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Most of you probably know who Yesenia Rojas is – the brave activist and neighborhood leader whom even Anaheim Police Chief Raul Quezada praises as a positive influence in her community. A peacekeeper.
And you may have heard that she is being unjustly railroaded into accepting a charge of “interfering with the police” at an incident at her birthday party late last year, when all she was doing was asking the police WHY they were arresting two young men in the neighborhood – something anyone has a right to ask.
The corrupt Anaheim establishment is aiming to sideline and silence this dissenting but lawful voice, as they did with Tony Jalali and William Fitzgerald. But Yesenia, her family’s hardworking main breadwinner, needs to come up with $5000 for competent legal representation so she can fight this case and not end up with probation or even jail.
So, we won’t go on much more – you should swing by her SECOND garage sale / fundraiser in front of her home at 710 North Anna Drive, 7am to noon, Saturday July 4 – or you can even arrange to make a contribution there. It is for JUSTICE!
She should plea out and make the problem go away for the good of the community. Not to mention her children,
Only someone who thinks she’s actually guilty, and deserves three years of probation IN A GANG INJUNCTION NEIGHBORHOOD, and deserves to be labeled a criminal for the rest of her life even though her record had been spotless, and only someone who puts no value on her work in her community, would say such a thing. Good to know all that, Barlow.
Well, this is one of your better pieces of writing, AI!
I don’t think I know who you are — Wikipedia seems to think that you’re an executed British-American drug smuggler, but I’m reserving judgment — so I’d like to ask you a few questions:
(1) Are you an attorney?
(2) Are you familiar with the charges against her?
(3) Do you have a sense of whether she’s guilty of wrongdoing?
(4) Do you know what plea deal was offered to her?
(5) Do you know the consequences of being on probation?
(6) What is “the problem”?
(7) Why do you think that a plea deal would “make [it] go away”?
(8) Why do you think that that would be “for the good of the community”?
(9) Why do you think that that would be “for the good of the community”?
You express such a strong opinion here. I hope that I don’t find out that you’re connected to the City Attorney’s office.
(Actually, to be honest, I sort of hope that I do.)