Authorities have arrested the man suspected of killing of Baltimore tech entrepreneur Pava LaPere, a U.S. Marshal confirmed, as police announced plans to reveal details of the capture following a major manhunt.

Baltimore police said they planned to announce the “arrest of murder suspect Jason Billingsley” in a news conference at 11 a.m. ET Thursday. No further details were released and police did not immediately respond to requests for comment from NBC News early Thursday.

Deputy U.S. Marshal Albert Maresca Jr. confirmed Billingsley’s arrest to Baltimore-based NBC affiliate WBAL-TV. He said the suspect, who is 32, was apprehended at a train station in Bowie, Maryland.

    • PenguinJuice@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It doesn’t follow your narrative, of course you’re butthurt by it. Dunno why it’s so popular to defend criminals nowadays but definitely shows the flawed mentality that’s so pervasive

      • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        doesn’t follow your narrative, of course you’re butthurt by it.

        What narrative? The entire idea of a rehabilitation based penal system has been native to the American justice system since we built our first prison.

        Your narrative is a modern neocon revision of historical fact. It doesn’t follow a logic, it’s just an attempt to utilize the power of the state against anyone you hold prejudice against.

        Dunno why it’s so popular to defend criminals nowadays

        No one is defending individual criminals, were defending the American people. When you strip the rights away from fellow americans, you are stripping away your own rights.

        Let’s say hypothetically you pass a bill that throws dangerous criminals away forever. What stops you from being labeled a dangerous criminal?

        flawed mentality that’s so pervasive

        Says the boy who thinks that keeping people in prison longer makes them less dangerous…

        • PenguinJuice@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          Bro, you’re defending criminals. I’m not having a discussion with you because there’s none to be had. Just by defending criminals you tell me all I need to know about your opinions.

          • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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            1 year ago

            Bro, you’re defending criminals.

            Lol, and you’re promoting endless incarceration… something unequivocally worse then defending criminal.

            I’m not having a discussion with you because there’s none to be had.

            Your not having a discussion because you don’t have any original thoughts on the subject. You’re just regurgitating fascist propaganda.

            • PenguinJuice@kbin.social
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              1 year ago

              I’m defending being a citizen who does not engage in violence, theft or crime in general. I absolutely think prioritizing those people’s needs should be prioritized over those who engage in those acts. Why is defending that class of citizen so bad?

              • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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                1 year ago

                defending being a citizen who does not engage in violence, theft or crime in general.

                Incarceration is inherently an act of violence. Subjecting someone to undue imprisonment is enacting more violence upon someone then an assault or any theft.

                absolutely think prioritizing those people’s needs should be prioritized over those who engage in those acts.

                They are the same people… rehabilitating people who engage in violent crime is done for the benefit of society, not the prisoner.

                Why is defending that class of citizen so bad?

                Because thats not a class of people? Every class of people engage with criminal behavior, it’s just the poor who can’t afford to buy “justice”.

                Your problem is that you think criminal behavior is a product of self discipline or morality, when in reality it is a product of environment and circumstance. Your naive beliefs inhibits the very possibility that people can change or be rehabilitated. Tbh everything you’ve said just sounds like a thinly veiled dog whistle.

                  • TranscendentalEmpire@lemm.ee
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                    1 year ago

                    How are any of us helping victims? Are we talking about individually? If so, Im a healthcare worker at a children’s hospital. I am all too familiar with the needs of the abused.

                    If we are talking about how we can help as a citizen, what policies we could enact that would help? I honestly don’t think sequestering violent people away to an even more violent environment is going to be helpful in reducing violence.

                    Antisocial and violent behavior is learned behavior, these people are conditioned by their local environment and interpersonal relationships to believe that violence is a tool of command.

                    To actually reduce and prevent things like rape we need to reshape the environments of the most impoverished populations. We also need to pay attention the the mental well-being of our younger population, regardless to class or creed.

      • Nataratata@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Because a lot of the people here never were the victim of a crime and think they never will be. Crime is something that happens “to others”. Especially sex crimes like rape is something people here feel especially apologetic for. Those poor rapists… I wonder why that is.