12-year-old boy charged with murder in fatal shooting of 11-year-old. Mourning mother says, 'These are kids. They should have been playing in a sandbox somewhere'



Police in Clayton County, Georgia, have charged an unidentified 12-year-old boy with murder and various other crimes after he allegedly shot and killed an 11-year-old boy this week.

What are the details?

In a pair of posts on their Facebook page, the Clayton County Police Department said they responded to a shooting incident involving at least two juveniles early Thursday evening near the 6000 block of Westbury Road in Riverdale.

Upon arriving on the scene, they reportedly discovered that an 11-year-old boy, later identified as Elyjah Munson, had been shot. The child died on site.

On Friday, police arrested the 12-year-old for his role in the incident and charged him as a juvenile with a host of crimes — including murder, aggravated assault, tampering with evidence, possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime, possession of a firearm under 18, and first-degree cruelty to children.

The two boys lived in a nearby apartment complex and had been walking in a group when the shooting occurred, WAGA-TV reported.

Further details regarding the incident are currently sparse as police continue to conduct an investigation.

Police spokeswoman, Officer Halekia Helm, told the Atlanta Journal-Constitution: “In an effort to maintain the integrity of this investigation, we are not releasing premature information in reference to this case."

What else?

Reporters from WAGA, however, were able to provide some more information after speaking with the victim's family and neighbors who reportedly witnessed the incident.

The victim's mother, Kendall Munson, told the outlet that the incident happened as a result of an argument between the two boys.

She noted that she had moved with her children out of Chicago at her parents' request. She was trying to flee violence in the Windy City but it ultimately followed her family to Georgia.

Munson added that her other son, who is just 12 years old, witnessed the shooting.

"He witnessed it and he just kept saying, ‘They left my brother lying there.’ This is crazy," Munson said.

In response to the announcement of charges on Friday, Munson, overcome with grief, expressed mixed feelings.

"I honestly don't know how to feel. That baby is 12. My baby is 11. These are kids," she said. "They should have been playing in a sandbox somewhere."

12-year-old charged with murder after 11-year-old shot in head www.youtube.com

Anything else?

Neighbor Jerry Shepherd told WAGA that he and his wife also witnessed the fatal shooting. He reported that "one of them was saying, ‘You play too much man,’ and he pulled out a gun and shot him in the head."

Police are reportedly now working to find out more information about the charged 12-year-old and his family. Of particular interest is how exactly the child obtained a gun, who the owner of the gun is, and whether or not that person will be charged.

This is a developing story and may be updated.

Horowitz: This Supreme Court decision demonstrates why 'conservative' judges will never reverse bad precedent



It's a perfect system for the leftists. Through judicial supremacism, their judges get to ignore 200 years of precedent, practice, and the plain meaning of natural law and the Constitution. But once they successfully breach that precedent in a single case, conservative judges will indulge the breach as the new baseline headed forward, and the only question is whether they decide to expand upon it as quickly as the leftists. Nowhere is this more evident than in last week's decision in Jones v. Mississippi, in which every justice but Clarence Thomas permanently enshrined the anti-constitutional premise that requiring juvenile murderers to serve life without parole violates the Eighth Amendment.

Some of you might have seen headlines indicating that conservatives won in the Supreme Court last week, when the court upheld the conviction of Brett Jones, who murdered his grandfather when he was 15 years old. While the state supreme court's judgement against Jones was indeed upheld by all six GOP appointees on the high court, Clarence Thomas observed in his concurrence that the other justices seem to have accepted the basic premise and even political rhetoric of the left on juvenile justice and have no plans to overturn any of the recent bad decisions.

Some background is in order before delving into this case and Thomas' concerns.

In 2005, contrary to practice in our country since the Founding, the Supreme Court ruled that capital punishment for juveniles violates the Eighth Amendment's prohibition on cruel and unusual punishment in all cases. Writing for the majority in Roper v. Simmons, Anthony Kennedy applied foreign law to overturn a 1989 Supreme Court decision (Stanford v. Kentucky) and rule that a punishment in practice at the time of our Founding somehow violated our own Constitution. He felt that "the evolving standards of decency" gave him the right to unilaterally amend the Constitution.

