These Murders Don't Fit Into the Culture War
By glossing over routine crime victims in favor of stories with unorthodox circumstances, the press paints a distorted picture of a very real problem.

The national conversation around criminal justice feels uniquely polarized. That's quite the feat in an age where almost everything, it seems, is political. But the debate is dominated by fights between the extreme ends of the spectrum, obscuring some of the routine problems facing Americans and the relative consensus around how to solve those issues.
One such area of common ground: that people who violently and habitually violate other people's rights deserve to receive proportional responses for those offenses. The media obviously cannot, and should not, cover every single crime. But by consistently glossing over routine crime victims in favor of stories with more unorthodox circumstances, the national press paints a distorted picture of a very real problem.
Aréanah Preston's murder in Chicago provides an example of this media trend. Upon getting home from her shift as a police officer early on the morning of May 6, Preston, 24, was assailed by a group of men who'd allegedly spent the evening committing a string of armed robberies. Joseph Brooks, the 18-year-old who confessed to shooting Preston, had been arrested nine times since 2019 for armed robbery and carjacking, among other things. The remaining three suspects also have multiple previous arrests on a slew of serious charges, from armed robbery and carjacking to possession of a stolen vehicle and weapons offenses.
The point is not that Preston's story is special. The point is that it isn't special. It's commonplace, and that's the issue. But the Prestons of the world are far less likely to attract national attention, inspire news cycles, and spur debate. In some sense, we've subconsciously accepted that things like this happen to people like her in places like that.
There are many such stories. Here's another: In late March, Philip Meyers allegedly approached John Sarquiz from behind, sucker-punched him, and then kicked him multiple times in the head, killing him. Meyers—who had 17 prior arrests and a homicide conviction from 1999—took cash from Sarquiz and threw the wallet back on his dying body.
The odds are pretty high that you've never heard of Preston or Sarquiz. That's at least in part because stories like theirs rarely make it further than the tabloid or local press.
And yet, the subject of crime is not nearly as polarized as it appears. The inverse is true: More than three-fourths of Americans view violent crime as a major problem, according to a Politico/Morning Consult poll released in October. Since this debate is often portrayed along racial lines, it's worth looking at that too: In August 2020, at the height of racial justice protests after the murder of George Floyd, 81 percent of black Americans said they wanted the police presence in their area maintained or increased, according to a Gallup poll. When black residents in Detroit were surveyed on the most pressing issue in their communities, the top answer was public safety. These are the people who unfortunately experience the brunt of these injustices.
It's easy to deprioritize those like Preston and Sarquiz, however, when criminal justice is a culture war debate—as opposed to one grounded in policy, where, ideally, the system targets the small group of prolific offenders responsible for the majority of violent crime. Prioritizing these types of clear-cut offenses, which too often go unsolved, is part of the solution.
That's not to say there aren't very real injustices that the U.S. criminal legal system perpetuates against the public. When police violate people's constitutional rights, as they do far too often, victims with meritorious claims are often left without any recourse. People continue to be sentenced for charges on which they were acquitted or on which the jury hung. (No, that isn't a misprint, although this outrageous practice receives almost no attention from the media.) The law and those who apply it criminalize behavior that should not be criminal. Prosecutors sometimes weaponize their immense power to bring charges no rational person would bring, which includes coercing innocent people to plead guilty. When they violate the Constitution on the job, they are absolutely immune from accountability. And compassion should be a part of how the country punishes and deters bad behavior—an opinion I have made very clear.
To put it more plainly: The choice is not between "backing the blue" no matter what or "abolishing the police," although those are often the solutions portrayed on cable news and Twitter. The voices behind them are interesting, and it's understandable why they draw attention. But those options do not reflect the reality of the public safety policy debate.
The tragic killing of Jordan Neely in New York City birthed a weekslong news cycle and offered pundits left and right the chance to confirm all of their ideological priors. It's not every day a homeless man, whose life mattered, is choked to death on a subway train. Meanwhile, Preston and Sarquiz's deaths were unsurprising. Their murders were somehow simultaneously appalling and mundane—which is all the more reason not to look away.
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The media obviously cannot, and should not, cover every single crime.
Unless the shooter is a tranny. Then anyone who doesn't report it does so deliberately because they're leftist left-handed leftists spouting leftist leftism.
Right, Parsons?
