Virginia court removed a leftist prosecutor from a playground violence case


A court in Virginia has dismissed a liberal Loudoun County prosecutor from a case involving the father of a girl who was sexually assaulted by a 15-year-old boy in a public school toilet after the latter used the facility’s lenient transgender regulations to gain entry.

At Stone Bridge High School in Ashburn, Virginia, in May of last year, the unknown student attacked Scott Smith’s daughter, prompting school administrators to deny the child had been sexually assaulted when she reported the rape.

The school’s gender-neutral toilets, where the rape took place, were confirmed by authorities during a meeting of the Loudoun County school board one month later.

After instructors falsely claimed they hadn’t received accusations of sex assaults in the girls’ restrooms, Smith reacted angrily and was hauled out of a school board meeting by police in images that were captured on camera and went viral.

Due to his age, DailyMail.com will not identify the 15-year-old rapist who sexually assaulted Smith’s daughter and another girl at a different school in October. He has subsequently been found guilty of both offences.

Smith, on the other hand, was charged with disorderly conduct and resisting arrest for the outburst in June during which he claimed that the school board was covering up the attack, which was later determined to have been a rape.

Following a successful battle to have prosecutor Buta Biberaj removed from the case, Smith was found guilty of two misdemeanours related to the board meeting: disorderly conduct and a later-dismissed obstruction charge. Smith is now attempting to appeal the remaining charge.

Smith said that Muslim immigrant Biberaj, one of many “woke” district attorneys supported by Democratic megadonor and billionaire George Soros, had a “clear prejudice” and was out to “make an example” of the Virginia parent.

According to a court order issued on Tuesday, Loudoun County Circuit Court Judge James Plowman found Smith’s argument to be “persuasive” and “sufficiently grounded,” and as a result, the father’s “due process rights” were in jeopardy.

However, he did not find “sufficient grounds” to establish a “direct conflict” that would allow the dismissal.

Then, for the second time in as many months, he would approve the dismissal of the prosecutor.

The shocking decision followed Bill Stanley, the Smith family’s attorney, vehemently arguing at a hearing in May that top Loudoun prosecutor Biberaj was intrinsically prejudiced against Smith, impeding Smith’s right to a fair trial.

The judge’s decision to dismiss the jurist follows one similar judgement in which he dismissed the Commonwealth’s Attorney from a burglary case from June in which he said Biberja’s office had intentionally misled the public.

Judge James Plowman, who was the Loudon Commonwealth Attorney prior to Biberaj’s election in 2019, said in that case that a flawed plea deal negotiated by Biberaj, who repeatedly downplayed the Hispanic suspect’s criminal history, demonstrated her inability to prosecute the case “consistent with professional standards.”

Now, Biberaj, who has received $861,039 from George Soros’ Super PAC in 2019, has been rejected once again; Plowman has once more provided an explanation for his choice.

The court said, “The position as expressed by counsel for the Defendant during oral argument is convincing.”

“The worries about public trust in the prosecution’s honesty as well as the defendant’s doubts about the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s objectivity are properly based.”

He granted Smith’s motion and said, “As a consequence, the integrity of the Defendant’s due process rights is in threat and must be maintained.”

The matter has been moved to a different county, and Eric Olsen, the Commonwealth’s Attorney for Stafford, is now in charge of the appeal for disorderly conduct.

Both of Smith’s attorneys welcomed Plowman’s decision as a triumph after the verdict.

According to Bill Stanley, the Virginia dad’s attorney, “Scott Smith and his family have only ever requested that the Loudoun County school system safeguard their daughter and treat them properly; it has not done so.”

In his effort to defend his precious daughter, Stanley continued, “The Court’s Order today has returned his hope for a fair trial on the remaining case against him and has somewhat remedied the unfairness caused by Ms. Biberaj’s partiality against Mr. Smith.”

“We are really appreciative of the Court’s decision.”

Smith also praised the news in his own statement, repeating allegations that the prosecutor had intended to use the furious parent as a scapegoat for her own political objectives.

“The cornerstone of a free society is a fair criminal justice system that is devoid of both prejudice and political goals,” Smith said.

“Ms. Biberaj has wanted to make an example of me from the beginning for just speaking up to protect my daughter at the now-famous Loudoun County School Board meeting,” the author claims.

He stated, “Buta Biberaj has shown prejudice against me throughout the legal procedures, and she has continued to feed the fires of those who would designate parents like me who defend our children against risky school practises as “domestic terrorists.”

Nothing is more false than what is said.

In May, Smith was seen being detained and hauled from a contentious school board meeting with his chest exposed after he objected to the board’s rules about gender-neutral restrooms. Officials bizarrely resorted to this strategy after first denying that a rape had occurred.

