"While to some, electronic monitoring sounds good, even with the new laws listed above, opponents point to several different examples of when alleged criminals on electronic monitoring have gone on to commit new crimes," Law Enforcement Today notes, adding: "One example occurred recently when Chicago Police were patrolling on January 12th when they saw a vehicle run a stop sign." As officers moved to stop the vehicle, who police later identified as Xavier Davison, got out and tried to walk away. As officers moved in and looked inside the vehicle he was driving, they saw a firearm in plain view. Police discovered that Davison had been released on electronic monitoring awaiting trial for attempted murder -- dating back to December 2018. Also, Davison was already a convicted felon, so he wasn't allowed to have a gun for any reason. Davison appeared before Cook County Judge Susana Ortiz for the new charges, which included violating the terms of his release. She ordered that he be remanded to custody without bail for violating the terms of release over the attempted murder charge, but she set bail at $200,000 for the new gun charge -- which made no sense. There are more examples of how this bizarre system is failing.Cook County Sheriff Tom Dart Says There Are Serious Flaws In System With Murder Suspects Being Out On Electronic Monitoring https://t.co/FM6j2I80Fu pic.twitter.com/Cg2HQeyhEU
— CBS Chicago (@cbschicago) January 11, 2022
"Just four weeks after a judge ordered Jorge Aguilar to stay in his house on electronic monitoring to await trial on charges of being a felon in possession of a firearm, Chicago police allegedly found him reclining in his car with a handgun on the floor and a Tupperware containing 50 grams of cocaine on his passenger seat," CWB Chicago reported earlier his month. "There was also $3,700 cash in his glove box. "But Aguilar, 27, won’t be charged with escaping from electronic monitoring because he wasn’t out of his house for more than two days," the outlet added. Instead of keeping him locked up, however, a Cook County judge again ordered him released on GPS monitoring and ordered him to stay in his residence pending court dates. He won't, of course -- though he'll be back before two days are up.A month after being ordered to stay in the house on electronic monitoring for a felony gun case, cops allegedly found him in his car with a gun, $3,700, and a Tupperware of cocaine. But he didn't break Illinois' new electronic monitoring rules.https://t.co/g3dU9rVUTX
— CWBChicago (@CWBChicago) January 8, 2022
#Chicago pic.twitter.com/BYiQJyW2nn
— Spot News (@SPOTNEWSonIG) January 13, 2022
— Spot News (@SPOTNEWSonIG) January 15, 2022Democrats are literally bringing our society to the brink of collapse, and yet, for some reason, far too many Americans keep putting them in power. Sources include: LawEnforcementToday.com CWBChicago.com
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