To prevent him from biting his judge he is presented masked to the court: a defendant arrives completely obstructed at his hearing
|Debora R. s'en était pris à une juge. CAPTURE D'ECRAN X
This Monday, January 8, 2024, a defendant was presented to the court masked to avoid any risk of him biting a magistrate. Last week, he attacked a judge in Las Vegas.
A restraint on his face to prevent him from biting his judge. A 30-year-old man was presented in court masked of Las Vegas due to a previous attack committed on a magistrate, reports BFMTV.
Presented masked and hindered
After several days spent in the cell, the defendant was presented to his hearing shackled at the arms, but also at the mouth. In question, the fact that he is here for the attack on a judge during a hearing last week.
Debora Redden, the man who attacked Las Vegas Judge Mary Holthus, is back in court with increased security measures. #court #Vegas #BreakingNews pic.twitter.com/E3lLyM47nO
— GertyMac (@GertyMac15) January 8, 2024
Heavy accusations
Tried for attempted murder, he was going to receive a sentence ranging from 19 to 48 months in prison before attacking the judge last Monday. "I would like to clarify that I am not changing or modifying the sentence that I was going to pronounce last week" asked the magistrate at the start of the hearing. Escorted by six police officers, the accused was highly monitored.
In a Las Vegas courtroom
Violent criminal Debora Redden tells judge “don’t send me to prison. But if appropriate, do what you gotta do”Also
When the judge “did what she gotta do” he leapt on top of her and attacked her
Her instincts were right 💯
— *🪬* (@_______0______) January 4, 2024
To this are now added charges of "attempted murder against an elderly person, assault and battery on a protected person leading to significant bodily harm against an elderly person, extortion, intimidation of a public official with threat of force, disregarding the safety of a person resulting in significant bodily harm, assault and battery inflicted by a probationer or parolee, lists the Las Vegas Review Journal.