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Iryna Zarutska was a beautiful, 23-year-old Ukrainian woman who fled her country in 2022 for safety in Charlotte, North Carolina.
On August 22, this year, she got on a tram and sat down in front of a black man. Four minutes later, he stabbed her to death.
The other blacks in the car didn’t lift a finger to help. The tram wasn’t about to stop, but they just quietly decided they’d rather be somewhere else, thank you very much.
The killer is Decarlos Brown, a 34-year-old vagrant with a criminal record that goes back to 2011, when he was a juvenile.
Among his 14 court cases in Charlotte are assault, larceny, trespassing, destruction of property, and armed robbery, for which he did five years. He also has a diagnosis of schizophrenia.
On January 19, seven months before he murdered Iryna Zarutska, he was hauled before Magistrate Teresa Stokes for frivolous police calls, or “misusing 911.”
She turned him loose without bail, and the conditions of release were that “you are ORDERED to appear before the Court” on January 21st — that was two days later — at 1:30 p.m.
You’re not supposed to turn loose criminals who are a danger to the community or a flight risk. I think a violent schizophrenic with no address or phone number is both a danger and a flight risk. Sure enough, Decarlos skipped his court date.
Did Magistrate Teresa notice? Did she care? Who is this woman? She has been on the bench only since April 2023, and though she doesn’t look much like a judge, she’s an accomplished woman.
She works at the Community Mental Health Services Authority of Clinton, Eato, and Ingrahm Counties in – believe it or not – Michigan. She is co-owner and director of a drying-out clinic called Pinnacle Recovery Services in Lansing, Michigan. She is co-owner of a sports bar, also in Lansing. She has a law degree from Cooley Law School and a Masters of Science in Criminal Justice. And, yes, she is “Magistrate for the State of North Carolina as of 2023.”
I’d say that when she let Decarlos walk, she did exactly what she has been trained to do. The cleaning lady would have made a better decision.
How did this woman end up on the bench? She was nominated by Clerk of the Superior Court of Mecklenburg County, Elisa Chinn-Gary, who is also a Racial Equity Organizer and a Diversity & Inclusion Consultant.
Clerk Chinn-Gary was named “Diversity Champion” by the Mecklenburg County Bar Association, got a Distinguished Service Award from the Charlotte NAACP, and a Sprit Award for Honoring the legacy of MLK. But her “most rewarding work has been as Co-Founder and Co-Chair of the RACE MATTERS FOR JUVENILE JUSTICE” dedicated to “children and families of color.”
This is her second most recent Facebook post, called “We are Magnificent.”
Her whole page is black this, black that, black me!
No surprise she nominated Sista Teresa as magistrate.
After the nomination, Teresa had to be approved and appointed by the Senior Resident Superior Court Judge Carla Archie.
She was president of William and Mary’s Black Law Student Association. In the legal department at Wells Fargo, she was co-chair of the diversity and inclusion committee.
At the North Carolina Education Lottery, she ran the supplier diversity program. She was on the board of the local black activist Urban League.
She, too, got the Diversity Champion Award from the Mecklenburg County Bar Association.
She attends an all-black megachurch called Friendship Missionary Baptist Church, and she is in Alpha Kappa Alpha, an all-black sorority, along with Kamala Harris.
I got to her Facebook the very day she took it private, so I found a few cute candid photos of her, including one in which she traded her judicial robes for something else.
Here’s a typical post: “60 years ago today, #RosaParks sat down on that bus so I could sit on the bench today.”
Here she is with her pal Eric Holder.
Last year, Libs of TikTok blasted her for sentencing a black man who shot five people to just 20-36 months.
You can’t be much more vehemently black than Carla Archie, and she’s the person who appoints magistrate judges.
I’d say it’s clearly thanks to these ladies that Decarlos was out and forgotten. Just let the brutha enjoy his freedom.
There is a lot to say about this case but big media were mum about it for days. Nancy Pelosi and her pals took a knee for drug addict George Floyed, but don’t expect them to shed tears for Miss Zarutska.
The Democrat mayor of Charlotte, Viola Lyles, likes to brag that she is Charlotte’s first black female mayor.
She called the killing a “tragedy,” not the savage slaughter that it was, and said it “sheds light on problems with society safety nets related to mental healthcare.”

Credit Image: © Maxwell Vittorio/ZUMA Press Wire
No tears for the victim.
Someone wrote a Wikipedia article called “Killing of Iryna Zarutska,” but the editors nominated it for deletion. Iryna wasn’t worth an article.
When The New York Times finally wrote about her—17 days after she was slashed to death — look at the headline: “A Gruesome Murder in North Carolina Ignites a Firestorm on the Right.”
You see, after an illegal Venezuelan sexually assaulted and murdered nursing student Laken Riley, Republicans and Donald Trump were so depraved they “stoke[d] fears about immigrants.”
The Times also brushed off “the idea that mainstream news outlets downplay crimes committed by Black people,” and proved its even-handedness by reminding us of “a white supremacist uprising . . . in 1898, in which at least 60 Black men were killed.”
Instead of making a big deal about this Ukrainian we must “address racial disparities in the justice system, such as Black and Hispanic people being overrepresented in the jail population.”
Well, I’m sure that was precisely Magistrate Stokes’ intention when she let Decarlos walk, and forgot about him for 215 days.
I believe I didn’t mention that when Carla Archie took over as senior resident judge, she promised us “an equitable court system in Mecklenburg County”—and that’s exactly what we got.
People are beginning to notice that you can’t talk sense about crime without talking about race. A Fox News program on Iryna highlighted the wildly disproportionate rates of black-on-white violent crime.
This is real progress. I’ve been banging on about the color of crime for 26 years, and it’s great to see other people bringing it up.
What else might they bring up? Just four days after the Zarutska killing, black man Barry West shot 17-year-old Katelynn Strate to death on a Louisiana highway, and had the gall to claim he was returning fire.
And just last Saturday, black man Harold Dabney stabbed and killed Prof. Julie Schnuelle of Auburn University so he could steal her Ford F-150.
Most people haven’t heard of these killings, but are they any less horrible than the death of Iryna Zarutska? No, they are just as horrible.
Yesterday, Donald Trump talked about Iryna on a video from the Oval Office.
He roared about the “depraved criminal element” roaming our streets, and said “we have to be vicious with them.”
Yes, Donald, and we have to be vicious with the judges who turn depraved criminals loose, vicious with the depraved media who couldn’t care less about Iryna Zarutska or any other white people snuffed out by their precious blacks with a capital B. And, finally, we have to be vicious about the sick, national climate of anti-white hate that made a black psychotic think the way out of his troubles was to kill an innocent white girl.
The President’s video will keep Iryna in the news, but the rot goes very, very deep. We can’t live with these people—not with the blacks who just walked by while Iryna bled to death, not with the black power structure that turned her killer loose, and not with the countless violent degenerates that turn up in every major city.
The multi-culti experiment’s over. It failed. We, as whites, have to go our own way and let the rest go theirs.
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