#JusticeSystemFail
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tmarshconnors · 1 month ago
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The UK Crown Prosecution Service is a joke
By Angry British Conservative
Let’s not sugar-coat it the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) in the UK has become an utter embarrassment. A bureaucratic shambles that’s more concerned with appeasing woke agendas and hitting diversity quotas than doing its actual job: prosecuting criminals and protecting the public.
We live in a country where violent thugs get community service, career shoplifters are let off with warnings, and law-abiding Brits are dragged through the mud for saying something "offensive" on social media. All the while, the CPS sits there twiddling its thumbs, doing mental gymnastics to avoid prosecuting actual threats to our safety.
Selective Justice: A Broken Compass
What we’re seeing now is a clear case of selective justice. You can commit burglary, carry a knife, or even assault someone in broad daylight and walk free if the CPS decides it's “not in the public interest” to prosecute. That phrase has become a get-out-of-jail-free card for criminals. Translation? “We can’t be bothered, or it doesn’t tick the right political boxes.”
Meanwhile, if you misgender someone online or repost a meme that’s deemed “inappropriate,” suddenly the full weight of the law descends upon you. The CPS will leap into action for that. Why? Because it's easier. Because it’s politically safe. And because they care more about virtue signalling than delivering real justice.
Victims Are Ignored, Criminals Are Coddled
Ask any victim of crime how it feels dealing with the CPS. Endless delays, excuses, and a clear lack of interest. Cases thrown out after months of “review,” leaving victims feeling betrayed and vulnerable. Yet the criminal walks away smiling.
Even the police as flawed as they are often express frustration behind closed doors. They arrest someone, do the paperwork, and then the CPS turns around and says, “Nah, not enough evidence,” or worse, “It’s not worth the hassle.” What kind of justice system is that?
Soft on Crime, Hard on Common Sense
We’ve got a justice system where burglars and drug dealers are considered “victims of circumstance,” and hardened criminals are offered therapy, housing, and sympathy. But heaven forbid you to defend your own home, say something blunt online, or stand up for traditional British values then suddenly you’re the villain.
The CPS is no longer an independent body fighting for justice — it’s a mouthpiece for left-wing ideology, diversity targets, and woke pandering. They’re not fit for purpose. And they’ve lost the trust of the very people they’re supposed to serve.
The Bottom Line
The Crown Prosecution Service has become a national joke. It’s time for a full overhaul. We need leadership with backbone, a return to common-sense law enforcement, and a system that punishes criminals, not the average Brit who’s just trying to live by the rules.
The law should be blind, fair, and firm. But under the CPS? It’s politically selective, weak, and wildly out of touch.
Enough is enough.
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pattywind · 1 month ago
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Title: When Justice Fails the Innocent: My Husband’s Fight for His Rights
I never imagined I’d be here—writing a blog post because the system meant to uphold justice has turned its back on an innocent man. My husband is living proof that the justice system in this country is not always just. What he’s going through is not only painful—it’s unconstitutional.
His charge? A blatant violation of his First Amendment rights. When did calling people to salvation become a threat? Since when is sharing faith treated like a crime? He never threatened, never harmed—he spoke, he shared. And for that, he was arrested.
But the violations didn’t stop there.
From the moment he entered this system, he’s been treated like he’s guilty until proven innocent. He was transferred between multiple federal facilities, not for punishment, but because his own defense attorney—without even speaking to him or discussing the allegation—ordered a mental health evaluation. Instead of meeting with my husband, his attorney dismissed him coldly, saying, “He speaks in Da Vinci code.”
That single, careless statement set off a chain of events that’s delayed his case and violated his right to due process. Every transfer pushes back the timeline. Every facility treats him more like a burden than a human being. The one currently housing him has denied him the ability to contact his attorney—ignoring emails from the attorney himself trying to schedule a call. That’s not just unethical; it’s a violation of both the Fifth and Sixth Amendments.
And what about his health?
When he was arrested, he could walk on his own. Now, he’s in a wheelchair. One facility refused to give him any mobility aid, forcing him to climb stairs in pain and instability. That’s more than neglect—that’s cruelty. An Eighth Amendment violation.
He’s been trying to document everything—writing down details, recording events the only way he can. But each time he’s transferred, those documents are taken—and they never come back. It’s like erasing his voice every single time.
I’ve reached out to everyone I can. I’ve emailed his attorney with proof that the charge is false. I’ve contacted media outlets to share his story. I’ve sent pleas to advocacy groups. I’ve begged for someone, anyone, to listen.
But the silence is deafening.
What am I supposed to do? I feel helpless. This system wasn’t built to listen to people like us. But I refuse to let them break me. Every day, I pray. I hand my worry over to God, because sometimes faith is the only strength I have left.
I know I’m not alone. I know there are other families out there, watching someone they love be crushed under the weight of a broken system. If you’re reading this and you’re one of them—know that I see you. I stand with you. Let’s keep speaking, even when they try to silence us.
Because someone, somewhere, has to listen. And justice shouldn’t be a privilege. It should be a right.
Injustice
• #WrongfulIncarceration
• #PrisonReform
• #JusticeForTheInnocent
• #FaithInHardTimes
• #FirstAmendmentRights
• #SixthAmendment
• #FifthAmendment
• #EighthAmendment
• #CallToSalvation
• #ReligiousFreedom
• #ChristianVoices
• #FamiliesOfTheIncarcerated
• #HumanRights
• #SpeakTruth
• #JusticeSystemFail
• #AdvocacyMatters
• #UnjustSystem
• #HopeInTheDarkness
• #StandUpForJustice
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needabetternamelater · 7 months ago
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jaymeebaybee · 12 years ago
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I'm not much of a social activist nor will I ever be but things like the verdict handed down today anger me to no end. I understand that the prosecution didn't do an amazing job at proving their case but if I really look at it, people have done more time for crimes that seem minuscule in comparison to murder. I've seen first hand the way the balance tilts when race is in play. People serve years for theft or drugs but when this dude commits murder somehow it can turn into self defense. So many times, people tried to say that this wasn't about race and that this crime is looked at objectively. Well, had this crime been looked at objectively...someone would be sitting in jail. A kid got killed. A kid. Because he was black that somehow made him more dangerous than a white kid? I beg to differ. I just think it's a load of bull. This has been about race the whole time. Just because my pigmentation (or anybody's for that matter) is not the same does not mean that I am unequal or inferior. If Zimmerman can get away with murder of an unarmed teen, who's to say that this won't happen again. "People of color" struggle in different ways when it comes to the justice system but we struggle all the same. I can only hope that ZImmerman gets his. The world can be funny sometimes. I'd be surprised if he wasn't shitting his pants when he realized he'd be released. He will always be guilty in my book.
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needabetternamelater · 8 months ago
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Sorry, you don't get to ignore Pareto's just because it's not convenient.
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