The Murder Of Philando Castile: Fear, Hatred And Panic Killed A Man.

Indifference and cowardice Set His Killer Free…

An incompetent and weak prosecutor is only as good as the jury that is selected. 

“Where There Is Love, There Is No Fear.”

They just don’t understand, how I can just kill a man! Cypress Hill

On the morning of July 6, 2016, Officer Jeronimo Yanez Woke Up With a Plan of Murder On His Mind; then he executed his plan — by killing Philando Castile — after making a traffic stop in Falcon Heights, Minn.

Dreaming of Murder while yet a suckling on his mother’s breast — a mother that more or less has the heart of a jackal — Jeronimo Yanez schemed and plotted in his mind as he grew to find a way how to commit murder and walk free.

On July 6, 2016, Yanez was able to fulfill his long-term dream, about four and a half years after St. Anthony Minnesota Police Department hired him without the proper administration of a Psyche-test.

Dashcam Video Of Castile Shooting

On July 6, 2016, all the stories that have been etched in his mind of Black people being the boogeyman flashed before his eyes when Castile informed him that “Sir, I have to tell you, I have a gun.”

Those words sent shivers down the spine of a sick coward and caused him, Jeronimo Yanez 29 to pump seven bullets into a car in which a 4-year-old baby was sitting.

Although, the chronic cold-hearted savage, Yanez acted with a depraved heart and blatant disregard, for life, when he discharged his weapon seven times into the car 32-year-old Philando Castile was driving.

A cowardly hate filled jury decided to turn his loose upon the community again, without any consequences for the carnage he visited upon the occupants of that vehicle.

Inside the car was Castile’s four-year-old step-daughter and his fiancé Diamond Reynolds.

The little four-year-old girl behaved with a presence of mind; of calm and peacefulness of an angel in the midst of a battle zone.

A presence of mind that police officer Yanez should have but lacked, because wild animals don’t possess such quality.

Yanez Executing Castile

 

Never-the-less, the child with the soul of a seventy-year-old person will be traumatized for life.

She did everything in her power to comfort her mother and promised to keep her safe.

She also wished the “world was a safer place,” while she had was imprisoned in the back seat of a police patrol car. She had committed no crime.

On behalf of the police department Yanez worked for, Saint Anthony recently settled a 3 million dollar lawsuit with the family of Philando Castile. They know his action on that day was not reasonable.

His shameful partner who was on scene and ran away during the commission of Castile’s murder went to court and testified that Yanez was the best partner he ever had.

His head needs to be examined, and he should be removed from duty. He is a danger to the community as a whole and a liability to its tax paying citizens.

The profile of the jurors paints a picture of cowardice and curry favor seekers.

Here is why Yanez was bound to walk. We have removed the personal information of the jurors so they cannot be identified.

Juror # 1: An uneducated young male, a black who recently got promoted to a manager in a fast food burger joint.

He is too grateful for his new largess and does not want to lose it by pissing off his masters.

Naturally, he voted to set the killer free.

Juror pool #: 17, an 18-year-old Ethiopian female (who has no right to be on any jury), because she’s deftly afraid of Trump and his henchmen believing that they round her up and send her back to Africa.

She does not understand the American jurisprudence. She is an American citizen through her Ethiopian-born father.

Those were the two niggroes on the jury pool.

The rest of the list reads like a who is who of fundamental bigots.

Juror pool # 21, a male, white approximate fifty-years-old. He is a construction worker and has a family member being prosecuted in a neighboring county.

To curry favor, he’ll set a killer cop free — in hopes that the prosecutor will go easy on his kindred.

He should not have been anywhere near that jury. He recently witnessed a drive-by shooting. He is extremely prejudicial from pre-conceived notions of all African-Americans.

He recalls seeing the Facebook video and remembers (the person he identifies with) Yanez as being upset.

He can’t recall the calm of the baby that was in the car when the execution was carried out.

But the prosecutors working in cahoots with the defense team allowed him on.

The List of Names To Be Continued

Staff Writer: Clinton Franklin

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