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CarbonNanotubes t1_j68uwk0 wrote

Why does he need an ankle monitor if exonerated? Does exonerated not mean he's innocent?

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LouisSeize t1_j692k5q wrote

You're right. It's a bad headline.

>He’s waiting to be fitted with an ankle monitor which he’s required to wear as Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez weighs his options to either appeal the judge’s decision, drop the charges, or completely retry the case.

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NetQuarterLatte t1_j68vhj1 wrote

> Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez weighs his options to either appeal the judge’s decision, drop the charges, or completely retry the case.

That seems to be the reason. It looks like that he is being presumed guilty (maybe because he was found guilty) until the legal proceeds are concluded to reverse it.

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nycdataviz t1_j6b24f6 wrote

Realistically this guy probably is still a murderer. You can get off on a technicality, but that doesn’t mean you’re exonerated.

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Pushed-pencil718 t1_j6brra2 wrote

W- So the court system has admitted to making a mistake in imprisoning him and your view is “Nah he’s probably a murderer anyway”. What is wrong with you?

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k1lk1 t1_j68rl6p wrote

> “Like most things that are given to people by the city, it is adjacent to a system that is utterly broken, dysfunctional, indifferent, and uncaring,” he said.

> City jail and finance officials refused to say how many other people are currently on Rikers waiting for ankle monitors. They also ignored questions about why it is taking so long to fit Mayo with one.

Unaccountable evil bureaucracies, often captured by unions too.

Bust up the unions and then fire everyone obstructing, malingering, or failing to do their job.

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mowotlarx t1_j68s1vi wrote

You're really trying to spin the corruption of Rikers as a universal fault of unions? Seriously?

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Pushed-pencil718 t1_j6brunf wrote

Wtf how does this have anything to do with unions? Please explain your thinking. I have got to hear this.

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