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The Guns Of July: Out Of 236 Gun Cases D.A. Had 37 Convictions

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By Ralph Cipriano
for BigTrial.net

When it comes to prosecuting gun crimes in Philadelphia, District Attorney Larry Krasner presides over a revolving door for criminals that puts them right back out on the street again, so they can wreak more havoc.

In July of 2019, court records show, the D.A.'s office prosecuted 236 gun cases. And as of March 16th, the last day the courts in Philadelphia were open, records show, 66 cases, or nearly 28 percent, had either been dropped, dismissed or lost by the D.A.'s office.

If you get arrested for illegally carrying guns in the city, your chances of walking are almost twice as good as getting convicted. Of those 236 cases stemming from July 2019, as of March 16th, only 37 defendants, or 15.6%, were found guilty. And all 37 of those cases were the result of plea bargains that for the criminals, turned out to be deals just too good to pass up.

Why? Because defendants who pleaded guilty to gun crimes typically were either put on probation and walked immediately. Or they pleaded guilty in order to get a sentence well below state sentencing guidelines for gun crimes.

And if you're one of those rare defendants in a gun case who has to go to trial, your chances of walking are still good. Why? Because out of the 236 gun cases from July of 2019, only 2 cases ever made it to trial. And the D.A.'s office lost both cases.

Photo Credit: Mark Allen Johnson/Zumapress.com
How about that for a record of futility?

Out of a total of 236 gun cases from July 2019 that were prosecuted by the D.A.'s office under Larry Krasner, not a single defendant to date has been convicted by a judge or a jury of being guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

The futility of the Philly D.A.'s office in prosecuting gun cases has happened by design. Three big reasons explain why Larry Krasner operates that revolving door for suspects accused of gun crimes.

The Three Big Reasons For The Revolving Door

Reason No. 1: the D.A.'s Progressive polices. D.A. Krasner, who opposes cash bail, presides over an office that sets low bail for most cases, bail that for dangerous, armed drug dealers amounts to chump change.

And D.A. Krasner, who opposes "mass incarceration," also has a standard office policy of giving criminals minimum sentences that are always well below the state's legal guidelines.

Any requests for substantial jail time in the Progressive office of D.A. Krasner have to be approved by a supervisor. And any substantial jail time for a crime of violence, such as murder, attempted murder, aggravated assault or gun charges, has to be personally approved by either Krasner or his first assistant.

The second factor behind the revolving door: the general incompetence of the D.A.'s office under Krasner.

Krasner, a career gadfly of a defense lawyer who dedicated himself to radical left-wing causes, has zero experience as a prosecutor. His first action when he took over the D.A.'s office was to fire his 31 most senior prosecutors. He promptly hired 60 rookie prosecutors, 18 of whom couldn't even pass the bar exam.

The incompetence of the D.A.'s office under Krasner can be seen at every level of the criminal justice process. It starts when Krasner's prosecutors try to convince a judge at a preliminary hearing to hold a defendant over for trial. And it ends when Krasner's prosecutors go to court to try cases and lose.

The third factor behind the D.A.'s revolving door for gun crimes is the subversive war being waged  against cops from inside the criminal justice system. As a defense lawyer, Krasner sued the Philadelphia Police Department 75 times. In his Progressive D.A.'s office, he has continued his war on cops in an internal campaign led by Assistant District Attorney Patricia Cummings, head of the D.A.'s Conviction Integrity Unit.

Photo Credit: Mark Allen Johnson/Zumapress.com
Cummings, who has serious integrity issues of her own, has sent out hundreds of letters to cops on Krasner's behalf informing them that they have been placed on the "do not testify" list, meaning the D.A.'s office will not call them as witnesses in any case.

Cummings has also sent out hundreds more letters formally notifying cops that certain damaging information from their personnel files, no matter how old, is about to be voluntarily turned over by the D.A.'s office to defense lawyers.

In other words, every month, the D.A.'s office is hard at work seeking to either disqualify or damage the credibility of more cops as witnesses in court, so the D.A.'s office can drop, dismiss or lose even more cases.

A Variety Of Offenses

The 236 gun cases from July 2019 were for a variety of offenses.

Of the 236 cases, 166 involved the illegal possession of a firearm. Of those 166 cases, 99 defendants, or 42%, were criminals barred from possessing firearms because they had prior convictions for serious felonies.

Of the 236 cases, 68 defendants, or 29%, were accused of using a gun during the commission of a felony, such as a shooting, attempted murder, robbery or kidnapping.

The D.A.'s Pathetic Record At Preliminary Hearings

At preliminary hearings, a judge has to decide whether a defendant already in custody after an arrest for an alleged gun crime should be held over for court to face charges.