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What I detest BLM and the woke crowd for more than anything else is how they derailed the hesitant and jerky progress towards police reform, set it back by a decade or two at least, because it didn't suit their fund-raising woke greenie agenda. There had been some small progress on qualified immunity, body cams, holding police accountable, civil asset forfeiture, a little bit of consensus starting to poke its head out of the Congressional sand, and *poof* it disappeared in that summer of mostly peaceful protests to defund the police.
They can rot in hell for that alone.
Seconded. We had a window to make things better and it was hijacked by activists for personal and political gain. Not only did we lose the opportunity but it will be even harder to make real change when the next chance comes around.
I suspect they did it on purpose, to keep the controversy alive. Somewhat like when any form of meaningful border and immigration bill is debated. Or abortion.
Marxist revolutionaries, like the traitors who founded BLM, can’t get their Marxist dystopia without creating chaos and pitting everyone against each other.
"and *poof* it disappeared in that summer of mostly peaceful protests to defund the police."
In 2020 the mayor of Washington allowed activists to paint BLM in large letters in front of the Whitehouse. The same year she agreed to an increase for police funding. Yes, you read that right, an increase. I think you shouldn't get too worked up over defund the police. It's not happening and it's not going to happen.
“they derailed the hesitant and jerky progress towards police reform”
I can’t decide what’s more sad. Is it that you are so credulous (or have such a poor awareness of how much needs to be reformed) that you think police reforms were happening at more than a “work for 10 years to get one common-sense reform” (like body cams) pace? Or is it that you think the Floyd protests made things happen slower (which would require a reverse gear) instead of sped up reforms.
Having body cams that can be shut off with no repercussions (as many cops do right before they beat or murder a suspect)? Not really aiding in accountability, is it? When it helps the cops they can keep the camera on. When it would prove they are bad apples? Not only are they not disciplined or suspended for turning off their cams, the “police can do no wrong” crowd, the FOP, and their fellow officers rush to support the “honest mistake” narratives. They try to dirty up the victim and downplay the cop’s red flags. Business as usual.
Qualified immunity was deeply entrenched before and after the Floyd protests. Nothing has changed and there certainly wasn’t any movement towards reform prior to Floyd’s murder.
No one was “holding police accountable” before the Floyd murder. Even with overwheling evidence (and a murder conviction), the fringe pushes the lie that Floyd died of a heart attack or an overdose and wail about the injustice done to four cops who, togther, committed or helped to commit a murder. Police accountability? Please.
The first ray of hope on civil asset forfeiture happened the other day. It was just as bad before and after the Floyd murder.
“a little bit of consensus starting to poke its head out of the Congressional sand”
If you mean that some Republicans were hinting, gently, off the record that maybe they should think about possibly looking into exploring the potential need for police reforms, then sure. Otherwise it was crickets except for a few libertarian-leaning folks. If I remember correctly, both Amash and Paul were more assertive about it.
“*poof* it disappeared in that summer of mostly peaceful protests to defund the police.”
Yes, statistically they were mostly peaceful protests. With the exception of the insanity of CHAZ and opportunistic criminals using the protests as cover for looting, the vast, overwhelming experience of the tens of millions of people who protested was peaceful. Even if you include the unprovoked violence by police, they were midtly peaceful.
And you can’t make something that never existed disappear.
“defund the police”
When you present fringe ideas as if it’s a mainstream belief, you show yourself to lack credibility and honesty.
Let’s see how “pro-reform” (and/or how willing you are to acknowledge the need for reform)
What do you think about these reforms? One week of unpaid suspension (or the duration of any appeal, if they lose) for any officer who turns off their body cam when interacting with a civilian. Half that for not turning it on in the first place. Progressively longer suspensions for repeat offenses. Loss of benefits and pension plus termination after enough violations (10? 15? A lot, so they have plenty of chances to change their behavior). Criminal charges and personal penalties for cops who don’t stop an unlawful action by a fellow officer (since, you know, they are supposed to stop crimes). Pass laws that specifically protect civilians filming of police encounters. Discipline records made public. Citizen seats on review boards. You know, rule of law and accountability measures.
What do you think about those? For? Against?
Oh, and independent, outside investigators to look into any allegations of domestic violence accusations or sexual assault with loss of employment and benefits (including pension) the result of any confirmation of the accusation. Not court conviction, an internal finding of domestic abuse or sexual assault by the officer.
