Those are dangerous criminals and we need them off the street!10bands
I’m snitchin
Man, they would have never found my ass. I would have used this time to get the fuck out of Dodge forever. This dude uses his few hours of freedom to go hang out with some dudes after spending years hanging out with some fucking dudes? Fuck out of hereRE-TARD!!!
I would've been focused on getting some pussy right quick!!
That, or some steak!! REALLY BOTH!!
RIGHT!!! That's all he was doing in prison.....lol. Hanging out with a bunch of damn dudes!!Man, they would have never found my ass. I would have used this time to get the fuck out of Dodge forever. This dude uses his few hours of freedom to go hang out with some dudes after spending years hanging out with some fucking dudes? Fuck out of here
Man, they would have never found my ass. I would have used this time to get the fuck out of Dodge forever. This dude uses his few hours of freedom to go hang out with some dudes after spending years hanging out with some fucking dudes? Fuck out of here
I said before, I don't necessarily care what they did in the past, if they can escape and not hurt or kill anyone and live the rest of their lives in peace, I'm happy. Some people don't need a life sentence. Sometimes people just need some time away to get their shit straight or whatever.If that's me, I immediately start heading for Shreveport, I get as far away from the I-10 as possible because I know Louisiana State Troopers are all over the place, and Texas Rangers are at the border or even assisting in Louisiana. I cut through northeast Texas and head to Oklahoma and immediately start making my way to one of those flyover states and try to get to Washington State and crossover into British Columbia.
Gonna go hateful 8 on these mfsThose are dangerous criminals and we need them off the street!
So they need to up it to 50k-100k per prisoner.
And at 50 bands a piece, I'm creating a group text and we're meeting up at one spot to "Plan" what's next.
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Then it's "Aww damn they got us"!![]()
Gonna go hateful 8 on these mfs
Those are dangerous criminals and we need them off the street!
So they need to up it to 50k-100k per prisoner.
And at 50 bands a piece, I'm creating a group text and we're meeting up at one spot to "Plan" what's next.
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Then it's "Aww damn they got us"!![]()
If they start talking 50K a piece I'm gonna be looking for them niggas likeGonna go hateful 8 on these mfs
If they start talking 50K a piece I'm gonna be looking for them niggas like
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Wait, this is real lol..Question.
Setup, He said this morning they realized they were gone
Later investigation showed they left around 1am.
My question, what time (in the morning) did they realize they were gone?
Why don't they have a motion detector, or some simple Ring tech.
That alerts them there is movement and *beep*
Alert the person who should be watching the cameras what is going one or what was detected?
I don't know how far that is away from the prison, but I cannot imagine going anywhere too far with no money, no phone, and no vehicle, especially with all those people on your ass.If that's me, I immediately start heading for Shreveport, I get as far away from the I-10 as possible because I know Louisiana State Troopers are all over the place, and Texas Rangers are at the border or even assisting in Louisiana. I cut through northeast Texas and head to Oklahoma and immediately start making my way to one of those flyover states and try to get to Washington State and crossover into British Columbia.
Did any of these dudes had a plan once they escaped of how they were gonna survive and evade capture while on the run, cause it doesn't seem like it. What is the point of escaping if their is no plan to remain free. Conventional wisdom will tell you that you need to get out of the country. I would have liked to know what was the thought process once they got out.
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Fearful New Orleans lawyers flee Louisiana after jailbreak as DA fires back at Landry
Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams said OPSO mishandled evidence and that the state was responsible for some inmate delays.www.nola.com
Two Orleans Parish lawyers who secured convictions against a recent escapee from the Orleans Parish jail have fled the state along with their families, fearing for their safety after the recent jailbreak, District Attorney Jason Williams said Monday at a news conference.
Williams personally tried the second-degree murder case against escapee Derrick Groves in October 2024, along with the two other lawyers who have left Louisiana. Williams said he was “personally afraid” for his own safety.
Groves' case was a gang-related double killing that had to be retried twice. Groves, 27, has been incarcerated for more than two years in the jail while awaiting sentencing in Orleans Parish Criminal District Court. He was convicted of second-degree murder in October, and was also convicted of manslaughter in a separate case.
In his news conference, Williams also pushed back against Gov. Jeff Landry's recent statement that New Orleans’ “progressive criminal justice system” was a cause of last week’s jailbreak.
“The lawyers who tried that case with me, the witnesses who were brave enough to come forward and stare Derrick Groves down in that courtroom, the next of kin, who sat in that courtroom knowing what he did to their family members — we’re all the ones in harm’s way, not Jeff Landry,” Williams said.
Williams highlighted his office’s high murder clearance rates and pointed to other delays in criminal cases that Williams said were caused by Landry’s administration.
The governor blasted the “progressive promises” made by Williams and Orleans Parish Sheriff Susan Hutson, who each were elected amid a post-George Floyd wave of legal reforms.
“New Orleans handed the jail keys to those who vowed to keep criminals out of jail,” Landry said.
Williams countered on Monday, saying his office’s murder clearance rates hover around 85%, which he called an “all-time high.”
“After we convict someone, it’s not on the DA’s office to go pick them up in a van and drive them up to (Louisiana State Penitentiary at) Angola,” Williams said. “That’s the state’s responsibility, by law.”
Williams added that criminal cases in Orleans Parish faced major delays during the COVID-19 pandemic, along with other delays in processing evidence from the state crime lab. He described Orleans Parish as one of the busiest courtrooms in the state, despite backlogs.
“To suggest that justice is not being served, because of the volume of cases that we have, that is factually dishonest, incorrect and disingenuous,” he added.
Williams said the governor did not contact him before accusing Williams of previously declining cases brought against five escapees, who picked up additional charges related to jail misconduct while they were in custody.
In response, Williams pointed the finger at Hutson, the sheriff. In each of those cases, Williams said, OPSO didn’t preserve video or other physical evidence needed to make a case.
“I understand the governor would like to know why we haven’t filed additional charges against those inmates,” Williams said. “The simple answer is we never got the evidence from the sheriff’s office.”
Representatives from Landry's office and Hutson's office didn't immediately return messages seeking comment.
Like my little cousins used to say: That niggah dumb.This mothafucka![]()