Pro-crime Democrats just let a career criminal walk who committed this unspeakable crime

Yumi Kimura from Yokohama, JAPAN, CC BY-SA 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

Three Key Takeaways:

  • Career criminal Danette Colbert, with five prior felony convictions, was charged with second-degree murder for killing Telemundo reporter Adan Manzano during Super Bowl week, exposing the consequences of Democrats’ pro-crime policies and a broken criminal justice system.
  • Colbert and accomplice Ricky White drugged and killed Manzano using a lethal combination of Xanax and alcohol before going on a spending spree with his credit cards, demonstrating a clear pattern of repeat criminal behavior.
  • This tragedy highlights the need for stronger criminal justice policies, including tougher sentences for repeat offenders, three-strikes laws, and mandatory minimum sentences to prevent dangerous criminals from being let back on the streets.

Violent crime continues to plague America’s cities under Democrat leadership.

Democrats’ pro-crime agenda has unleashed dangerous repeat offenders onto our streets.

And pro-crime Democrats just let a career criminal walk who committed this unspeakable crime.

Career criminal charged in brutal Super Bowl week murder

A shocking murder during Super Bowl week has exposed the devastating consequences of America’s broken criminal justice system.

Danette Colbert, a 48-year-old career criminal known as the “Bourbon Street Hustler,” has been charged with second-degree murder in the death of a young Telemundo reporter.

The victim, 27-year-old Adan Manzano, was simply doing his job covering America’s biggest sporting event when he became the target of a cold-blooded criminal scheme.

Kenner Police Chief Keith Conley didn’t mince words when describing the suspect. “She’s a career criminal,” he told reporters, pointing to her extensive history of “confidence games, access device fraud, and robbery schemes.”

What’s truly infuriating is that Colbert had five previous felony convictions on her rap sheet. Yet somehow, she remained free to allegedly orchestrate this heinous crime.

The details of the murder are absolutely chilling. Security footage from the Comfort Inn Suites in Kenner, Louisiana, captured Colbert making multiple trips to and from Manzano’s room on the day of the killing.

The Jefferson Parish Coroner later found the young reporter face-down on a pillow – a grim detail that speaks volumes about the killer’s callousness.

But that’s not even the most disturbing part of this tragedy.

Dr. Gerry Cvitanovich, Jefferson Parish Coroner, revealed that toxicology reports showed massive amounts of benzodiazepines – commonly known as Xanax – in Manzano’s system.

Medical experts confirmed what investigators suspected: combined with alcohol, these drugs create what’s known as a “blackout cocktail” – a lethal combination used to incapacitate victims.

This wasn’t Colbert’s first time using this method, either. She had previously been linked to at least two other incidents involving drugged male victims.

The pattern was clear – if only Democrat prosecutors had been paying attention instead of focusing on their pro-crime agenda.

Through coordinated efforts across multiple jurisdictions, law enforcement tracked down Colbert’s accomplice, Ricky White, in Hollywood, Florida. He’s now awaiting extradition back to Louisiana.

Chief Conley confirmed that Colbert and White worked “hand in hand” in this calculated criminal scheme. After killing Manzano, they went on a spending spree with his credit cards throughout New Orleans.

This tragedy raises serious questions about America’s criminal justice system. How many more victims will it take before Democrat-run cities finally put public safety ahead of their pro-crime policies?

When will judges and prosecutors stop the revolving door that keeps putting dangerous repeat offenders back on our streets?

The swift coordination between local, state, and federal law enforcement agencies proves what’s possible when we give our police the support and resources they need. But it shouldn’t take a murder to demonstrate the importance of tough-on-crime policies.

If America had stronger three-strikes laws and mandatory minimum sentences for repeat violent offenders, this young reporter might still be alive today.

Instead, a career criminal with five felony convictions was walking free.