You think officers who were involved in the Floyd death got off scot free? Do Police officers routinely turn off their body cam during shootings? Maybe you should cite some information.
The Floyd protests resulted in massive civil unrests burned down cities. In CA, it was common for protesters to spontaneously become looters and break into stores. You're resorting to some ridiculous semantics in which the LA riots was theoretically "mostly peaceful" because 99% of protesters weren't violent.
There was, in fact, incremental move towards police reform and accountability. See how the voters of Fullerton responded to the Kelly Thomas incident, for instance. The radicals rode the Floyd protest to define the reform and put in place activists DAs who were openly hostile to cops and prosecuting crime. Things got so bad that even SF voters voted out their progressive DAs.
81% of black Americans want the same or more amount cops in their neighborhood. 81%. Think about that a for a second. For all intents and purposes, they do NOT support punishing the entire police force by sins of individual officers.
"81% of Black Americans want the same or more amount of cops in their neighborhood".
Cite your source, please. ????
“Do Police officers routinely turn off their body cam during shootings ?”
Amazingly, and tragically, no.
The typical cop feels as if he’s virtually impervious.
Check out this shit:
https://www.tallahassee.com/story/news/local/2022/10/14/zach-wester-victims-drug-planting-deputy-agree-settle/10484276002/
Officer Wester didn’t even turn off his body cam when planting drugs on innocent people.
That 1 cop is doing a fuckton of lifting, if he's the all those cops doing all the all that shutting off the body cams, dim bulb zealot. You could, for laughs, try to distinguish the difference between what one bad cop does, what you would do, and what other folks would or would not do. As to your 'cite your source,' here's something they must not have told you in dim bulb zealot class: 'non-white' folks have the same dislike of being robbed, raped, shot and murdered as other folks. And, not being stupid, they can draw a line between police presence and the chance of those things happening to them. I've haven't said it in a while, but get the fuck back to dailykos, salon, or whatever groupthink shithole you slimed in from.
The only tragic thing about Neely's death is that it's fucked up Penny's life.
Correct
Tragic in that his family didn’t care until his violence lead to his f’ing up Penney’s life.
The only thing tragic about Neely's death is that government and the press are persecuting the hero who did it instead of lionizing him.
Also correct
I find Neely's family bitching about it most irksome.
You ignored his problems for YEARS until somebody had to deal with them instead.
Fuck his family.
"How dare someone have taken out the trash that we ignored rotting on the lawn for decades!?!?!"
The tragic killing of Jordan Neely in New York City birthed a weekslong news cycle and offered pundits left and right the chance to confirm all of their ideological priors.
*looks out window*
If the "ideological priors" are that blue cities have allowed roving hoards of meth addicts and mentally unstable homeless people to continue their criminal behavior despite being *checks article* "arrested nine times since 2019 for armed robbery and carjacking, among other things", then "ideological priors" confirmed, I guess.
These confirm my Culture War Ideological Priors that "Blue Run Cities are anarcho-tyrannical post-apocalyptic shitholes." Only that's not fair because at least in a true post-apocalyptic scenario I'd be allowed to shoot back.
Hey Billy, to "be the change" and really put your money where your mouth is, care to look into the black youths who accosted Sara Comrie? I mean, we have her face, her name, her occupation and place of employment, strong indications of her sexuality, receipts to prove she paid for the bike, statements that she attempted to clarify ownership prior to the video, doxxing of people she worked with… *anything* on the party or parties that it strongly appears precipitated, if not staged, the whole affair?
Or is this article your “I’m not part of the problem. Those other people are part of the problem. Hey! Look over there! [Runs away.]” apology?
It's not happening.
It's happening, but it's not as bad as you say.
It's happening, it's as bad as you say, but we're drawing the wrong lessons from it.
Well, I don't know. I think crimes involving murder are slightly more noteworthy than a dispute over a rental bike.
But do we know that the young man holding the bike was participating in a deliberate scam, and it wasn't, say, an honest misunderstanding?
No, we don’t know for sure. There is circumstantial evidence suggesting so. However, what we do know is that the media participated in a deliberate scam.
They did? How so?
Sea lion mode engaged!
"Shit-Gargling Retard Mode Engaged", more likely.
