Justice Department Arrests 1,500 in Roundup of Violent Suspects

Justice Department Arrests 1,500 in Roundup of Violent Suspects

The Justice Department announced arrests last week of about 1,500 people in cities nationwide that the agency described as some of the most violent fugitives, sex offenders and gang members.

Some of the arrests were concentrated in the Washington, D.C. and Baltimore areas.

They included Robert Bakersville, 28, on a homicide charge after a shooting at a home in Southeast Washington, D.C. Police say they found ammunition and “ghost gun” components in his Oxon Hill residence.

A primary motivation behind the month-long Operation North Star was to halt gun violence that has risen to a national concern this year.

“The Justice Department is committed to doing everything we can to protect our communities from violent crime and end the plague of gun violence,” Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said in a statement.

Garland made the statement two days after a gunman in Highland Park, Ill., killed seven people and injured 30 and one day after police in Richmond, Va., said they thwarted another mass murder.

A tipster notified police the two suspects planned to randomly shoot persons attending a fireworks display at an amphitheater in Richmond. Police recovered two assault rifles, a handgun and 223 rounds of ammunition from the men’s home.

The U.S. Marshals Service focused its Operation North Star on cities with the highest rates of homicides and gun violence. Among the persons arrested, 230 are being charged with homicide offenses and 131 with sexual assault crimes.

The Justice Department assurances that they were trying to get gun violence under control were undercut by a June 23 Supreme Court ruling that loosened restrictions on carrying concealed guns outside the owners’ homes.

The Supreme Court said legal gun owners do not need to demonstrate a special need, such as self-defense, to carry a concealed weapon.

Accused Highland Park shooter Robert E. Crimo, 21, passed government background checks before legally purchasing five guns, including an assault rifle used to kill victims at the Independence Day parade. He is charged with seven counts of first-degree murder.

For more information, contact The Legal Forum (www.legal-forum.net) at email: [email protected] or phone: 202-479-7240.

Raphael Szendro

Broker at R&R Executive Realty, President at Machon Mishpat Tzedek Inc.

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