Of the 236 cases from July 2019 that went to preliminary hearings:

-- 13 cases were dismissed outright by judges for lack of evidence.
-- In 3 cases the judge either threw out the gun charges against the defendant because of a lack of evidence, or the gun charges were withdrawn by the prosecutor.
-- 20 cases were dismissed by judges due to a lack of prosecution.
-- 23 cases were voluntarily withdrawn by the D.A.'s office due to prosecutorial discretion.

To sum up, the cases withdrawn and completely over after the preliminary hearing stage of the criminal justice process amounted to 56. Three more defendants went to trial on other charges, but the gun charges against them were dismissed.

The D.A.'s Pathetic Record At Sentencing

As of March 16th, 54 cases from those July 2019 gun arrests were disposed of. Here are the dispositions:

-- 2 defendants arrested by the cops for allegedly committing gunpoint robberies were sent by the D.A.'s office back to juvenile court, rather than being prosecuted as adults.
-- 5 defendants were sent to diversionary programs where they would receive counseling rather than jail time.
-- 5 cases were dropped by the D.A.'s office due to prosecutorial discretion.
-- 2 cases were dismisssed by judges due to lack of prosecution.
-- 1 case was abated because the defendant, Enrique Hernandez, 37, was shot to death on Sept. 8, 2019.
-- 14 defendants negotiated a guilty plea.
-- 23 defendants agreed to plead guilty, but no deal was struck on a sentence.
-- 2 defendants went to trial and were found not guilty.

Of the 14 defendants who negotiated guilty pleas that included agreed-upon sentences:

-- 7 defendants were sentenced to probation, meaning they didn't have to serve a day in jail.
-- 7 defendants were sentenced to jail; but five of the 7 were granted immediate release or early parole by the D.A.'s office on the day they signed their plea bargain, regardless of whether the defendants had months left to serve on their jail sentences.

Of the 23 defendants who pleaded guilty but the plea bargain didn't include an agreement on a sentence, as of March 16th, only 9 of these defendants had been sentenced.

Three of those defendants who pleaded guilty got state sentences because they had prior convictions.

The 3 state sentences:

-- 3 to 6  years in jail for a felon who was barred from possessing a firearm, and also had prior convictions for aggravated assault on a cop, and possession of an unlicensed firearm.
-- 2 1/2 to 5 years in jail for a gunpoint robbery with two victims.
-- 3 1/2 to 7 years in jail for two separate gunpoint robberies.

Of the remaining six defendants:

-- 5 defendants got 11 1/2 to 23-month sentences; but 4 of those 5 got immediate parole.
-- 1 defendant was sentenced to no further penalty, meaning he left court without having to do any jail time or go on probation.

To sum up, of the 23 defendants who agreed to a plea bargain and have been sentenced as of March 16th, 17, or 74%, immediately walked and didn't have to serve another day in jail.

Keep in mind that all of these sentences handed out under plea bargains were way below state sentencing guidelines for gun crimes that call for maximum sentences of:

-- 5 years for conviction of a first-degree misdemeanor.
-- 7 years for a third-degree felony.
-- 20 years for a first-degree felony, which usually involves using a gun in the commission of a shooting, kidnaping, murder, rape or robbery.

So you see everybody accused of a gun crime gets a break from their Uncle Larry.

A prime example of the weak sentences handed out by the D.A.'s office is Eric Beverly, 21, of Frankford. He was arrested on July 7, 2019 for attempted murder after he tried to shoot another person to death. The eight charges filed against Beverly included attempted murder, aggravated assault, simple assault, reckless endangerment, and four firearms charges.

Beverly had a prior conviction for a gunpoint robbery. In 2018, he was sentenced to 3 to 6 years in jail and 5 years probation after he pleaded guilty to aggravated assault, robbery with intent to commit serious injury, conspiracy, theft, assault, and possession of an instrument of crime.

So what did the D.A.'s office do when it came to arranging a plea bargain for Beverly's arrest in July 2019, when he tried to shoot somebody to death?

On Jan. 7th of this year, the district attorney allowed Beverly to enter a negotiated guilty plea to a single gun charge, possession of firearms. As part of his plea bargain, the D.A.'s office dropped the other seven charges, including attempted murder and aggravated assault.

Beverly was sentenced to time served, 23 months, plus two years of probation. But the plea bargain arranged by the D.A. called for running Beverly's new sentence for possession of firearms concurrent with his old sentence on the 2018 gunpoint robbery. So Beverly wound up not having to suffer any additional penalty for his most recent crime -- when he tried to murder somebody with a gun.