I mean, I did a DuckDuckGo search on Sara Comrie, and I found articles from CBS News, NBC News, NY Post, NY Daily News, that were all matter-of-fact, not condemning her as racist, simply repeating what was known and who said what.
I did find an opinion piece from a lefty site that compared her to Carolyn Bryant, the white woman who accused Emmett Till of raping her, which is utterly absurd, and an opinion piece which criticized her for her choice of tactics even if she was in the right.
I'm aware that a lot of people have called her a racist Karen, but I don't think they were in the media.
This was an opportunity for the media to do one of its specialties – a soft-focus interview with the woman about her experience being harassed and attacked for something she didn’t do, and which she literally had the receipt to disprove.
But such interviews are confined to the Right Sort of People.
Or the media could simply have done some digging and compared the receipts possessed by the woman and by the youths.
Also, did the youths ever produce any receipts? Did the media ask about this?
She received death threats. She was suspended from her job. Her family and friends were hounded. Yet some still saying it's her fault, because she got emotional (which seems actually misogynistic to me). In a just world she should receive massive compensation, but that's a crapshoot anymore. It will probably end in some sort of settlement complete with a non-disclosure agreement. She will get paid and the media won't have to admit fault. Just like with Sandman. If this happened to me, I would insist on any settlement including a full, front page mea culpa from any media site I was suing, to be approved prior to publication by my lawyers and myself as the first condition of the settlement. And I would insist it be ran front page, above the fold, or the digital equivalent. And insist it include a full disclosure of journalistic standards they violated and how their bias played into these violations.
If I were her, I would sue everyone that fucked with me. This cancel culture shit has to be out down, and ll the leftists who participate in it. All of them have to go.
Yes, we do know.
She had proof she paid for it. He had jackshit. And you cannot rent the same bike at the same time.
For it to be an "honest" disagreement, you'd have to believe a 6 month pregnant woman would accost an innocent young black man for no reason in NYC. Are you high?
No, just fucking stupid. He's bearly sapient.
It's a well-known trait for pregnant women to accost, tussle w/ groups of 5 or more young males. It's hard-wired in, a survival trait... This is where the reasonmag staff's progressives playing at being libertarian, and the commentariat who do the same really out themselves time and again. And time and again try to same sophistry to claim that what they really meant was X while you and I are really no more than bigots.
If you call Neely "a homeless man" rather than "a fugitive violent felon who was shouting death threats", you've completely disqualified yourself from being worth listening to on criminal justice policy.
Today in Philly armed with AKs and bullet proof vests, gas stations hotels:
https://time.com/6275440/insecure-private-security-replacing-police/
Lee Fang substack published a report on billionaire Pierre Obydiar (owns left media outlets) funding abolish the police activists and investing in private security firms ( look it up). Then there’s Jamie Dimon calling for the seizure of private property for green new deal investments. On Taibbis substack there’s a flow chart of the censorship industrial complex. Sorry Reason - - Koch Foundation is on the list.
The climate and woke cultural marxist narrative seem to be fooling a lot of U.S. citizens. Using the word cronyism to describe fascism is one way to soften the blow of a gentler and compassionate sort of fascism.
And of course, Time is saying that anyone that needs private security is rich and needs to be removed from property ownership altogether.
Time for Reason to kick the Koch habit.
I'm glad to hear a voice stating the truth that everyone - white, black, other - has a right to public safety, and that everyone also has a right NOT to be abused or killed by public safety officers. In some places protection for witnesses is so weak - i.e., gangs are so dominant, that witnesses refuse to speak with police in fear for their lives & those of their families. We need MORE policing to get over this.
But we need BETTER policing, too. Corrupt or racist cops have virtual impunity - it's well-documented how hard it's been to implement improvements & dismiss even proven bad cops.
The reforms we started CAN be revived - we have no other choice, IMHO. But incentives on the right and extreme left feed everything wrong with this aspect of our society. I appreciate the comments here hoping to keep up the fight to improve things.
Politicians tell cops to murder people over plant leaves, then act all hurt and surprised that anyone with sense hates their guts. The ones with no sense blindly take reprisal against the willing tools of those politicians. Who could have seen that coming?
Around five people are murdered in DC most every week. News coverage is generally relegated to a few paragraphs in the Metro section, generally because the race of the killer doesn’t fit the narrative.
Overall very good analysis Billy. Halfway through I scrolled up to see who authored it a was surprised to see your name. Good work.