Whether one agrees with capital punishment at all or for juveniles in particular, there is no way anyone can suggest with a straight face that it is barred by the Constitution. If you don't like the practice, then you can fight it in the state legislatures. Any conservative justice worth a penny as an originalist would have to overturn Roper at the first opportunity. Yet Roper was just the beginning of this one-directional ratchet towards sanitizing heinous crimes committed by juveniles and absurdly enshrining it in the Constitution.

What's the alternative to the death penalty for juvenile violent criminals? Life in prison without parole, right? Well, in Graham v. Florida (2010), Kennedy, joined by the liberals and Roberts, ruled that life in prison without parole for a juvenile is unconstitutional except for cases of murder. Then, in his incremental ad hoc constitutional amendment process, in Miller v. Alabama (2012), Kennedy took it to the next level and joined with the four liberals to rule that state laws mandating life in prison without parole even for murder are indeed unconstitutional. Finally, in Montgomery v. Louisiana (2016), the court retroactively applied the Miller v. Alabama decision to roughly 2,500 people already serving mandatory sentences of life without parole as juvenile murderers. Roberts bizarrely joined in with Montgomery, even though he wrote the dissent in Miller,because once a post-constitutional decision is made, he will indulge and even expand it.

Which brings us back to the Jones case. While Miller barred states from categorically mandating life without parole for juvenile murderers, it still allowed judges to issue such sentences, so long as they offer defendants individualized hearings to weigh the merits of life without parole for that particular juvenile as opposed to simply mandating it across the board. On paper, Montgomery simply applied this ruling in Miller retroactively to those currently sentenced under mandatory life without parole laws. But Jones and the liberal justices argued that the rationale undergirding Montgomery, in which they made the individualized determination part of a "substantive" right, would necessarily require that the judge actually issue a finding that this particular defendant is part of what the court now believes is a small minority of those "whose crimes reflect permanent incorrigibility."

In other words, according to Jones, although the state judge did follow the letter of Montgomery and re-sentenced him using an individualized hearing, the sentencing is not valid because now he must show his work and demonstrate in a finding that Jones is incorrigible. The court ruled 6-3 that the Montgomery decision does not compel such a finding, and in the majority opinion, written by Justice Kavanagh, the court struggles to explain away some of the language in Montgomery.

In comes Thomas in his concurrence and blasts his colleagues for indulging Montgomery in the first place. Wouldn't this have been the perfect opportunity to overturn Montgomery, if not the entire rationale — a misreading of the Eighth Amendment — behind the line of cases leading up to it?

"The Court correctly holds that the Eighth Amendment does not require a finding that a minor be permanently incorrigible as a prerequisite to a sentence of life without parole," Thomas wrote. "But in reaching that result, the majority adopts a strained reading of Montgomery v. Louisiana, 577 U. S. 190 (2016), instead of outright admitting that it is irreconcilable with Miller v. Alabama, 567 U. S. 460 (2012)—and the Constitution. The better approach is to be patently clear that Montgomery was a 'demonstrably erroneous' decision worthy of outright rejection."

What's worse is that Kavanaugh's majority opinion concludes by emphatically stating that the court is following precedent and almost apologizing for the concept of life without parole and hoping for other ways for Jones to get out of the sentence.

"As this case again demonstrates, any homicide, and particularly a homicide committed by an individual under 18, is a horrific tragedy for all involved and for all affected," Kavanagh wrote, echoing the sentiment of the left that juvenile murderers are also victims.

He goes on: "Determining the proper sentence in such a case raises profound questions of morality and social policy. The States, not the federal courts, make those broad moral and policy judgments in the first instance when enacting their sentencing laws."

But that's not true! The federal courts have already barred states from categorically mandating life without parole, much less the death penalty, and from issuing life without parole to juvenile serial rapists. Kavanaugh and his colleagues don't seem to be troubled by that degree of federal encroachment upon long-standing state criminal justice decisions. They have no plans to overturn those insane decisions. The majority opinion basically praises Miller and Montgomery and brags that they have "indeed helped make life-without-parole sentences for offenders under 18 'relatively rare.'"

