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Soros-backed Central Florida prosecutor allows man charged with molesting child to avoid prison

Orange-Osceola State Attorney Monique Worrell has once again been credibly accused of treating a child molester with kid gloves.

Worrell, a Democrat prosecutor who was first elected to office in 2021, is a Soros-funded leftist who’s repeatedly been caught treating dangerous criminals with kid gloves:

Her latest mishandling of crime involves a longtime child molester named Peter Washington.

According to Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier, a Republican, Washington was convicted of attempting to rape a child under 12 in 1995. He was arrested again for molesting a child over the age of 12 in 2023.

For his second offense, he faced up to 27 years in prison. Yet Worrell decided to pursue a paltry sentence of just 15 years of probation instead.

Uthmeier has been on Worrell’s case for a while now — and rightly so, it appears. Earlier this week, he drew attention to another case involving her.

This time around, she drastically reduced the charges being faced by a man who’d opened fire on his ex-girlfriend 12 times while she was in the drive-through at a fast-food restaurant.

“In defiance of the Florida Legislature, she allowed Alain Barrett to escape mandatory minimum sentences after he shot at his ex-girlfriend twelve times in an attempt to murder her,” Uthmeier explained in a tweet. “Thanks to her, he will likely spend less than 10 years behind bars.”

“This was first-degree attempted murder, but State Attorney Worrell pled it down to a second-degree offense without a firearm,” Uthmeier added in the video above. “She waived the mandatory minimums in the case.”

Earlier this fall, Uthmeier also demanded that Worrell explain why she’d handed out light sentences in several other cases involving children.

One case involved a 61-year-old man accused of masturbating in front of children at a public park, and the other case involved a man who shared videos of the rape of infants and toddlers.

“These dismissals lacked sufficient legal justification, exhibit gross abuses of discretion, pose serious threats to public safety, and undermine the public’s confidence in the administration of justice,” Uthmeier wrote to Worrell in a letter last month.

Worrell subsequently sought to defend her decision in the masturbation case.

“All things that are wrong are not illegal,” she said during a press conference. “And I’m not standing before you today telling you that what happened in that park was wrong. But I am standing before you today telling you that I trust the word of the attorney who was assigned to this case when he said, ‘Although those actions were wrong, he could not prove beyond a reasonable doubt that they were illegal.’”

Uthmeier didn’t buy the excuse:

In a statement made to Florida’s Voice, Worrell called Uthmeier’s criticisms a “predicable pattern meant to undermine trust in law enforcement and build another political witch hunt to overturn the will of the voters who overwhelmingly re-elected me back into office.”

“If the Attorney General does not like the law as written, he should take those concerns to the legislature and stop wasting taxpayer resources on baseless political attacks and attempts to interfere with this office,” she added.

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Vivek Saxena
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