Posts Tagged ‘Dallas Mavericks’

Soros Prosecutors = Paradise For Sex Traffickers

Wednesday, January 17th, 2024

It isn’t just petty criminals and the psychotic that soft-on-crime, Soros-backed DAs have opened the door for. It’s also made blue cities paradise for sex traffickers.

While politicians call attention to January as Human Trafficking Awareness Month, a Texas mom wants to make lawmakers aware of how the state’s justice system is failing victims like her daughter.

Her daughter’s sex trafficking case made international headlines in April 2022 when the teenager was sexually assaulted and forced into prostitution after disappearing from a Dallas Mavericks game.

She’s now safe, but her parents remain frustrated that Dallas County District Attorney John Creuzot failed to prosecute a suspect linked to the trafficking who was charged with sexually assaulting the 15-year-old girl.

Creuzot, as you may remember, owes his office in good measure to the $400,000 George Soros-related entities donated to his campaign in 2022.

“As a mom and as a woman, this is a hill I’m willing to die on,” the victim’s mother told Texas Scorecard.

She called the months since her daughter’s traumatic experience a “rollercoaster” and blames missteps by Dallas police and Creuzot’s office as well as “loopholes” in state law for allowing the man, who her daughter says raped her, to go free.

The victim, who lives in North Richland Hills, went missing from the American Airlines Center while attending a basketball game with her father. He raised the alarm after she went to the bathroom and didn’t return.

Surveillance video showed the victim leaving with Emanuel Jose Cartagena.

Ten days later, she was recovered in Oklahoma City after a private investigator, recommended to the girl’s parents by friends, found online photos advertising her for sex.

Local police immediately arrested three suspects and charged them with human trafficking, conspiracy, and computer crimes. Multiple people involved in the sex trafficking ring were eventually charged and sentenced in Oklahoma, but neither Cartagena nor other men seen on the Dallas surveillance video were found at the Oklahoma crime scene.

Nine months later, in January 2023, Cartagena was arrested and charged in Dallas with sexual assault of a child.

The victim told police Cartagena had sexually assaulted her in Dallas before she was taken to Oklahoma.

On October 30, 2023, a Dallas County grand jury no-billed Cartagena, meaning jurors did not see sufficient evidence to prosecute him for the crime.

“I was astounded,” said the mom.

The trafficking victim’s mom recounted multiple missteps by Dallas police and prosecutors.

First, she said the Dallas Police Department refused to let her husband file a missing persons report. Police classify older missing teens as “runaways,” she said, even though they are under the age of consent. They told the family to file a report with their local police, 40 miles away from where their daughter disappeared.

“That’s an enormous problem,” she said.

While Dallas PD idled, the private investigator tracked down her daughter “within a matter of hours” by searching online ads.

She said once her daughter was recovered, Dallas officials declined an invitation from authorities in Oklahoma to come up and gather information that could help with their investigation.

Ahead of the grand jury hearing the case, the victim’s mom said her lawyer offered the Dallas prosecutor more documentation about her daughter’s case, but the prosecutor refused, saying, “If I need it, I’ll subpoena it.”

She also said her daughter, who was too young to consent to sex, picked Cartagena out of a lineup as the man who raped her. Yet the grand jury still sided with Cartagena, and he went free.

“At the end of the day, take out all the trafficking stuff, how does that happen?” she asked.

After the grand jury no-billed Cartagena, she said Creuzot told her that prosecutors had followed “office policy” by not recommending an indictment and he would not re-present the case with the additional evidence.

It sounds like Creuzot’s office didn’t get an indictment because they didn’t want to get an indictment.

A Dallas Morning News opinion piece published this month says Cartagena has a history of promoting and compelling prostitution of minors and cites two Harris County cases in 2015 and 2016.

Prior bad acts are generally inadmissible as evidence, but the victim’s mom says Creuzot knew, or should have known, that Cartagena has a history of sexually exploiting children and recommended an indictment.

“The guy who did this had done it before and will probably do it again,” she said.

“I’m not done fighting,” she added. “I can’t let this go.”

The victim’s mom said, “Aside from the goodness of God, we wouldn’t have my daughter. We are lucky. My daughter is safe,” she added. “But we are not the norm. What about all the other victims?”

She noted that Texas is second in the nation for sex trafficking, behind New York, with Dallas and Houston as hot spots.

“It’s not just due to the state’s size,” she said. “It’s our laws and loopholes that go in the criminals’ favor.”

