Memphis Voters Dump Harsh D.A. in Favor of Criminal Justice Reformer
Let’s perhaps stop trying to tease national trends out of the complexities of local public safety issues.

Memphis-area voters have booted out a Republican district attorney with a reputation for harsh tactics—which included getting a woman sentenced to prison for six years for registering to vote—in favor of a Democratic challenger promising reforms.
Amy Weirich, Republican district attorney for Shelby County, Tennessee, has been dumped by voters in favor of Democrat Steve Mulroy, who has promised to take a look at bail policies for the county and to start a conviction integrity unit to review prior cases for possible mistakes.
The election was Thursday, and as of noon Friday, Shelby County results have Mulroy firmly ahead, 76,280 votes to 59,364 votes. Mulroy, 58, is a law professor, former federal prosecutor, and a former civil rights lawyer for the Department of Justice under President Bill Clinton. His platform promises an emphasis on prioritizing violent offenses for prosecution and alternatives to prison for nonviolent offenses. He wants to avoid cash bail in cases where individual defendants aren't flight risks or dangers to the community to avoid leaving them stuck in pretrial detention simply because they can't pay. He also says he wants to increase spending on law enforcement and hire more police officers, and he endorses "red flag" laws to allow courts to take guns away from people deemed "dangerous." (Read Reason's Jacob Sullum on the problems with such laws.)
Meanwhile, Weirich's harsher methods and ethics have drawn criticism. In 2021, she prosecuted Pamela Moses for violating the law by attempting to register to vote. Moses had lost the right to vote in Tennessee for a previous conviction but said she had been told by a corrections officer that she could have her right to vote restored if she had completed probation. That officer was wrong. But Weirich's office went after Moses, and when she insisted on a jury trial for the chance to prove her innocence, the D.A.'s office threw the book at her. When she was convicted, her office asked for and received a six-year sentence for Moses, seemingly as punishment for fighting back and not accepting a plea deal.
Subsequently, the state revealed that it was, in fact, their fault that Moses got bad advice and acknowledged its error at the time that Moses was convicted. A judge determined that prosecutors failed to disclose this evidence at the trial. The judge ordered a new trial for Moses, upon which Weirich announced her office was dropping the charges. Bolts magazine has more detail about the bizarre crusade against Moses and Tennessee's harsh and confusing voter disenfranchisement mechanisms here.
It's also worth noting that despite the tough-on-crime rhetoric on Weirich's part, Memphis has seen the same kind of violent crime spikes that cities across the country have been experiencing for the past two years.
Considering the recent recall of progressive criminal justice reformer Chesa Boudin in San Francisco with the rejection of Weirich in Shelby County, it may be helpful to stop trying to make national trends out of these individual elections. Instead, consider that perhaps people want to feel safe without necessarily wanting the hammer of justice to come slamming down on people who clearly don't deserve it (like Moses). The way Boudin approached reforms didn't make people feel safe in the face of various public safety concerns, and Weirich's tough stance and overly harsh conduct didn't either.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
No Black mother should have to fear for her son's life when he robs a liquor store.
#CriminalJusticeReformNOW
Don't hold people who are not a "danger to the community" or a "flight risk" on cash bond. I mean just because the guy is in the country illegally and is accused of breaking into a woman's house and raping her doesn't mean he is a flight risk or a danger. Hey, we don't know that he raped that woman and he clearly wants to be in the US or else he wouldn't have come here in the first place. So, what reason is there to think he will leave?
This is exactly the way people like Shackford think. If it didn't cause so much harm, it would be funny.
I am a student and I do work part time on this website to meet my needs. One who is jobless or want to earn more money for himself, (buc-55) should must try this because this is really very easy and less time consuming and also advantageous without investing any amount.
.
SEE MORE:>>>> https://workofferweb24.pages.dev/
or killing a McDonalds Employee for serving allegedly cold french fries. This is where Shariah's Law makes sense: amputate, decapitate, mame, whatever it takes, violent thugs when caught in the act before a George Soros DA lets them walk gratis.
All of the people who end up being victimized by the criminals the Soros DA's let walk are just poor and brown people anyway. It is not like they are important or warrant any concern in Shackford's view of the world.
Is this DA another Soros creep?
I am creating eighty North American nation greenbacks per-hr. to finish some web services from home. I actually have not ever thought adore it would even realisable but my friend mate got $27k solely in four weeks simply doing this best csv19 assignment and conjointly she convinced Maine to avail. Look further details going this web-page.
.
---------->>> https://smartpay241.blogspot.com
The way Boudin approached reforms didn't make people feel safe in the face of various public safety concerns, and Weirich's tough stance and overly harsh conduct didn't either.
