On 13 Nov 2023, The Patriot <
patr...@protonmail.com> posted some
news:uiuko0$uuml$
1...@dont-email.me:
> If the nigger had not been fucking prostitutes and snorting cocaine,
> he'd be alive today. Another black turd is gone from the gene pool.
> Fuck his family.
When Ohio’s top prosecutor announced the arrest of a sex worker accused
of drugging and killing four customers, he failed to consider the
victims and instead shamed them, the family of one victim said.
"Don’t buy sex in Ohio — it ruins lives and could cost you yours,” Ohio
Attorney General Dave Yost said last month in a news release detailing
the indictment of serial killing suspect Rebecca Auborn, who was also
charged with trying to kill a fifth customer.
Christyn Crockett, 41, a church administrator in the Columbus area and
daughter of victim Wayne Akin, called Yost’s comments “devastating.”
"He’s not wrong,” Crockett said in her first interview about her father,
a former postal worker who struggled with drug addiction yet provided a
“powerful foundation” for his family. “But for the victims’ sake, it’s
just so insensitive.”
Crockett’s husband, Ittai Crockett, said that Auborn’s alleged victims
may have been breaking the law but that they were still people who “have
family, that have grandkids; they have people that care about them.”
"It was just, like, victim-shaming,” he said.
In an interview, Yost said that Akin’s family and the other families are
survivors of crime and that he recognized their trauma.
"However, that being said, and my sincere sympathy is extended to them,
respectfully they were not my audience,” Yost said. “My audience was the
many, many men who buy sex every day, who are complicit in human
trafficking and who are acting dangerously.”
"There’s no sensitive way to talk about evil things,” he added. “You do
no one any service or favor by failing to play-talk about evil.”
In the joint statement, authorities accused Auborn of drugging five men
and robbing them from December to June. She is accused of dosing them
with fentanyl, according to an indictment obtained by NBC News.
Auborn, 33, has pleaded not guilty to more than two dozen counts of
murder, aggravated robbery, involuntary manslaughter and other crimes,
court records show. Her lawyer did not respond to a request for comment.
Her mother-in-law declined to comment, and her husband did not respond
to a request for comment.
A total transformation
Akin was pronounced dead at his North Columbus apartment at 12:44 p.m.
April 17 — his 64th birthday — according to a coroner’s report.
Crockett said that when she was growing up, she understood her father to
be a kindhearted family man and gifted tinkerer — someone who spent
hours in the basement building computers and had managed to move his
family out of a rough part of Columbus.
"We had escaped that lifestyle because of my father,” she said. “He was
always intent on making sure that we had a good life with stable parents
and a solid upbringing.”
Then, in the early 2000s, toward the end of his tenure at a Postal
Service distribution center, Akin developed chronic fatigue syndrome and
was barely able to do anything physical, Crockett said. After he turned
to cocaine, Crockett said, he disappeared entirely.
"He just transformed into somebody I didn’t know,” she said. “The
kindness never left, the smile, the jokes. It’s just — when someone’s
under the influence, they’re just not themselves.”
https://www.yahoo.com/news/ohio-ag-don-t-buy-170040059.html