out much of her early nomadic years with Dad — they moved to several different cities in California, Florida, New Mexico, Iowa and Nebraska — she remembers her father routinely preyed on single mothers with young children. "He would find a lost soul, bring her home and then do his devil's work," she said.

In 1994, Condoluci pleaded no contest in Florida to molesting the 5-year-old son of a woman he was dating. His sentence? Four years' probation. In 2006, by then relocated to Nebraska, Condoluci was sentenced to five years in prison for sexually assaulting the 12-year-old daughter of another woman in his life. He served less than two years.

Around the same time, Henry says she was befriended by a licensed counselor and foster mother who encouraged her to report her father to the Omaha Police Department. Henry says the Omaha Police Department told her she had waited too long; the statute of limitations had run out.

Today, others, most notably, two of Henry's female cousins, have posted on a "Free James Fairbanks" Facebook page that they were sexually abused by "Uncle Matt," and they are supporting his killer. One told me: "I was raped till I was 13 years old. It started when I was 7."

In a confession Fairbanks distributed to the local media before his arrest, he explained that while looking for a new apartment, he had checked the sex registry for a particular neighborhood and found Condoluci's name. Fairbanks admitted he had watched the convict pretending to wash his car while ogling a group of children playing in the street.

"I felt sick to my stomach," Fairbanks wrote. "I researched him more and more and found he had victimized dozens of kids in different states. ... (He) had a playground set in his backyard." Because of his work with victimized kids, Fairbanks said, "I couldn't in good conscience allow him to do it to anyone else while I had the means to stop him."

Total strangers are sending money to Fairbank's jailhouse account; thousands have signed petitions calling for Fairbanks to be pardoned — unlikely at this point since he hasn't been convicted of anything. Many are saying simply that Fairbanks should not spend another night in lockup, that he did the community a favor.

This case challenges society's ethics and our own morals. It underscores the failure of the statute of limitations laws because as any victim of childhood sex abuse will tell you, they get no reprieve from a lifetime of trauma. The case also highlights those disappointing sex registries that are clogged with the names of teenage Romeos and public urinators but fail to focus strict surveillance on career pedophiles and rapists.

The case leaves us with the unsettling idea that sometimes — when those in authority fail to protect — murder could be seen as a public service.

In that instance, should the murderer get a pass?

To find out more about Diane Dimond, visit her website at www.dianedimond.com. Her latest book, "Thinking Outside the Crime and Justice Box," is available on Amazon.com. To read features by other Creators Syndicate writers and cartoonists, visit the Creators Syndicate webpage at www.creators.com.

6 comments:

  1. https://www.3newsnow.com/news/local-news/exclusive-jailhouse-interview-with-man-accused-of-killing-omaha-sex-offender

    Update James Fairbanks goes on the defensive and yes its a ploy to taint the jury in Nebraska.

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fimEvNi5EWk

    https://www.ketv.com/article/i-felt-like-the-justice-system-had-failed-man-charged-with-murder-in-death-of-convicted-sex-offender-speaks-out/32844554

    ReplyDelete
  2. Fairbanks already bragged about going there with a gun with "the means to stop him." That's premeditated murder.

    The 1st Degree Murder case is a slam dunk. #LockHimUp

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Its all about tainting the Jury

      Delete
    2. MILWAUKEE (CBS 58) -- Milwaukee police have one suspect in custody for allegedly burning down a house near 40th and Lloyd on Tuesday, June 23.
      One of the residents was giving birth the day it happened.

      Jaleesa Hall was at St. Joe's Hospital when the home was burned down. She saw everything the family owned go down in flames on television.

      A neighborhood search for two missing girls resulted in a house burning down. Hall learned about the destruction at her residence three hours after going into labor.

      "I see it going up in flames and hundreds of people out there rioting, and I didn't know where I was going to go," said Hall.

      Neighbors suspected the house was involved in sex trafficking.

      Police say no evidence of sex trafficking has been found and this should caution people from believing online rumors.

      "Looking at social media from un-vetted sources, to be taking that as gospel, that?s exactly what happened out there on 40th Street," said Assistant Chief Paul Formolo, Milwaukee Police Department.

      Police say both missing girls that prompted the unrest were found in an unrelated location and are safe.

      MPD found one of four arson suspects and are still looking for the rest.

      "To go out and misidentify a house that contains real families, children, and go after the people that are in that house and just set it ablaze is just unacceptable," said Assistant Chief Regina Howard, MPD Administration Bureau.

      Hall's sister-in-law set up a GoFundMe page for the family. Hall says anything that can help her, her 2-year-old child, and her newborn baby is appreciated.

      "We literally just have the stuff on our back at the moment, so we need clothes, shoes, personal hygiene products," Hall said.


      https://www.cbs58.com/news/woman-gave-birth-hours-before-learning-her-home-at-40th-and-lloyd-was-set-on-fire-destroyed

      If you are wondering why we have due process this might be the reason as seen in this Wisconsin riot report

      Delete
    3. https://www.3newsnow.com/news/local-news/vigilante-james-fairbanks-who-killed-sex-offender-gets-40-70-years-in-prison

      Update James Fairbanks just got convicted for murder on Condoluci. Yes James Fairbanks is sentenced to 40-70 years in Prison. Fairbanks will play the Patrick Drum card and say ooh its hero blaming to investigate the death of Condoluci but in some cases the vigilante will end up more paranoid than even the rape victims that he claims to be protecting??

      https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2007/dec/29/victim-finds-freedom-in-forgiveness/

      Case and point Eve Vasquez in this link attempted to remain sane during both the rape case and the death of her abuser. However the vigilante ended up more insane Michael A Mullen and even in death after he killed the people he said were rapists.

      https://www.spokesman.com/stories/2006/sep/03/hurt-then-hurt-again-by-killer/

      https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/prison-death-of-sex-offenders-killer-is-investigated-as-a-suicide/

      Apparently James Fairbanks don't understand that its "Petty Criminals" who reoffend the most because they are homeless, race and mentally ill.

      Delete
  3. https://abc7.com/lapd-stops-use-of-calgang-database-after-allegations-of-misuse/6257995/

    LOS ANGELES (KABC) -- The Los Angeles Police Department on Friday announced that it is stopping the use of a statewide database used by law enforcement agencies for sharing information regarding potential gang members.

    The department's moratorium on the CalGang System stems from recent audits and investigations into allegations that some officers within the LAPD falsified records and listed innocent people as gang members, calling the database's accuracy into question.

    "To strengthen community trust and avoid any adverse impact on individuals, particularly in communities of color, the department will no longer use this resource," the department said in a statement Friday.

    The LAPD was investigating its alleged misuse of CalGang, after it was announced in January that a teenager was entered into the system when he had no gang affiliations.

    Attorney General Xavier Becerra announced in February his office would audit the department's records and policies on the use of the database.

    "We do not yet have a clear or full picture of what occurred, but we know enough to know that we must act. Any falsification of police records and abuse of the CalGang database is unacceptable," Becerra said in February. "If Californians are falsely included in the database, that could potentially subject them to unwarranted scrutiny.''

    According to Becerra, approximately 80,000 are listed in the database, but it is unknown how many were entered by LAPD, the largest contributor in the state to the system.

    The department says it will no longer enter names into the system and will only be accessible for the purpose of removing names from the list that were erroneously entered.

    ReplyDelete

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