The approach didn't make people "feel unsafe". It wasn't there imagination you disgusting moron. They were unsafe. Crime rates went through the roof. Literally thousands of people were victims of violent crimes up to and including rape and murder as a result of Boudain policies. Being a leftist, Shackford couldn't care less about those people. But, it would be nice if he would at least admit they really were victims and didn't just imagine the whole thing. Being a leftwing Alex Jones is not a good look.
Look, if they want to identify as victims and declare their pronouns to be 'the unsafe', what obligation is it of Scott's to respect that, huh?
Scott, did you hear about how to have fun this weekend with your
paid sexworkerdate? Straight from the CDC's orifice:Masturbate together at a distance of at least 6 feet, without touching each other and without touching any rash," the CDC recommends. "Remember to wash your hands, fetish gear, sex toys and any fabrics (bedding, towels, clothing) after having sex."
"Consider having sex with your clothes on or covering areas where rash is present, reducing as much skin-to-skin contact as possible. If the rash is confined to the genitals or anus, condoms may help; however, condoms alone are likely not enough to prevent monkeypox."
Stop pretending anyone takes you seriously cupcake. As a homosexual you are the bitter queen many of us gay men have sought to avoid in real life. Your screeds are copy and paste talking points from George Soros DNC. Grow a pair.
Happy Pride
How much did George Soros give Shackford's soft of crime Democrat candidate for DA?
She was probably the only Republican to ever win an election in traditionally deep blue Memphis.
In Memphis she was there for 12 years and has a long record and some highly publicized misfires, to attack and the voters decided to go with someone else. Happens all the time. But Boudain was thrown out by the far left, after only 2 years of being one of the most incompetent prosecutors in History leaving behind a trail of crimes, murders, robberies - there didn't seem to be any crime she was interested in prosecuting.
"Considering the recent recall of progressive criminal justice reformer Chesa Boudin in San Francisco..."
Still crying over this Scott? SMH
Of course the pro-crime, pro-criminal leftist Scott is still skimping for the marxist Boudin; they're two of a kind.
Amy Weirich, Republican district attorney for Shelby County, Tennessee, has been dumped by voters in favor of Democrat Steve Mulroy, who has promised to take a look at bail policies for the county and to start a conviction integrity unit to review prior cases for possible mistakes.
Combined with this:
Let’s perhaps stop trying to tease national trends out of the complexities of local public safety issues.
Have to agree with you on this one, Scott. Memphis kicked out their strong, independent female DA by the mansplaining Steve Mulroy. Tease a national trend out of that.
how long can Reason sustain Scott Shackford, ENB, et al, who are clearly hated by Reason readers? Even CNN came to grips with their millstone anchors
The one who proposed a red wedding via twitter to all conservative writers should have been sacked on the spot.
Hey, Shackford's on solid ground here. I agree with him "that perhaps people want to feel safe without necessarily wanting the hammer of justice to come slamming down on people who clearly don't deserve it." Neither Boudin or Weirich are prosecutors who bring justice to the criminals that deserve it. Failing to prosecute criminals is just about as bad as going after people who've acted in good faith (regardless of their past record assuming they've done their time/fine). Neither protects and serves the public.
And I wholeheartedly agree "Let’s perhaps stop trying to tease national trends out of the complexities of local public safety issues." Consider how the Democrats made a national issue (blaming Trump, and systemic racism) for the deaths and oppression of blacks (and other poor people), for how Democrat mayors hire, train and manage their self-admitted racist police. They made it a national issue, when it really was an issue about how Democrats use the police to oppress blacks and the poor, or anyone not supporting Democrats.
I don't know much about this "too local" story... but I'm going to guess that whatever the new DA supports, Memphis I strongly suspect that Memphis voters would not have much patience for a homelessness-industrial-complex candidate who wanted to abolish the police and put every criminal into a diversion program.
But again, I'm not really knowledgeable about Memphis local politics.
Blue dot in a red state
The Koch / Soros / Reason soft-on-crime #FreeTheCriminals and #EmptyThePrisons agenda may have suffered a setback when Boudin was recalled. But we'll keep fighting to create an America in which no crime (except INSURRECTION of course) is punished by more than 2 months behind bars.
#BillionairesKnowBest
#CheapLaborAboveAll
We'll see if Bill Lee has the balls to remove him if needed.
Der Fuehrer DeSantis removed a twice elected state's attorney in Tampa yesterday who was known for prosecutorial restraint and who pledged to not go after abortion seekers and providers. He'll regret heating up that campaign issue.
I'm sure he'll "regret" it while he's having breakfast in the White House on Jan. 21, 2025.
Will he be invited there by Pete Buttigieg?
Yeah joe, everyone loves child molestors so goddamn much.
Do we really want prosecutors alone deciding what laws to enforce or not? Nobody elected them to do that.
Prosecutors always exercise discretion and this guy was elected, then reelected, unlike DeSantis who has won one contest for governor by 30k votes out of 8 million cast. How this asshole thinks that makes him dictator of the entire state, running over local elected leaders and businesses, tells you what you need to know.