Smith had attempted to inform that same room weeks previously that his daughter had been raped by the boy in the girls’ toilet at Stone Bridge High School.

With Biberaj’s assistance, the youngster was subsequently transferred to Broad Run High School, where he is said to have abused another pupil.

Until his next court date, the juvenile rapist is being held in juvenile custody.

Later, Biberaj would defend her choice to transfer the 15-year-old kid to a different school while attempting to have Smith arrested for his outburst on charges of disorderly conduct and resisting arrest.

The student was subsequently charged with two charges of forceful sodomy, and Smith was given a suspended sentence of 10 days in prison, subject to a year of good conduct.

The kid was then given an ankle monitor and moved to a another school, where he was subsequently charged with sexually assaulting a different female student.

The details of the occurrence are still unknown.

Biberaj still supported the option to transfer the kid to a different school, stating that it was based on the knowledge available at the time and the belief that it was unlikely the youngster would commit another crime.

Biberaj bizarrely said at the time, “We thought based on the evidence that he had no history of having done this previous to this violation that was claimed.”

According to Biberaj, who spoke to Fox 5, “I would beg this: for people to be patient because as we know often what is originally reported is not then what the eventual outcome of all the facts are.” Never once did the prosecutor make a statement about what those further facts were.

But eventually, on October 25, a judge’substantiated’ accusations of forced sodomy and forceful fellatio, the juvenile equivalent of a conviction, and the 15-year-old boy was found guilty of the attack.

However, Biberaj’s issues did not stop there.

As a result of her hesitation to bring charges against the kid, whose nationality has not been made public, Biberaj has come under fire for the way she has run her office. One former prosecutor said that staff members were “pushed to bail individuals out in domestic violence situations.”

After FOX 5 discovered that Biberaj employed a convicted sex offender as a paralegal earlier this year, the head of the Loudon County Board of Supervisors likewise expressed her fury with Biberaj.

Then, in June, Plowman made the decision to fire the progressive prosecutor from a burglary case involving Kevin Enrique Valle, 19, because he said she minimised the serial offender’s criminal past.

Valle was suspected of participating in a “potential 12 burglary crime spree spanning four counties over 10 days” and was charged with two felonies for burglary and two misdemeanours for property damage and fake identity.

However, an attorney from Biberaj’s office, Michele Burton, generated uproar by offering Valle a six-month plea agreement by downplaying his prior criminal history and omitting additional burglary accusations brought against him. Instead of pursuing the adolescent to the greatest extent of the law.

In response, Plowman argued that the plea agreement incorrectly claimed that the offences were all committed last year within a few hours, rather than over the course of ten days.

Plowman also brought up the fact that Valle had a juvenile past, was now facing more criminal charges, and had already admitted guilt to three prior offences.

According to court documents acquired by DailyMail.com, Valle had more than 40 charges pending against him in several counties throughout Virginia, including ones for grand theft, burglary, and carrying a hidden weapon—a record that Biberaj’s office simply ignored.

At the time, he said in a letter, “Biberaj and the Loudon County Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office is thus REMOVED AND DISQUALIFIED from further prosecution as counsel of record in this issue.”

Following that ruling, the state’s Republican attorney general, Jason Miyares, wrote to the top judge to express his belief that Biberaj and her office had lost the court’s “justifiable trust.”

According to a story at the time by Fox News, he indicated that his staff was prepared to support and even prosecute the case.

Insisting that her office was functioning legally despite this, Biberaj even petitioned the State Supreme Court, requesting that the ruling be set aside and barring the court from excluding her office from the case. These petitions were rejected.

In the context of the most recent judgement, Biberaj once again questioned Plowman’s justification for excluding her from Smith’s ongoing assault appeal and expressed astonishment at the decision.

Since I was never given the chance to return and discuss the disorderly conduct, I’m surprised by the court’s ruling, Biberaj told WTOP.

She is adamant that she had no bias against Smith and that if the father had “accepted responsibility,” the case might have been settled months ago.

Smith’s forthcoming trial will cover the last disorderly conduct allegation he is facing.

Meanwhile, the family of the classmate who was raped by the adolescent from Loudoun County known as the “kid in a skirt” kindly urged a court to transfer him to a residential treatment facility rather than prison earlier this year, sparing him from going to jail.

Additionally, the adolescent apparently isn’t transgender and just wore the skirt to enter the gender-neutral restroom.

I am happy by the Court’s fair and just judgement, and I look forward to demonstrating my innocence for my acts at the June 22, 2021 Loudoun County School Board meeting at the next criminal trial, Smith said on Tuesday in response to the court’s decision to dismiss Biberaj.


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