A 2016 study found that 79,000 minors were victims of sex trafficking in Texas. Child sex trafficking has continued to grow as traffickers use the internet to exploit children for money.

It probably doesn’t help that the Texas Department of Licensing and Regulation Anti-Trafficking Unit (ATU) was so badly run that it was disbanded earlier this year.

But it sounds like Emanuel Jose Cartagena would be behind bars right now were Creuzot and his fellow Soros-backed prosecutors not so intent on keeping him on the street.

LinkSwarm for December 2, 2023

Saturday, December 2nd, 2023

As promised, here’s a second LinkSwarm for your reading enjoyment and edification!

  • “The chief of staff for Department of Defense Education Activity schools in the U.S. was arrested last week during a two-day human trafficking operation in Coweta County, Georgia, according to local authorities. Stephen Hovanic, 64, of Sharpsburg, Georgia, was arrested Nov. 15 in a sting that netted 25 additional suspects on charges related to prostitution as well as drugs, weapons and warrants, according to the Coweta County Sheriff’s Office and its Police to Citizen Portal website.” Our country is in the best of hands. (Hat tip: Borepatch.)
  • “NY retailers lost $4.4 billion due to organized shoplifting rings in 2022.” This is your city on Soros prosecutors.
  • Want to guess who polls show as the clear leader for the 2024 Presidential election?

  • I missed the announcement in August that Rep. John Raney, one of Dade Phalen’s school choice opponent/Ken Paxton impeachment supporters, is also not running for reelection. (Hat tip to reader David Besly.)
  • Your government in action: “A traditional Catholic family was allegedly ‘dragged out of their home at gunpoint, handcuffed and locked in a van’ earlier this year after the FBI “goaded” their 15-year-old son to post “offensive memes” online. The teen, a volunteer firefighter and altar boy, was then hospitalized on mental health pretenses, according to his father, Jeremiah Rufini. The FBI’s aggressive “investigation” only resulted in a misdemeanor conviction against the boy for breach of peace, but financially devastated the family with substantial legal expenses.”
  • Speaking of the FBI: “Inmate Who Shanked Derek Chauvin 22 Times Is Former FBI Informant Who Led Mexican Mafia Faction.”
  • “Disney on Track to Lose Nearly $750 Million Across 13 Films in Historic Year of Box-Office Flops.”

    The Disney Grooming Institute had the worst box office year imaginable in 2023. Couldn’t happen to a nicer den of thieves of children’s innocence.

    After losing $106 million on Lightyear (2022) and another $152 million on Strange World (2022) — both of which featured prominent gay plotlines aimed at little kids — the Disney Grooming Syndicate roared into 2023, hoping for a much better year. But…

    Thanks to Disney’s cratered reputation and string of terrible movies where good storytelling and relatable characters took a backseat to divisive politics, 2023 was an even bigger disaster.

    Snip. Here are his numbers condensed. John Nolte seems to be adding in market cost and going with 2X cost to breaking even, though usually I’ve seen estimates go with 2.5x production costs.

    • Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania…Deficit: -$37 million
    • Chevalier [unknown, but with a $4.147 million gross, I’m pretty sure we can assume it lost money – LP]
    • Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 3…Profit: +98 million
    • The Little Mermaid [live action remake]…Deficit: -$40 million
    • The Boogeyman…Deficit: -$14 million
    • Elemental…Deficit: -$1.5 million
    • Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny…Deficit: -$158 million
    • Haunted Mansion…Deficit: -$141 million
    • A Haunting in Venice…Deficit: -$39 million
    • The Creator…Deficit: -$68 million
    • The Marvels…Deficit: -$150 million
    • Next Goal Wins…Deficit -$20 million
    • Wish… Deficit: -$175 million

    Heck of a job, Bob! (Hat tip: Ace of Spades HQ.)

  • Sure, people talk about horsepower, but it took Donut Media to dyno a horse. Turns out a horse produces 5.7 horsepower.
  • Tom Scott travels to Austin to view some of the nation’s last surviving moontowers. I did not know that Austin Energy was actually created to run the moontowers.
  • Mark Cuban is reportedly selling the Dallas Mavericks to Sheldeon Adelson’s widow.
  • “Vox Media Lays Off 4% of Staff in 2nd Round of Cuts This Year.” Well, that’s a start. I was unaware they owned The Dodo, maybe because three minute animal rescue videos on YouTube don’t require you to interact with their Coral commenting system.
  • The Polar Express Voted ‘Best Christmas Movie’ By Serial Killers.”