[P]robotic Black Prosecutor [in service of white domination] Failed to Disclose Key Evidence for 8 Months & [P]robotic Black Police Chief Fabricated Evidence to Falsely Convict Black Teen of Murder- served 8 yrs in jail
/Beware of black probots in service of white domination. They are everywhere in high places these days - they look like us but these folks are not real. Programmed in all areas of activity to do things against the interests of Black folks. Back in the day these bots could have run a plantation for master remotely- that is, w/o any white overseers around. According to the Funktionary, a probot is a propagandizing programmed robot. A probot is one who disseminates lies, distortions and convenient mass truths composed by a superior overruling elite. [Can't thank of nuthin but shatt!] [more]
(in above video) Black Probot Explains Away Everything Except Why She Sat on [her fat ass] Police Chief's Confession that he Fabricated Evidence in Murder Case for 8 Months. Kym Worthy is the current prosecutor of Wayne County, Michigan, home to Detroit. She is known for taking down unfiltered Black mayor Kwame Kilpatrick. Although the probots work hard for whitey observe that they are often scarified and then replaced. Here, Chief Tolbert [in photo below] may face perjury charges. And think of other black droids, such as O.J., Bill Cosby or Michael Steele; after serving the master so well they are discarded like . . . like, niggers [nigger means victim of white supremacy. nigger is what is being done to you.]
Could Racists Have Done it Better? From [HERE] and [HERE] and [HERE] Prosecutors waited eight months before notifying Davontae Sanford’s attorneys about potentially exculpatory evidence, according to a new report released by the Michigan State Police, reports the Detroit Metro Times.
Sanford was released and his conviction was vacated earlier this month after Wayne County prosecutors revealed that an accurate crime scene sketch alleged to have been drawn by Sanford was in fact drawn by a former Detroit deputy chief of police, James Tolbert (in photo). The deputy chief admitted to drawing the sketch in an October 2015 interview with state investigators and the information was not released to Sanford’s defense team until May.
The report brings into question statements made by the case’s prosecutor earlier this month. Specifically, the Wayne County prosecutor had reported on June 9 that she’d only learned of Tolbert’s admission on May 20, 2016. But, according to the new report, the prosecutor’s office was actually informed of the evidence many months before. [MORE] [See June 9th press conference above]
According to the report, which Michigan Public Radio received through a Freedom of Information Act request, on Oct. 6, 2015, state police detectives convened with assistant prosecutors Rob Moran, Jason Williams, and Tom Chambers, and investigator Cory Williams to, as the report says, "discuss our interview results with Chief Tolbert."
As the report continues, "They were specifically briefed on Chief Tolbert’s statements regarding the diagram that Sanford had allegedly drawn for DPD." [MORE]
As reported by the Detroit Metro Times, Michigan’s code of conduct for its prosecutors mandates that prosecutors “make a timely disclosure to the defense of evidence that could exonerate a suspect.” That prosecutors wanted to investigate such information is not relevant to whether information was exculpatory and therefore should have been disclosed to the defense. Exculpatory evidence is any material evidence that may tend to negate guilt. Impeachment evidence like a confession that the police chief lied in court and told more lies to investigators should have been turned over immediately. The County office is in damage control mode- trying to save her from the bar. Racists could get away with this bs but can a black probot??
Sanford was convicted at just 14 years old of a 2007 quadruple homicide. His conviction was based primarily on a confession—which took place after two days of interrogation without the presence of an attorney or guardian—and the crime scene sketch. The Michigan Innocence Clinic and the Center on Wrongful Convictions of Youth took on the case in 2014, spurring the Michigan State Police to reopen the investigation into the murders.