[dropcpa]The Virginia Office of the Commonwealth Attorney in Loudoun County, run by the Soros-backed Buta Biberaj, hired a registered sex offender without performing a simple background check, it has been revealed.
According to Just The News:
[The office] unknowingly hired a registered sex offender, having failed to submit the successful applicant to a background check. The unidentified male was hired as a paralegal and fired days later.
In an interview with a local Fox News affiliate, the man, identified only as John, said he is trying to rebuild his life following five years in prison, in which he spent his time studying legal issues.
At the time of his rapid hiring, John told Fox 5 in the story posted last week, he expected a background check, but there wasn’t one. Instead, John said, he was immediately given a badge and access to cases and a backlog of old files. He also said he was struggling with mental illness at the time he was downloading hundreds, then thousands of picture, including child pornography.
The office learned of the man’s criminal status when his probation officer called to confirm his employment.
Buta Biberaj won her race with $659,000 in backing from George Soros and was sworn into her position in 2020.
As I wrote in my new book The Man Behind the Curtain: Inside the Secret Network of George Soros, Biberaj has been a disaster for Loudoun County, and this is just her latest failure:
On the campaign trail, Biberaj said she favored new pretrial diversion programs for perpetrators of lower-level charges to earn a “dismissal” of their case, backed restoring voting rights of felons, and argued that prosecutors shouldn’t be involved in immigration enforcement on the nonsensical basis that it would make it look like the officer was “much more forceful in trying to bully or take advantage of somebody’s status by threatening them with that.”
She also called for the attorney’s office to start collecting racial and demographic data for charging and sentencing decisions. In her words, this is to make sure police are not “over policing on one side” while “not doing the same investigation into others.”
After taking her position she was one of twelve Virginia prosecutors who signed onto a letter calling for “automated, automatic, and free expungement of criminal records for formerly system-involved community members,” the end of mandatory minimum sentences, the end of cash bail, the abolition of the death penalty, and the end of “three strikes” felony enhancements for petty larceny offenses.
The Loudoun County Board of Supervisors decided to give her office a smaller budget increase than requested in 2021 due to high turnover and her handling of domestic-violence cases. Of 735 cases brought to her office, she dismissed 491, bringing only 8 percent to trial.
Biberaj defended herself by saying that prosecution is more than just taking cases to trial, “it’s the whole process of examining cases and working with all parties involved to find the right outcome.”
Apparently, the right outcome is no outcome.
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