Every time other races kill one of the African ghetto, these kneegrows go

and go monkey.

However, whenever black teens like Karmelo Anthony and Cordell Goosby kill other races like Meka and Asian, they don't get convicted as hate crime. They'll be treated as mental illness and will serve community service. Allow to get free from jail by pleading "not guilty".
A Collin County jury sentenced 19-year-old Karmelo Anthony to 35 years in prison Tuesday for the murder of 17-year-old Austin Metcalf at a Frisco track meet last year.
It came just hours after Anthony was found guilty of murder in the fatal stabbing. He faced up to life in prison.
Jurors had the option of finding him guilty of manslaughter or murder if they didn’t find him not guilty. The two charges are distinguished by intent. Murder means the jury believed Anthony “knowingly” caused Metcalf’s death.
During the trial’s punishment phase, Anthony’s mother Kayla Hayes asked the jury for mercy.
“He’s my oldest, he’s my first born, he will always be my baby,” she said. “I love him very much.”
She was asked if she believed her son had any regrets.
“Yes, I know my son,” she said. “He’s very sorry for what he did.”
“Please have mercy on my son,” she added.
Now kneegrows are celebrating the victory of Karmelo and mocking Austin Metcalf's death.
https://www.instagram.com/reel/DZs3qEzjIAA/?utm_source=ig_web_copy_link&igsh=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==The man who shot and killed a pregnant Korean-American woman and her unborn baby in Seattle on June 13, 2023, is Cordell Goosby. He fired multiple shots into the victims' car at a red light in a random, unprovoked attack, killing 34-year-old Eina Kwon and her unborn daughter while also injuring her husband.
Following the attack, Goosby turned himself in to police, admitting to the crime. After psychiatric evaluations from both defense and state-appointed medical experts concluded that he was experiencing a severe mental health crisis and was legally insane at the time, a King County judge found Goosby not guilty by reason of insanity. Instead of serving time in a traditional prison, he was committed to a state psychiatric hospital.
Under Washington state law, Goosby could not be charged with homicide for the unborn baby unless the child was born alive, which complicated the legal proceedings and sparked significant community outrage and debate. You can read more about the court's ruling and the details of the case via FOX 13 Seattle and the New York Post.