Shit Sandwich, hold the bread
The New York City Crime Report with Pat Dixon
Pat Dixon
4.2 • 831 Ratings
🗓️ 5 March 2022
⏱️ 93 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
A man shit in a paper bag inside an idling subway car, strolled over to a seated woman on the platform and forcefully smeared the fresh excrement all over the woman's face and head.
37-yr-old Frank Abrokwa is currently awaiting court on a variety of charges including numerous assaults, harassment, theft and hate crimes. He spit on a Jewish man in Crown Heights, before threatening to kill him.
He also had over 40 prior arrests before he made headlines with the recent feces attack.
He's basically public enemy number one in New York City, but he's NOT in jail. A violent repeat-offender - in the past 30 days, he's assaulted multiple strangers without warning, smeared his own excrement in a woman's face, stolen weapons and told the judge at his court appearance, "Fck you, bitch" - is free today without paying a single dollar in bail, thanks to "bail reform" laws passed in the state legislature.
These laws eliminate pre-trial incarceration for all but a few major crimes, while also tying the hands of judges by removing judicial discretion in consideration of bail requirements. Under the law, judges cannot weigh a defendant's criminal history, including any and all recent arrests for violent offenses.
Intended to guarantee equitable treatment within the criminal justice system for people of color, bail reform laws have created a permissive environment in which criminals may remain constantly active. Men who would've previously been stuck in Rikers and other city jails now roam the streets from target to target, and attack with virtual impunity.
Adding fuel this trash fire, Manhattan prosecutors have been warned by new DA, Alvin Bragg, not to ask for jail or prison time in criminal cases they prosecute, barring only the most serious offenses such as 1st-degree murder or felonious domestic assault.
The current conditions in New York City are as close to lawlessness as the law will allow, emboldening the criminal element to rob or pointlessly attack anyone they see and then reoffend, sometimes immediately after being arrested, processed and released.
Lawmakers, the Manhattan DA and even feckless Mayor Eric Adams - whose token visit to Albany to petition members of the legislature to reconsider elements of the bail reform measures was a toothless and transparently political errand, designed to deflect all responbility for the safety of New Yorkers back to the capital - are in full agreement: "Equitable" treatment of violent criminals is far more important than the rights of victims, the safety of citizens and the need to maintain any semblance of order or civility in America's largest city.
Guest: Ian Erickson
*Guess who ranked HIGH on the list of New York podcasts? https://blog.feedspot.com/new_york_podcasts/
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | From the smallest room in New York City comes a show that gives you a reason to live. |
| 0:06.5 | And actually, as you can see, the president lingering behind us, you know, as if we're at a debate and we're Hillary Clinton. |
| 0:12.5 | I hate him doing that. |
| 0:14.3 | I can't stand president, former President Trump. |
| 0:17.2 | What a scumbag, you know. |
| 0:20.7 | In the Boogie D. |
| 0:21.9 | Now we toss around words a lot these days, like next level, but in the boogie down Bronx. |
| 0:27.7 | 37-year-old Frank Abraqua since 1999, he's been arrested 22 times and he has dozens of sealed arrests. |
| 0:35.3 | Getting arrested, you know this does not prove that you committed a crime, but, and we |
| 0:40.5 | understand, arrest is not a conviction, but 40 arrests, yeah, you're a fucking criminal. |
| 0:44.8 | Frank Abraqua, most recently arrested February, well, before this, he was most recently |
| 0:51.0 | arrested February 5th. |
| 0:52.8 | That was his most recent prior arrest to what we were about to talk about. |
| 0:55.8 | When he allegedly slugged a man in the face at the Port Authority bus terminal, a good place to get slugged in the face. I mean, like, a very likely and normal place to get... You almost don't go there unless you... You're going to get slugged in the face. Plan on it. Right. And, of course, Ian Erickson is sitting here with me now. |
| 0:54.3 | And now the victim felt someone punch him. He turned around. Brock was the only one there. Nobody else here. Like, if I got punched in the face right now, I would go Donald Trump. Donald Trump punch you in the face. And I would be an idiot because that's not him just holding still there. |
| 1:28.8 | Charge with third degree assault, aggravated harassment in the second degree, attempted assault in the third degree, |
| 1:34.9 | and second degree aggravated harassment in those cases was, in that case, was Abraqua. |
| 1:39.6 | And on January 7th, he punched a 30-year-old man multiple times in the head. |
| 1:43.5 | That was in Harlem at the 125th Street 2-3 station. Yeah, don't go there. Right there in Harlem. You know what? 125th Street station's fine. I mean, not the station maybe. 125th Street. I remember going there back when it was Bloomberg days. Different town now, of course. Maybe you don't go there. but I mean I've been to shows at the Apollo I've been to show at the Apollo |
| 1:46.0 | show at the apollo i've been |
| 2:02.7 | excuse me i've been to show at the apollo once i saw uh okay you tell me who you think i saw |
| 2:09.5 | there who did i see at the apollo chris rock jim gaffigan |
... |
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