Domestic violence defendant allowed bail after social movement murders victim hours later

Domestic violence defendant allowed bail after social movement murders victim hours later


A domestic abuse suspect was freed after being granted bail thanks to a social movement, only for him to kill the scared victim of his alleged assault hours later.

The mother of his children, Rachel Angel Abraham, was reportedly stabbed and strangled to death in Portland, Oregon, in July by Mohamed Osman Adan, 33.

According to reports, Adan entered Abraham’s townhouse, disconnected his GPS monitor, and killed Abraham brutally.

Adan was ordered to stay in detention the day before by Multnomah County Circuit Judge Jerry B. Hodson, who also rejected petitions for his release or a reduced bond.

But the Portland Freedom Fund, which is administered by a 43-year-old bankrupt named Amanda Trujillo, paid his $20,000 bail.

Despite Abraham shared her concern that Adan might hurt her and prosecutors advocating against his release, the fund made the payment.

The Freedom Fund issued a non-apology for their part in the horrifying murder on Facebook, and Adan is now back on bail.

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The disastrous outcomes of awakened social justice organisations and judges releasing dangerous criminals into the streets to further racial “equity” are nothing new, but Adan’s case is the most recent in a long series of horrifying examples.

The abuser and ex-boyfriend of Rachel Angel Abraham, 36, a mother of six, is Mohamed Osman Adan, 33.

Despite her orders of protection against him, she was brutally killed; police believe Adan was responsible for the strangled and stabbing death in July.

Adan was detained after being accused of disobeying a no-contact order relating to domestic abuse, but was released because Amanda Trujillo, co-president of The Portland Freedom Fund, provided $2,000 of his $20,000 bond.

He carried out the vicious deed on the mother of his six children one week after being released.

The Multnomah County-based nonprofit headed by Trujillo identifies itself as a “volunteer-run abolitionist organisation that posts bail for Black, Indigenous, and people of colour as well as anyone susceptible to COVID-19.” According to the organisation, grants and contributions help to fund its operations.

Trujillo herself has declined to make any direct comments on the tragedy that her group is accused of being the spark for. She has at least five speeding-related felony offences and is bankrupt.

Mohamed Osman Adan, 33, was detained for the brutal killing of Rachel Angel Abraham, 36, and Multnomah County Circuit Judge Jerry B. Hodson had refused requests for his release or a lower bail the day before the heinous crime.

This week’s first stunning event occurred in New York City when a person suspected of killing someone in Times Square was released on bond.

Jesus Ramirez, a 28-year-old serial violent offender, was granted freedom by acting Supreme Court Justice Suzanne Adams.

Ramirez had a long criminal history that included over 30 arrests and four prison terms. He was a well-known drug dealer and had only been detained once before in 2011 when he was 17 years old for trespassing.

On August 27, the night of the murderous assault, Ramirez ran into Guarionex Torres, 49, in Times Square.

It became violent close to the Port Authority terminal. According to authorities, the two guys, who were both from the Bronx, had a passing acquaintance.

Police said Torres was “mutilated” after Ramirez attacked him so viciously with slashes and stabbings.

Ramirez allegedly threw himself at his defenceless victim while carrying a knuckle knife blade throughout the brutal assault.

According to the lawsuit, Torres suffered wounds to his neck and arm, a gash from his right ear to his left face, and a stab wound in his chest.

Ramirez abandoned the bicycle on the blood-spattered sidewalk and ran off on foot.

Police discovered Torres face down in his own blood with “pieces of his body hanging off,” a source told The Washington Post.

Ramirez was quickly apprehended while still wearing the murder weapon, which was stained with Torres’ blood.

Just two streets away from the fight’s site, Torres had been detained two weeks before for threatening someone with a hatchet. He was back on the streets after posting $3,500 cash bail, according to court documents obtained by The New York Daily News. He was charged with menacing and possessing weapons.

Judge Philip Thornton of the Pierce County Superior Court released 48-year-old serial offender Aaron Fulk and warned him to act properly.

However, eight days after leaving jail, Fulk killed Rodney Peterman, 66, in an unprovoked attack on August 2, 2022, using a three by four metal pole.

Peterman, a walker-dependent disabled man, was killed close to Pike Place Market, a well-known tourist destination in Seattle.

Peterman was shocked bystanders who attempted CPR on him, but he never became conscious and passed away at the hospital four days later.