The Poster Boy For The Guns Of July

But if you're looking for a poster boy for Krasner's permissive policies stemming from the arrests of July 2019, it would have to be Franciso Ortiz, 29, of Northeast Philadelphia.

On July 13, 2019, police arrested Ortiz and charged him with carrying an unlicensed firearm, possession of a prohibited fireman, and carrying a firearm in public.

Bail was set that same day at $100,000. It was a relatively low amount considering Ortiz had twice pleaded guilty in 2009 for two different arrests on illegal gun charges, for which he served a total of 10 years in prison before being released in April 2019.

But on July 30, 2019, Ortiz's lawyer made a motion to lower his bail to $50,000, and the D.A.'s office went along with it. So on July 30, 2019, after putting up 10 percent of that bail, or $5,000, Ortiz walked out of jail and promptly embarked on a bloody spree of drug-related shootings.

On Sept. 18th, police say, Ortiz shot a 22-year-old man to death who was outside his home while his girlfriend and child were inside.

On Oct. 19th, police said, Ortiz opened fire on another man driving through the Hunting Park section of the city. The victim  responded, police said, by allegedly using his child as a human shield.

Ortiz shot 11-month-old Yazeem Jenkins four times, including once in the head and once in the chest. If the child survives, doctors said, he'll be a quadriplegic.

Less than 24 hours later, according to police, Ortiz supplied an AK-47 assault rifle that was used by two other men in another drug-related shoot-out that resulted in the murder of a two-year-old girl in her mother's living room. The mother, who was holding her baby in her arms, was shot in the head and back.

Ortiz is now being held without bail on three open cases containing some 39 charges that include murder, attempted murder, aggravated assault, reckless endangerment, plus numerous weapons offenses.

The Revolving Door Is Why The Mayor And Police Commissioner Have Turned On Krasner

Krasner's pathetic record on prosecuting gun crimes is why our normally wimpy mayor and his brand new, seldom-seen police commissioner have publicly turned on the D.A.

At a March 31st, at a joint press conference, Mayor Jim Kenney said,  "We are calling on the district attorney to vigorously enforce all firearms charges during this time of crisis. It is imperative that he [Krasner] send a clear message that gun violence will not be taken lightly."

"There needs to be some consequences for carrying an illegal gun in Philadelphia," the mayor concluded. "If you're carrying a gun illegally you need to be locked up and kept there."

"There has to be teeth, there has to be consequences" to illegally carrying a gun in the city, echoed Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw. "We can't see a revolving door."

But under Larry Krasner, that's exactly what we have.

Repeat Offenders

Of those 236 gun cases from July 2019, five defendants were arrested twice. So that means out of the 236 cases there were a total of 231 defendants.

Of the 231 defendants, 45, or 19.5%, had open cases during the prior 12 months. And at least 35 defendants, or 15%, were arrested again after their July arrests. That's a total recidivism rate, past and future, of at least 34.6%.

Photo credit: Street Photographer Boogie
The number of 45 defendants who were arrested in the last 12 months, however, is probably higher, as the D.A.'s office has been marking many prior cases as "Limited Access," meaning the press and public can't see them.

For example, on July 18, 2019, the police arrested Kenneth Saunders, 43, of North Philadelphia and charged him with possession of a firearm, aggravated assault, firearms not to be carried without a license, carrying firearms in public, simple assault, and reckless endangerment.

Saunders had a prior record. In 2005, he was found guilty of carrying firearms without a license, carrying firearms in a public place, endangering the welfare of children, and reckless endangerment. He was sentenced to 11 1/2 to 23 months in jail plus three years probation.

In 2010, he pleaded guilty to manufacture, delivery and possession with intent to manufacture or deliver, and was sentenced to 24 months of probation. In 2013, he was found in contempt of court and sentenced to five to 10 days in jail.

In 2015, he was pleaded guilty to possession of a firearm, carrying a firearm without a license, and was sentenced to 4 to 10 years in jail and seven years probation.

But on Nov. 4, 2019, all six charges filed against Saunders for his most recent July 2019 arrest were withdrawn and are now marked "LA Case" for limited access, meaning the press and public can't see them.

It's amazing all the favors Uncle Larry does for criminals.

Krasner's Defense Of His Record: The Earth Is Flat

In the grand tradition of figures don't lie but liars can figure, Krasner has a history of inventing his own statistics to back his arguments that the earth is flat.

At a virtual press conference on April 17th, held without reporters, either in person or on Zoom, Krasner came up with his own freshly-baked crime stats in an attempt to show that the crime rate was going down, rather than up.

To get there, he compared the crime rate of the city on pandemic lockdown for one week this April to the crime rate of the city on an alleged week averaged over the past three years.

