Muslim woman accused of punching police officer has charges against her dropped
Posted By Pamela Geller On
Photo: The woman, whose name is suppressed, leaves court on Monday after Magistrate Margaret McGlynn dropped the charges against her
Not only did she punch a cop, but she threatened to slit his throat.
Special rights for a special class. Savagery pays in the modern age of the primitive.
Islamic supremacism is the common theme of Islam in the West as well as Islam everywhere else. From ISIS to CAIR —
Not only did she hit a police officer but this pious Muslim The court abused Senior-Constable Stacie Gwyn after her phone was seized from underneath her burqa saying: “Don’t touch my phone, you’re a whore, you are Christian, you will burn in hell. You will be the first one in uniform to have your throat slit.”
Feminist groups were unavailable for comment.
“Muslim woman accused of punching police officer has charges against her dropped,” By Sarah Crawford, The Daily Telegraph, [1] September 1, 2015, (thanks to Kenneth):The woman leaving Parramatta Local Court yesterday.A MUSLIM woman accused of punching one police officer and threatening to slit the throat of another when she was searched during a counter-terrorism raid has had charges against her dismissed after a magistrate deemed the officers’ actions unlawful.The 24-year-old, whose name was suppressed, walked free from Parramatta Local Court yesterday after Magistrate Margaret McGlynn dismissed charges of intimidating and assaulting police in the execution of their duty.The court heard the woman abused Senior-Constable Stacie Gwyn after her phone was seized from underneath her burqa saying: “Don’t touch my phone, you’re a whore, you are Christian, you will burn in hell. You will be the first one in uniform to have your throat slit.”She was then accused of punching Probationary Constable Shaun Temur in the nose when he tried to restrain her. Ms McGlynn said her threat to the female police officer was “religious vilification combined with threats of violence” making it a “most serious offence.”But the magistrate concluded police failed to make the case because the officers had, unknown to the them, conducted an unlawful search of the woman which meant they were not acting “in the execution of their duty”.Ms McGlynn upheld the woman’s defence she was illegally detained and searched because she was not named on the warrant and therefore police had no authority to frisk her.Ms McGlynn said the law surrounding the arrest and search of people by police must be complied with “so the community is safe from an excessive invasion of their person”.The woman’s lawyers will now make an application for NSW police to pay costs, likely to be in excess of $15,000.A spokesperson for Police Minister Troy Grant said NSW police prosecutions was reviewing the judgment.
No comments:
Post a Comment