In a gem of a footnote, Thomas blasts Kavanaugh's majority opinion for using the left's language on juvenile murderers, which is the opposite of the language the court uses for juveniles seeking abortions.

Thomas wrote, "The Court's language in this line of precedents is notable. When addressing juvenile murderers, this Court has stated that 'children are different' and that courts must consider 'a child's lesser culpability.' Montgomery, 577 U. S., at 207–208 (emphasis added). And yet, when assessing the Court-created right of an individual of the same age to seek an abortion, Members of this Court take pains to emphasize a 'young woman's' right to choose. …It is curious how the Court's view of the maturity of minors ebbs and flows depending on the issue."

Thomas' observations speaks to the broad philosophy of leftists toward minors in which they believe they are mature enough to do everything except be held accountable for murder.

It is very notable that not a single other justice signed onto Thomas' important concurrence. Ask yourself the following question: If the conservative justices are not even willing to roll back radically unconstitutional expansions of unconstitutional decisions as recent as 2016, and the best we can hope for is that sometimes they will decline to expand upon it further for now, do you really think we have the votes to overturn even the expansions of Roe (such as Hellerstadt with the Gosnell laws), much less Roe itself and Casey? Do you really think the non-Thomas justices will have the moxie to overturn any bad precedent couched in race, sensitivity, morality, and caring, which is essentially how every important decision is framed?

Indeed, the Republican Party has convinced conservatives to continue voting for Republicans, despite the betrayals, all to save the courts. Now they are promising to fight the Democrats trying to pack the courts. But if we were truly honest, as this low-profile but important case demonstrates, we'd concede that the courts were lost a long time ago. It's the current orientation of the court that's the problem. We have met the enemy, and he is us.

Horowitz: Juveniles are treated like adults for everything but committing heinous crimes



Prominent leftists are using the shooting of knife-wielding Ma'Khia Bryant as a platform to reveal what we always knew they felt about juvenile violent criminals. They believe that juveniles stabbing with knives is just an example of kids being kids. At the same time, they refuse to allow kids to play outdoor sports without masks because of a virus that doesn't affect them.

Hence, what we are dealing with today is not liberal, socialist, or even communist. It is a demonic de-civilization agenda aimed at flipping natural law perfectly upside down. This means treating children like adults in terms of culpability, responsibility, and maturity, except for those juveniles who commit unspeakable crimes.

Some people might have been shocked when prominent leftists like Valerie Jarrett and Jen Psaki insinuated that Bryant was just having a typical teenage fight and that police should have broken it up without bloodshed. They basically implied that the police should have allowed her to stab the victim.

"She was a child," press secretary Jen Psaki told reporters Wednesday. "We're thinking of her friends and family in the communities that are hurting and grieving her loss. We know that police violence disproportionately impacts Black and Latino people in communities and that Black women and girls, like Black men and boys, experience higher rates of police violence."

What she refused to mention is that Bryant was about to stab another child who happened also to be black. Just two days before, in Cincinnati, a 13-year-old girl was accused of stabbing another 13-year-old girl, who happened to be black, and killing her with nothing more than a pocketknife. Do the leftists now believe that the Cincinnati outcome was better than the Columbus case because the perpetrator in the former was not stopped?

Well, this sentiment is not an anomaly. As I've chronicled in great detail over the years, juvenile criminals are getting increasingly more violent, yet are let out on our streets even after committing the worst crimes. In the same city of Columbus, a 17-year-old accused of murder while out on parole was just released on low bail.

More recently, a pair of unnamed juveniles allegedly shot a man at the Hotel Pergola in New York City on April 15 and were charged with attempted murder, assault, and criminal possession of a weapon. Yet according to the New York Post, they were cut loose without bail at their arraignment. At a time when Trump supporters who were charged with nothing more than trespassing on public property are held without the possibility of bail, juveniles charged with attempted murder are released without any bail. This is not an exception, but a feature of our juvenile system that has essentially chalked up all crime, including the most violent shootings and beatings, to kids being kids.

