Comments by "rockethead7" (@rockethead7) on "Inside Edition"
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Multiple people called the police. One woman recorded it on her cell phone, and showed the video to the police. The police report says that it was a very loud, and very public display, in view of multiple people including children. This differs from the version told by a woman trying to get out of being arrested. But, yeah, tell me, if you believe her, how do you explain how people saw her, if she wasn't in view of anybody? How did the police view a video of the event, if nobody could see it? And, sorry, but you don't get warnings for crimes. You can get warnings for infractions. But, crimes don't work that way. Learn a little bit about the legal system before advocating something that cannot legally happen.
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First of all, other than one obscure article on a website I had never even heard of, she didn't suffer a single bit from any public shame or comments. The arrest video wasn't made public until she was already dead 1.5 years. And, none of this stuff went viral until about a month ago. She died in March of 2022, almost two years ago. So, no, she didn't read any comments about this, because she was already dead before anybody ever commented.
Secondly, sorry, but her claims about thinking nobody could see her just don't jive with the police report. The woman in the "audience" who recorded the incident showed that recording to the police. The police described the video in the arrest report, which said that it was a very loud and public display in front of multiple people including children. Sorry if you take her word for it, as she's trying to avoid being arrested, claiming that she thought nobody could see her. But, yeah, that's just another form of "I didn't do it." Yes, many criminals say that.
Thirdly, I don't know about you, but, if I was in her shoes, I'd be far more ashamed of her arrest record for stealing cars and public drunkenness. But, it seems that "shame" wasn't even in her vocabulary.
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Oh, I'm in total agreement. This isn't "news," it's a crafted story designed to go viral in the interest of generating clicks. To address why, well, ad revenue. But, on a deeper level, I think they probably feel like this woman was fair game. They portray her as a shy soccer mom, caught in an unfortunate situation. The reality was that she was a stripper who put on shows like that every day at the club, served a felony term in prison for stealing cars, and had an arrest record a mile long, judgements against her for various thefts and other stuff, drug and alcohol charges, and open warrants for failures to appear in court. So, I'm guessing that the media looked at her as "deserving." Personally, I disagree. I think if they're going to publicize it, they should do it accurately. But, it would be better not to publicize it at all.
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Empathy and kindness? And, you picked THIS woman's story to push that agenda? The woman with the mile long arrest record, the felony prison term for stealing cars, various judgements against her for theft, multiple charges for drugs and alcohol, many repeated failures to appear in court (including for this arrest, and many prior), open arrest warrants, etc. And, according to her landlord, her profession was, well, one of those words that's banned from YouTube comments, but, ya know, involving cash transactions with lots of men. And, this is your shining beacon of empathy and kindness?
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