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Almost Half of Murders in US Happen in Districts With a George Soros-Funded Prosecutor

A recent report from the Law Enforcement Legal Defense Fund (LELDF) has revealed a striking connection between Soros-funded prosecutors and murder rates in the United States.

The findings revealed that 40 percent of all murders in the nation occur in districts overseen by prosecutors backed by billionaire philanthropist George Soros.

The research highlights that these prosecutors represent one in five Americans, covering jurisdictions responsible for two out of every five murders nationwide.

The study identifies 75 Soros-funded district attorneys who serve 72 million Americans, including residents of half of the country’s 50 most populous cities and counties.

“Over the past decade, a wave of ‘social justice’ candidates have been elected as the chief prosecutor in jurisdictions across the United States,” the report states.

These prosecutors, often new to the political and legal landscapes, have implemented what the LELDF describes as “radical justice policies.”

These include eliminating cash bail, dismissing felony cases and imposing lenient sentences; moves that critics argue have strained relationships with law enforcement.

From 2018 to 2021 alone, Soros spent $13 million on just ten prosecutors’ races.

In several instances, his organizations’ contributions made up as much as 90 percent of a candidate’s campaign funding.

Over the last decade, his spending on direct campaign contributions for prosecutors has exceeded $40 million.

The report delves into the financial and organizational strategies employed by Soros, the author further outlined.

Using a network of shell organizations, affiliates, and pass-through committees, Soros directs significant financial resources to support his preferred candidates.

Despite their substantial backing, many of these prosecutors had minimal experience in politics or prosecution before assuming office.

His influence extends beyond prosecutorial elections, and his support for progressive causes has sparked debates about the role of private funding in public office campaigns.

Further fueling controversy, George Soros was recently awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom, one of the nation’s highest civilian honors.

President Joe Biden presented the medal at a White House ceremony, where it was accepted on Soros’s behalf by his son, Alex Soros, who now leads the George Soros Foundations.
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SatanBurger · 36-40, F
First off, most of the crimes done by police officers have been caught on tape are almost always absolutely guilty. They were NOT being prosecuted before, why do you think those riots started in the first place. So that's not true.

I also read the original source:

https://www.policedefense.org/sorosmap/

If Soros funded well trained lawyers as a philanthropist and the cops got prosecuted, that's the law working appropriately if the cops were guilty in the first place so that's a good thing.

The cop's legal defense team is arguing that "tough on crime" people were replaced and if that's true (which I doubt,) then it's because tough on crime doesn't really work.

https://www.ojp.gov/ncjrs/virtual-library/abstracts/failure-get-tough-crime-policy

The American image of the “monster-criminal” has a specific history. The notion of essentially malignant beings who stands opposed to respectable society has roots in the 19th-century criminologist Cesare Lombroso, who used now-discredited notions of racial and sexual difference to theorize “the criminal man.” This notion was reimagined in America in the 1970s, when politicians found it useful to raise the specter of “the criminal” to promote an agenda of aggressive incarceration that served both to detract attention from social problems and to control disgruntled social groups.

https://www.owu.edu/news-media/from-our-perspective/tough-questions-for-tough-on-crime-policies/

So I don't see the issue here.
sunsporter1649 · 70-79, M
@SatanBurger
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SatanBurger · 36-40, F
@sunsporter1649 There's a prison that has the lowest reoffending rates in all of Europe and they take the exact opposite approach. Your meme is just hyperbolic in nature due to many different things. When done carefully and not haphazardly, prison and crime reform does benefit.