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Prosecutors Crying As They Like Their Dirty Diapers Rule 8.3.b
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Prosecutors Crying As They Like Their Dirty Diapers Rule 8.3.b

Monday, July 28, 2025

These prosecutors are crying because they like the smell of their dirty diapers. Example One: The dirty diaper of City of Enumclaw Police, King County Prosecutors, and corrupted Detective Grant McCall, who engaged in a conspired hate crime prosecutors refused to investigate. Let these whiny prosecutors fix their corruptions first, then come back crying. Besides, this prosecutor crying is for show only, as these prosecutors know there are not enough honorable judges in Washington State that will reign in their destructive power. Prosecutors always cry they need more power, more money, and more respect - ignore them as these tears are the same old manipulative lies. - The Consider Podcast

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Crying For Their Dirty Diaper Quote

“This can’t be serious. This is really appalling. I didn’t think that it was actually going to be approved,” State Rep. Lauren Davis (D-Shoreline) said of the rule change on “The Jason Rantz Show” on KTTH.

Note: Mr. Rantz is missing the positive aspect of this power. Because of his far too narrow focus on "law and order" at all costs rather than "justice and order," this power enables judges to rein in rogue prosecutors/police full of corruption. It just depends on how honorable the Judge is whether Rule 8.3.b winds up becoming a good or bad application of the law. However, prosecutors deserve this rule and many more like it!

More Crying For Their Dirty Diaper Quote

Senior prosecutors warned this would erode faith in the justice system. Colin Hayes from Clark County called it “unnecessary” and a recipe for “disparate outcomes.” King County’s Lucy Pippin said it “untethers the rule from due process” and would allow criminals to benefit even when they weren’t wronged.

Snohomish County Prosecutor Jason Cummings, a Democrat, is also alarmed that activist judges will abuse this new rule. He says the very reason we made previous reforms to ensure everyone will be treated fairly, whether a judge makes a ruling in Seattle, Yakima, Sultan, or Vancouver.

“It was all based in the premise we need to make sure people are treated the same,” Cummings explained on “The Jason Rantz Show” on KTTH. “This rule change effectively will allow judges, based on maybe they’re more an activist judge versus more traditional judge, of just missing cases where there’s been absolutely no prejudice to the rights of accused, affecting the right to a fair trial and that’s extremely disappointed.” BY JASON RANTZ Talk Show Host and Columnist at AM 770 KTTH

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