This was at a time when police statistics on major crimes committed so far this year, such as homicide, armed robbery, aggravated assault with a firearm, commercial burglaries and shooting incidents, were all arrows on a graph pointing straight up when compared with the crime rates of the previous year.

But Krasner has his own stats, and apparently he only believes what his stats say.

It's called inventing your own reality. And it  helps if you can find somebody dumb enough to run with it.

Fortunately for Krasner, he works in a town where the alleged newspaper of record shares his enlightened views on how to remake society into a Progressive Utopia.

Useful Idiots At The Inquirer

A great example of this synergy happened on June 18, 2019, just a couple of weeks before the gun arrests of July 2019 took place. On that day, D.A. Krasner sat down with gullible reporters from his favorite newspaper, The Philadelphia Inquirer, and tried to explain why his radical policies had nothing to do with the escalating crime rate.

As the Inquirer dutifully reported at the time, the interview with Krasner was conducted after yet another weekend of violent crime in Philadelphia. The Krasner interview was also done to rebut Richard Ross, the police commissioner at the time, who had publicly stated that there was a perception among criminals that if they were caught in Philadelphia carrying illegal firearms, they would suffer no consequences.

If that criticism sounds familiar, it's the same charge that Mayor Kenney and the new police commissioner made last month against Krasner.

But back on June 18, 2019, Krasner defended himself by making the argument to the useful idiots at the Inquirer that his administration had approved for prosecution more than 98% of gun cases in 2018. And that his prosecution rate on gun crimes was so much better than the 97% percent rate of prosecution rate for guns crimes that was posted by the D.A.'s office in 2017 under R. Seth Williams.

Hey Mr. D.A., what does it matter if your office approves 98 percent of gun cases for prosecution, but it's so permissive and incompetent that only 15.6 percent get convicted? And they all walk immediately, or get sweetheart deals way below the sentencing guidelines?

That's just what happened regarding the 236 gun crimes that the D.A.'s office allegedly prosecuted from July of 2019. The cops made the arrests but the D.A. let the criminals out the back door.

What's the response of the D.A.'s office to the statistics in this story?

As usual, both "Stonewall" Krasner and Jane "The Mute" Roh, his alleged spokesperson, along with Patricia 'Integrity Challenged" Cummings, did not respond to a request for comment.

Only a fool -- or a Progressive reporter at the Inquirer -- would believe any of Krasner's ridiculous arguments and bogus stats about the crime rate not going up, and the great job his office is doing of prosecuting gun crimes.
Photo Credit: Andrew Kramer/KYW News Radio

But that's exactly what the useful idiots at the Inquirer continue to do.

On April 24th, under the bylines of three reporters, the Inquirer ran a story with the headline "Even a pandemic can't slow Philly's gun violence."

In the story, the Inky reported that since the mayor had shutdown the city, "at least 135 people have been shot -- an average of more than four a day -- often in neighborhoods long plagued by gun violence."

The story went on for more than 40 paragraphs, recounting the circumstances behind one recent shooting after another. But at any point in that long story did the Inky hold the D.A. accountable?

Nope. In that long story, the Inquirer devoted just one he-said, she-said paragraph to the question of whether  the D.A.'s office was responsible for the escalating gun violence in the city:

"The violence in Philadelphia has reignited a simmering tension between the police and District Attorney Larry Krasner. Last month, Kenney and Commissioner Danielle Outlaw faulted Krasner's office for not aggressively prosecuting suspected gun offenders -- a charge Krasner has called inaccurate and unnecessarily divisive."

Nothing to see here folks. Whether the D.A.'s office is responsible for escalating gun violence is just a political debate. And hey, while people are shooting and killing each other out on the streets, and kids are getting caught in the crossfire, we wouldn't want to be unnecessarily divisive.

Apparently, the card-carrying Progressives at the Inquirer can't bring themselves to tell the citizens of Philadelphia that the Progressive policies of District Attorney Krasner have been a bloody disaster.

Krasner, a blind ideologue, is headed over a cliff, but sadly, he's taking the city along with him.

If you're going to continually let criminals walk on gun charges, armed and dangerous drug dealers will continue to shoot in out on the streets.

There will be more deaths, more people wounded, and more babies and children caught in the crossfire. And more handwringing by the mayor and police commissioner.

Meanwhile, the Inquirer will keep quiet about it because they've got Progressive Larry's back.

To prop up Krasner, the Inquirer has broken every journalistic rule in the book. As they repeatedly fail the public by refusing to report the obvious facts that would show the D.A.'s raw culpability for the daily carnage out on the streets.

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