Preston was a Chicago police officer.
When I first heard of her murder, I first wondered what she knew amd who stood to lose all if what she knew became public.
LOL have you ever been to Chicago? You dont need to know anything to be a target.
Billy and girl -bullying cohorts are rightly upset that unequal yet apposite reprisal force brings on the murder of some of the very cops Republicans believe ought to be busting blacks, harrying hippies, enslaving girls and robbing reds. But their own insistence on officious initiation of deadly force is what put those cops at risk (and spawned the cycle of aggression and reprisal) in the first place.
The Preston murder made national coverage for at least a week. Google News carried it, for christ's sake...
I get your point, Billy, but you picked a bad example.
It's true - leftist violence is a problem everywhere.
At 1:43 a.m. on May 6, 2023, a Chicago police officer reported over police radio that the city’s ShotSpotter system detected nine gunshots at a specific location, the location where Aréanah Preston was shot and killed. Chicago police did not respond immediately and, at least for the first two days after the shooting, didn’t explain why. A retired first deputy police superintendent offered the excuse that no car was available at the time. At 2:02 a.m., Preston’s Apple Watch reported a possible car accident to police. A Chicago police officer notified dispatchers “I’m comin’ from a distance.” Around the same time, a police officer reported over police radio that a vehicle had struck the officer’s police car (about two miles from the Preston shooting) and then fled. So many police officers from a department suffering an ongoing manpower shortage so severe no officers are available on a Friday night/Saturday morning to respond to shots fired replied over the radio they were en route to the scene that an officer from the struck car responded: “We don’t need the whole world coming here. We just need a couple of cars for traffic.” At 2:15 a.m. the officer “comin’ from a distance” to the location identified by the ShotSpotter reported an off-duty police officer had been shot and demanded an ambulance. Chicago police, with the assistance of a helicopter, kept streets clear for an ambulance rushing Preston to the University of Chicago emergency room, about three miles from the shooting. The officers of the over-staffed Chicago police department previously unavailable to respond to a shooting in the area now suddenly available in the area decided to close the streets surrounding the one square block of the emergency room. Using at least fifteen vehicles and thirty officers, they closed Cottage Grove Avenue and Maryland Avenue at 56th and 57th Streets and blocked traffic into and out of Washington Park at 57th Street. These efforts couldn’t have been of any assistance to Preston, of course, but it did result in a flashing-blue-light show for at least two hours.
I bet you're getting paid by the word, but could you at least try using some paragraphs next time?
None of these facts had anything whatsoever to do with the issue: why a gang of people with multiple prior violent criminal convictions was on the streets that night to commit any crimes. There is no possible excuse for that situation. The reason this crime - and thousands of other violent crimes - was perpetrated was that the perpetrators were allowed by a broken criminal justice system to be on the streets instead of being incarcerated or executed.
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The majority of murders have nothing to do with the cultural wars, but reporters and the media likes to use them to keep the cultural wars alive.
Yes, I'll say it - and I'm no left-winger. Abolish the police! The *government* police. This is a libertarian publication, and I'm troubled that the author didn't even mention the beneficial aspects of privatizing police forces so that they can finally be held accountable.
In other words. dog bites man.
Once again, repeated violent criminal convictions should result in the death penalty for the perpetrator. Yes, there should be proper safeguards in place to prevent miscarriages of justice. No, victimless crimes based solely on vices like drugs, prostitution or gambling should not count as violent crimes for the death penalty. No, mindless mandatory minimum sentences like "three strikes and you're out" should not be allowed. Taxpayers should not be required to pay the costs of confinement, medical care and food indefinitely for career criminals, including life imprisonment. If a crime was so atrocious and the criminal so incorrigible that society can only be protected by incarceration for life then there is no acceptable reason not to kill them and end the dangerous threat permanently.
"81% of Black Americans want the same or more amount of cops in their neighborhood".
Cite your source, please. ????
https://www.newsweek.com/81-black-americans-dont-want-less-police-presence-despite-protestssome-want-more-cops-poll-1523093#:~:text=News-,81%25%20of%20Black%20Americans%20Don't%20Want%20Less%20Police%20Presence,Some%20Want%20More%20Cops%3A%20Poll&text=A%20majority%20of%20Black%20Americans,brutality%2C%20according%20to%20new%20polls.
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