Horowitz: Why Eliza Fletcher should be the next George Floyd — but won’t



Imagine if career violent criminals were given the January 6 treatment. Well, for one, innocent victims like Eliza Fletcher would still be alive.

The story of Eliza Fletcher is one that exemplifies why we need to have some form of government, but one that also demonstrates that the criminal justice system only seems to deter political opponents, not violent criminals.

\u201cHere\u2019s missing Memphis jogger #ElizaFletcher singing to her students on video, per media reports in Memphis. \n\nAll the more heartbreaking after a body was found tonight near a scene connected to the abduction suspect. \u201d
— JB Biunno #HeyJB (@JB Biunno #HeyJB) 1662432424

By all accounts, Eliza Fletcher, 34, seems to have been a model mother and teacher of preschool children whose life we should be commemorating more than George Floyd’s and whose tragic death should trigger a true debate over real criminal justice reform – keeping incorrigibly violent criminals off the streets.

On Sunday, Memphis police arrested Cleotha Abston, 38, in connection with Fletcher’s murder and charged him with first-degree murder, premeditated murder, murder in perpetration of kidnapping, and tampering with evidence. He was also arraigned on charges of identity theft for allegedly stealing another woman’s wallet the previous day. According to the police affidavit, Abston ambushed Fletcher while she was jogging last Friday morning near the University of Memphis campus, forced her into his car, and seriously injured her. The details of her death are still unclear, but authorities found her body behind a Memphis apartment building on Tuesday.

So, who is Cleotha Abston? Well, typically if someone is into kidnapping, it means he’s likely done it before. Abston’s record bears this out. In 2000, Shelby County, Tennessee, charged him with “especially aggravated kidnapping” for carjacking Kemper Durand and stuffing him into his trunk at knifepoint for two hours until the victim escaped while the vehicle was stopped at an ATM. He entered a guilty plea and received 24 years in prison, starting in November 2001. He was also charged with aggravated kidnapping, for which he was sentenced to 11 years, but not only were the two sentences concurrent, he was released after 85% of the 24 years. He was released from prison Nov. 7, 2020.

Incidentally, under Tennessee’s new law, which was opposed by Republican Gov. Bill Lee, Abston would still have been in prison because violent criminals are now required to serve 100% of their sentences.

Although the sentence was not egregiously lenient, local media reports that he had a lengthy record as a juvenile prior to the 2000 carjacking and kidnapping. The Commercial Appeal reported that Abston “also appeared in juvenile court records in 1996, 1997, 1998, and 1999 for charges including theft, aggravated assault, aggravated assault with a weapon, and rape.” Durand, the victim of the 2000 kidnapping, mentioned his prior history in court during a sentencing hearing. In a victim impact statement, Durand wrote, “I was extremely lucky that I was able to escape from the custody of Cleotha Abston. ... It is quite likely that I would have been killed had I not escaped,” the Commercial Appeal reported.

It is self-evident that someone engaging in that activity, including rape, at such a young age is not a candidate for rehabilitation. For the eight most violent crimes, all juveniles should be charged as adults. WREG reports than Abston was arrested every few months from the time he was eleven, and even for the rape and aggravated assault charges, he only served some time in juvenile detention. This is the rule, not the exception, throughout the justice system, and it needs to change.

This man should never have been released, and even if he was, we need a system in place to more closely monitor behavior and re-incarcerate released criminals even for minor infractions, just as they did with Jan. 6 protesters. Neighbors told Daily Mail that Abston was a “weird pervert” who stalked women, watched them, and tried to get them to have sex with him for $100. Even model citizens and military veterans were held without bail because of their political activities, yet these criminals somehow escape the long reach of Big Brother when it comes to bad behavior post-release.

We need a clear three-strikes-and-you’re-out policy to mandate life in prison for anyone who commits three violent felonies – whether as a minor or an adult. Violent crime should never be tolerated, and after someone is given as second chance and follows it up with a violent crime, he is clearly incorrigible.

What is further shocking about the Abston case is that his criminal record reveals several instances of illegal drug possession, indecent exposure, tampering with security, and possession of a deadly weapon within the final years of his prison sentence, according to prison records obtained by TheBlaze. Yet he still somehow received 511 days of credit, demonstrating the absurdity of the “good time” credit system.

Also, assuming the case is as clear as the preliminary evidence shows and Abston is convicted of premediated murder, he should get the death penalty expeditiously. But our system is so broken, it will likely take decades, thereby mooting any deterrent inherent in capital punishment.

There are thousands upon thousands of irredeemable Abstons out on the streets or about to exit prison. The national discussion we need is how to keep those people away from society. The question is whether murals will be painted in the streets of Memphis commemorating the memory of Eliza Fletcher in support of this cause – or are not all causes as equal as others?

'I ended her life:' Brian Laundrie reportedly confessed to murdering Gabby Petito in newly released diary



Brian Laundrie confessed that he murdered Gabby Petito, according to a new alleged diary entry that was reportedly discovered in a Florida nature preserve.

An eight-page diary written by Laundrie was released on Friday by his family's attorney Steven Bertolino.

"Today the Petito family attorney, Patrick Reilly, and myself met with the FBI in Tampa to sort through and take possession of the personal items that belonged to Gabby and Brian," Bertolino told Fox News. "As part of this return of property in FBI custody I was given Brian’s notebook and I have turned [the] same over to Chris and Roberta Laundrie."

In the notebook, Laundrie reportedly made a confession to the murder of his fiancé, Gabby Petito.

"I ended her life," Laundrie reportedly wrote in the notebook. "I thought it was merciful, that it is what she wanted, but I see now all the mistakes I made."

Laundrie allegedly believed that Petito suffered an injury while the two were camping during their cross-country expedition. He claims that she is in "extreme" pain, but does not appear to make an effort to get her medical assistance.

The 23-year-old Laundrie mentioned trying to keep Petito warm and awake in the diary recovered from the Myakkahatchee Creek Environmental Park on Oct. 20, 2021.

"I thought it was merciful, that it is what she wanted, but I see now all the mistakes I made," Laundrie said in a possible murder confession. "I panicked. I was in shock."

Following Petito's death, Laundrie said he couldn't go on without her.

He said, "From the moment I decided, took away her pain, I knew I couldn't go on without her."

Laundrie wrote, "Please do not make life harder for my family. They lost a son and a daughter. The most wonderful girl in the world. Gabby I'm sorry."

He added, "I am sorry to my family. This is a shock to them as well [as] a terrible grief."

\u201c1/8\nThis is Brian Laundrie\u2019s notebook confession where he admits he ended Gabby's life.\u201d
— Brian Entin (@Brian Entin) 1656097985

Petito's remains were found in Bridger-Teton National Forest on Sept. 19. A coroner ruled that Petito was a victim of a homicide by manual strangulation and blunt-force trauma to the head and neck.

The Sarasota County medical examiner revealed that Laundrie died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head.

"The cause of death has been determined to be a gunshot wound to the head. The manner of death has been determined to be suicide," the medical examiner said in a statement.

#HeyJB with Brian Entin: Gabby Petito, Brian Laundrie Evidence Emerges After Notebook Revealed www.youtube.com