Fulk was detained after making an attempt to flee the scene.

On July 25, Fulk was charged with felony harassment after it was claimed that he had threatened to kill a member of the Tacoma, Washington, transit system.

Fulk was released on his own recognisance and without bail after Thornton rejected the prosecution’s request for a bail of $10,000 and a condition that he refrain from committing any crimes.

Fulk was found guilty of attempted assault in 2018 and of disorderly conduct, making false statements, and careless driving in 2011. According to court records, there was an aggravating battery in 1994 in Coeur D’Alene, Idaho, KING5 News reported.

Despite the fact that Matthew Velardo, 22, was being held on criminal charges after being arrested, New York District Judge Leticia Ramirez released him from custody.

According to court documents, Velardo was apprehended in possession of an American Tactical.22 rifle with an extended magazine holding hundreds of rounds of ammunition, which was hidden in the trunk of his vehicle, The New York Post said.

Velardo was supposed to be put under $50,000 bail, a $150,000 bond, or a $150,000 secured bond, according to the Bronx District Attorney Darcel Clark’s office, but the court disregarded their request.

Additionally, she ignored the pleadings of the prosecution and gave Velardo supervised freedom.

Ramirez released Velardo on the same day that she set bail for suspected murderer and Bronx smoke shop employee Vernon Gowdy, 54, at only $5,000. Gowdy was charged with murder, manslaughter, and illegal possession of a firearm in the death of Kenneth Fair, 59.

Before Gowdy stabbed the deceased in the neck, the former Parks Department employee brutally killed Fair, a homeless man, who had reportedly engaged in a verbal altercation with Gowdy’s superior.

Gowdy has a lengthy criminal past dating back to the 1990s, with 15 previous arrests.

Assamad Nash, 25, allegedly followed Christina Yuna Lee, 35, inside her Chinatown apartment and fatally stabbed her more than 40 times. Nash had eight previous offences on his record.

The horrific act happened on February 13, 2022.

But five weeks before to the brutal murder, Judge Herb Moses had granted Nash supervised release and asked him to frequently check in with the courts to monitor the progress of his case.

Mayor Eric Adams and a number of other political officials were furious that Nash was walking the streets of Manhattan when three court proceedings were still pending against him.

The criminal record of the homeless Nash comprised 18 previous arrests, along with accusations of robbery, carjacking, and burglary.

In September 2021, Lee was accused of assaulting a guy at a metro turnstile. In January 2022, only weeks before Lee was brutally murdered, Lee was accused of eluding police while being detained for criminal mischief.

After three arrests in a four-month period, Nash was released on supervised release prior to the brutal killing of Lee.

Bail might have been imposed by the Manhattan courts who presided over Nash’s prior offences, but they chose not to.

The three judges, the former district attorney Cy Vance, and the prosecutor under him and his successor Alvin Bragg did not demand that Nash have a psychological test. Nor did Nash’s Legal Aid attorneys.

Murder suspect is released by NYC Judge April Newbauer with NO BAIL

On September 20, 2020, Eugene Clark, 54, severely assaulted Ramon Luna, 67, near East 125th Street and Lexington Avenue in East Harlem.

The crime was also committed by two other suspects.

Luna was beaten by the suspect so badly that he went into a coma and died in August 2021 as a result of his wounds.

After serving six months in prison on a robbery conviction previous to the assault, Clark had just received his parole.

Luna admitted to the offence, according to the prosecution, nine days after the assault. Initially, he was accused of grand theft and freed on bond.

After Luna’s passing, the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office reviewed the case in August, and on February 2 a grand jury in Manhattan’s Supreme Court indicted Clark for second-degree murder.

The career criminal, whose criminal history spans to the 1980s and includes gang violence, robbery, and illicit drug sales For second-degree robbery, Clark received a 4.5-year prison term in 1984. In 1988, he received a parole discharge.

He received a ten-year term for first-degree robbery and the illegal selling of a dangerous narcotic at the beginning of 2001.

Additionally, he was granted parole in 2013 and finished it in 2020, one month before Ramon Luna was attacked.

According to a report, he was under post-release monitoring until August 2022.

Clark was freed on his own recognisance and without posting bail after his arraignment on March 10, 2021. Judge April Newbauer granted the prosecution’s request that Clark be censured without being given bail.


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