The Law Applies to Us and The Law of the Jungle Applies to Authorities: White Cop Convicted of Murdering Laquan McDonald to be Released After Only 3 Yrs in Prison [Faced max sentence of over 400 Yrs]

WHAT IS WHITE COLLECTIVE POWER? WHITE COP’s murder charge carried a possible sentence of 20 Yrs and Each of the 16 counts of aggravated battery he was found guilty of carried a sentence of six to 30 years. However, Cook County Judge Vincent Gaughan said he would only consider the second-degree murder conviction while making his sentencing decision.

DR. BLYND STATES, We are bound by the written law but those who wrote the law are bound by the law of the jungle. Makes you feel like a fool, doesn't it? Minority rule majority fooled? Surely, on earth as it is in heaven. Why would we ever allow "government" to assert the position that it is not bound by the same law that binds us? The answer is that we are fools sweet-talked by judges into believing that the "natural state of affairs" is to bind the people by law, and the "'government" by fiat. "Government" has replaced religion as the opiate of the masses using the Media as its subduing gasses (fumes of subterfuge).

From [HERE] White Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke will be released from prison on Feb. 3 after serving a little less than three years and four months behind bars.

Van Dyke has been in custody since his conviction in October 2018 on aggravated battery and second degree murder charges for the shooting death of Laquan McDonald. A Cook County jury in October found Van Dyke guilty of second-degree murder and 16 counts of aggravated battery in the Oct. 20, 2014, slaying. McDonald, 17, was shot 16 times.

In 2014, Van Dyke shot the Black teen 16 times. Video of the shooting from a police dashboard camera was released more than two years after courts and reporters forced the city of Chicago to release video of the killing it had sought to keep secret. It was a key piece of evidence in the trial and inflamed public reaction across the country. Van Dyke was found guilty of second-degree murder and 16 counts of aggravated battery. The video showed that McDonald had not lunged at Van Dyke, as officers and city officials claimed for years to explain why he had not faced discipline or criminal charge.

The murder charge carried a possible sentence of four to 20 years in prison; probation without prison time was also an option. Each count of aggravated battery carried a sentence of six to 30 years.

However, Cook County Judge Vincent Gaughan said he would only consider the second-degree murder conviction while making his decision. He sentenced him to six years and nine months in prison for the 2014 murder of Laquan McDonald. His sentence was based on his second-degree murder conviction, which only required 50 percent of a sentence to be served.  He received credit for time served awaiting sentencing. [MORE]

Grace Memorial Baptist Church Pastor Rev. Marvin Hunter, McDonald's uncle, said he was notified Friday of Van Dyke's pending release.

"It's a shame that Jason Van Dyke has a date that he can be paroled and free from his past to a certain degree and Laquan McDonald can never have another birthday," Hunter said. "My prayer is that Mr. Van Dyke comes out a different man than when he went in."

William Calloway, the activist who was instrumental in getting the dash cam video of the shooting released reacted to news of Van Dyke's pending release.

"The federal government has the legal authority, U.S. Attorney John Lausch has the legal authority, and he has the moral obligation to file federal civil rights charges on Jason Van Dyke," Calloway said.

Van Dyke has spent the last three-plus years in multiple out-of-state prisons and at one point was assaulted while in the general population of a facility in Connecticut. His attorney, Jennifer Blagg, who worked on his appeal said she doesn't know exactly where he'll be released from next month. He is currently in an out-of-state facility in protective custody.

He will spend at least two years on parole and will have to check in with a parole officer on a regular basis while remaining in the Chicago area.