This is the problem with the media. They begin the criminal justice discussion at the point of police encounters and wonder why so many juveniles are encountered by police and why, under the worst circumstances, some of them are shot in a confrontation. What they never ask is why so many juveniles are committing so many violent crimes that are just as devastating as when they are committed by an adult. Were they to ask that question, they'd easily discover the answer in the lack of deterrent – with so many juvenile violent criminals never spending a day in jail.

Our criminal justice system has essentially legalized all forms of crime for children. The same people who think that 16-year-olds should vote, get a sex-change castration operation, or consent to an abortion also believe that they should not stand trial for murder.

Already in 1981, when juvenile crime wasn't nearly as bad as it is today, President Reagan's Task Force on Victims of Crime observed the asymmetry of the standards to which we hold juvenile criminals culpable relative to the burden borne by victims.

"The criminal justice system is disturbingly inconsistent in the way it treats juvenile victims and juvenile victimizers," wrote the commission in its recommendations. "This divergence exists, in part, because society has developed two independent systems based on widely divergent presuppositions. If a child is a victim, that child is expected to come to an adult court, open to the public, and behave like an adult, speak like an adult, comprehend like an adult, and meet adult standards. The motivation underlying this treatment is the protection of adult suspects against the testimony of children, who are considered less trustworthy or accurate than adults."

Now contrast that degree of responsibility to juvenile criminals in the justice system.

"The juvenile justice system, on the other hand, begins with the premise that those who have not reached adulthood cannot be truly held accountable for their actions; they do not intend to do harm and will reform if shown the error of their ways. As a result, in many jurisdictions even violent and frequent dangerous conduct is not considered criminal, and is evaluated behind closed doors. Society is paying a tremendous price for this system. The Task Force suggests that the different treatment of juvenile victims and juvenile victimizers be carefully reevaluated."

Well, 40 years later, not only has this dichotomy not been reevaluated, it has been exacerbated. The only consistency is that victims of crime always lose in our system. Today, a child is like an adult for everything from COVID culpability to sex education but is just being a kid when trying to kill someone. Welcome to the de-civilization dystopia awaiting us if we don't fight back now. The only question for Republicans is how much of civilization are they willing to destroy just so they won't be called racist?

12-year-old boy charged with first-degree murder after allegedly shooting a 13-year-old



A 12-year-old boy from Washington, D.C., has been charged with first-degree murder for allegedly shooting and killing a 13-year-old boy, police announced Monday.

The suspect, whose name has not been released to the public, is being charged as a juvenile, ABC News reported. The outlet noted that the incident took place outside a shopping center in Prince George's County, Maryland, over the weekend.

What happened?

Around 10:15 p.m. Saturday, officers with the Prince George's County Police Department responded to a reported stabbing at the Ritchie Station Marketplace shopping center in Forestville, Maryland, located right off the beltway.

When they arrived on the scene, they found a 13-year-old boy suffering from stab wounds that were not life threatening. He was transported to a nearby hospital for medical treatment, but has since been released.

However, lying next to the stabbing victim, police also found a 13-year-old boy later identified as King Douglas, who was suffering from a gunshot wound. Police confirmed that Douglas was pronounced dead at the scene.

Officers reportedly said they do not believe the shooting to be random. Rather, they believe the violence stemmed from some sort of confrontation.

"The preliminary investigation revealed the shooting and stabbing stemmed from a dispute between two groups of juveniles in the shopping center," police said in a statement, according to WRC-TV.

Investigators are still looking for a separate suspect they believe is responsible for the stabbing attack and have asked the public to come forward with any information about the incident.

Anything else?

The incident is just the latest in a string of crimes committed by juveniles in the D.C. area in recent months.

In March, the tragic killing of an Uber Eats driver at the hands of two teenage girls — aged 13 and 15 — in the nation's capital shocked the country.

The girls reportedly attacked the driver, 66-year-old Pakistani immigrant Mohammad Anwar, with a stun gun nearby Nationals Park, causing the car to flip on its side. The vehicle raced around a sharp turn before hitting a curb. Anwar was expelled from the vehicle during the accident and died from his injuries.