Local businesses? Does that include the megacorporation which was deprived of its company-town status in certain communities?
Fuck off and die, Asshole.
Fuck you asshole.
THAT's the spirit!
The libertarian case for arbitrary discretion in enforcing the law.
Do not engage Joe Asshole; simply reply with insults.
Not a one of his posts is worth refuting; like turd he lies and never does anything other than lie. If something in one of Joe Asshole’s posts is not a lie, it is there by mistake. Joe Asshole lies; it's what he does.
Joe Asshole is a psychopathic liar; he is too stupid to recognize the fact, but everybody knows it. You might just as well attempt to reason with or correct a random handful of mud as engage Joe Asshole.
Do not engage Joe Asshole; simply reply with insults; Joe Asshole deserves nothing other.
Eat shit and die, Asshole.
One again the majority of the people don't was the extremist positions of the Democrat or the Republican parties. The majority of the people want reasonable positions and for the most part want to be left alone to live their lives.
The black and white or Hobson's choice the Democrat and Republican parties offer isn't a choice that is worthy of accepting.
It is time citizens to vote for the third party of their choice. My preference is the Libertarian party, but for others it could be the Green party or others. The point is to break up the monopoly of the two party system.
LOL
Share the joke with the rest of the class!
So violent crime's going up in Memphis huh? Not that I was going to anyway but, guess I'm not going to be going through Memphis anytime soon......
I agree with Mulroy in theory if he sticks to what he claims is his approach. Just as I don't trust Republicans not to put the innocent in jail, I don't trust the Democrats not to get the guilty out of jail.
It seems there is a nice middle ground of enforcing the law, jury of peers, and investigations respecting rights.
Any way we could find common ground there?
Currently, I don’t think Florida has any stringent abortion laws on the books. But what exists should be enforced. It’s not the SA’s job to decide what laws should be enforced and what doesn’t.
" His platform promises an emphasis on prioritizing violent offenses for prosecution and alternatives to prison for nonviolent offenses. He wants to avoid cash bail in cases where individual defendants aren't flight risks or dangers to the community to avoid leaving them stuck in pretrial detention simply because they can't pay. He also says he wants to increase spending on law enforcement and hire more police officers, and he endorses "red flag" laws to allow courts to take guns away from people deemed "dangerous."
Aside from cash bail his platform is pretty much standard Republican policy. And as long as bail is required for violent offenses, really no big deal. This stands in contrast to the Soros prosecutors who put violent criminals back on the street on their own recognizance where they do shit like drive a red SUV through a parade. So the voters picked a Democrat over a Republican with some baggage. Meh.
Bail reform wouldn't be a big deal if criminal law weren't so complicated that trials take forever. You get accused of a crime, the question of your guilt should be decided before the second setting of the sun. The jury should be the 12 people you already have sitting there, waiting for whatever case comes. Did you do it? No? Any witnesses should already be there and go to court immediately; if you have to go looking for them, forget it, they don't care enough for their testimony to count anyway. If it took longer than that to find someone and accuse them, the case must not be that important, forget it.
In fact, the jury should be in a cruising van, and get called by radio to the scene of the alleged crime, so there's no waiting, and no need to bring anybody in.
If a case is too complicated to be handled in such a matter, forget it, criminal law should not be involved.
Durnedest coincidence... search "Pamela Moses" Tennessee, and the gal who turns up in the image search is the same color as that gal in Texas. Remember? The People's Ignorant Government Shysters sent Crystal Mason to the slammer for voting while black--that and convicted of insufficient zeal in helping the IRS rob people with a fountain pen. What kind of party would benefit from Jim Crow and night-rider racial voting restrictions in southern States today?
Memphis is also only 29% white. That would mess up your narrative though.
Fuck off and die, asshole.
I'll take making shit up for a $1000 Alex
Boudin's greatest mistake was a large driver in the boarding up of Union Square; the tourist shopping district in downtown SF.
He made it known that shoplifting under $950 in goods would not be a prosecutorial priority. Per perp.
So the thugs collected 10 or 15 of their closest friends and cleaned out a store, while any cops nearby twiddled their thumbs.
You can call this 'reformist', but it seems more honest to call it 'lefty stupidity'
Thanks for your beyond belief blogs stuff. looking for a Accountant Cambridge ? Check out this!
What could POSSIBLY go wrong?
Ask San Francisco, Chicago and Florida.
I was surprised they had a decent DA (or anything else) in Memphis. It a cesspool of the same type as Chicago, Baltimore, etc. only smaller and with a somewhat lower homicide rate. It's every bit as corrupt, just more of a low-budget corruption. The reason I don't pay attention is that while it is just across the river from my my little piece of paradise (NEA) I know we can easily block the bridges when everything goes south.