North Carolina Finally Scrapes Cashless Bail Off the Books After Iryna Zarutska Tragedy - 🔔 The Liberty Daily

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(Substack)—North Carolina lawmakers just rammed through a tough new criminal justice bill with enough votes to steamroll any veto, all sparked by the brutal murder of 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska on Charlotte’s light rail back in August. The House voted 82-30 to pass House Bill 307, with even a chunk of Democrats jumping on board, right after the Senate gave it the green light. This guts cashless bail for violent suspects and cranks up the heat on pretrial releases, finally addressing the kind of revolving-door justice that let a dangerous thug roam free and end an innocent life.

Take the CNN report on this: “In response to the stabbing death of a Ukrainian refugee on Charlotte’s light rail system, the North Carolina legislature gave final approval Tuesday to a criminal justice package that limits bail and seeks to ensure more defendants undergo mental health evaluations.”

It’s a direct and necessary smackdown on the lax policies that failed Zarutska. She fled war-torn Ukraine only to get knifed on public transit. The bill now mandates mental health checks for defendants, aiming to catch the unhinged before they strike again. No more pretending every lowlife deserves a free pass while victims pay the price.

The New York Post lays it out clear: “Among other changes, the bill would get rid of cashless bail and add an ‘aggravated sentencing factor’ for crimes committed against public transportation passengers.”

Getting rid of cashless bail means judges can’t just wave violent offenders back onto the streets without a dime changing hands, a move that’s long overdue in a state plagued by repeat criminals. That aggravated factor? It slaps extra time on sentences for attacks like the one on Zarutska.

Perhaps some thugs will think twice before turning buses and trains into killing grounds. Public transport should be a safe ride, not a gamble with your life because some soft judge decided bail is optional.

Then there’s the part that really packs a punch: “The bill also includes an amendment that would ‘seek to revive the death penalty’ in the state, which has had a de facto moratorium on capital punishment in place since 2006.”

North Carolina hasn’t executed anyone in nearly two decades, thanks to endless legal stalls and drug shortages for lethal injections. This amendment could kickstart the process again, clearing the way for justice in heinous cases like Zarutska’s murder. Why the freeze? Botched executions and lawsuits over methods have kept the chamber empty, but with monsters like her killer facing charges that could warrant the ultimate penalty, it’s a step toward real deterrence.

Decarlos Brown Jr., the guy arrested for the stabbing, was a walking red flag. He was out on the streets because Judge Teresa Stokes let him walk on cashless bail for prior violent charges, despite his rap sheet screaming “danger.” A repeat violent offender with a history of trouble, Brown slashed Zarutska’s throat on that light rail train, turning a routine commute into a bloodbath.

The Justice Department isn’t messing around either, with Attorney General Pam Bondi stating, “I have directed my attorneys to federally prosecute DeCarlos Brown Jr., a repeat violent offender with a history of violent crime, for murder.”

Federal charges on top of state ones mean this could go all the way to the death penalty, both levels carrying that weight. It’s a grim reminder that when judges play fast and loose with bail, innocent people like Zarutska—a young woman who escaped one hell only to find another—end up dead.

Now the ball’s in Democratic Gov. Josh Stein’s court. His spokesperson says he’s “reviewing the measure,” but with that veto-proof majority, any attempt to block it would just look like more coddling of criminals. Stein, the ex-attorney general, has mumbled support for some pretrial reforms after the murder, but we’ll see if he puts public safety over party politics. North Carolina deserves better than the failed experiments that got them here—experiments that lawmakers themselves blasted at a press conference, calling out the 2023 Pretrial Integrity Act as not tough enough to stop tragedies like this.

Bottom line: This bill, dubbed “Iryna’s Law” in some circles, is a win for sanity in a system that’s been bleeding out from bleeding-heart policies. It took a senseless slaughter to force the change, and that’s the real shame. Let’s hope other states wake up before they bury more victims of their own making.