criminal James has more problems

the annoying thing

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NY Attorney General Letitia James, already under federal indictment for bank fraud, is now accused of housing her fugitive grandniece, Nakia Thompson, inside her Virginia home!!
Thompson has been living in James’s Norfolk, Virginia property since 2020, along with her three children, without paying rent.
Court documents show that this same home is at the center of James’s own indictment.
She signed mortgage papers declaring it would be a “second home” used exclusively by her, not a rental or shared residence.
Yet for years, Thompson has lived there as her permanent address.
Prosecutors say James’s statement to the bank was false and allowed her to secure a more favorable mortgage rate.
Thompson is not some distant relative or victim of circumstance.
She is a 36-year-old repeat offender with a long record of criminal activity.
North Carolina authorities officially list her as an absconder after she violated probation for assault and trespassing charges.
She has been arrested multiple times, including twice for assaulting police officers.
Her criminal history includes burglary, grand larceny, possession of burglary tools, and child endangerment-related traffic offenses.
She once pleaded guilty to both petit and grand larceny, received probation, and then failed to complete it.
Because her charges were misdemeanors, North Carolina cannot extradite her from Virginia.
That means she has effectively been hiding in plain sight under the roof of one of the most powerful prosecutors in America.
This same prosecutor, Letitia James, has built her entire career on calling herself a watchdog for justice.
She claimed to fight corruption, hold the powerful accountable, and protect the rule of law.
Yet according to prosecutors, she broke the law for personal gain and protected a convicted criminal in her own family.
It is not a political issue.
It is a moral one.
Ordinary Americans who falsify mortgage documents or harbor a wanted fugitive go to prison.
They do not get prime-time interviews or glowing press coverage.
But the same rules rarely apply to those in power.
The facts are clear.
The Norfolk home was supposed to be a personal second residence, not a refuge for a wanted relative.
Thompson’s name never appeared on any lease, and she never paid rent or contributed to the upkeep of the property.
She had been wanted in North Carolina for years, listed publicly as avoiding supervision by her probation officer.
Yet she lived openly in a house owned by the top law enforcement official of New York State.
James’s defenders call the charges politically motivated.
But this story is not about politics.
It is about accountability.
When those tasked with enforcing the law treat it as optional, public trust collapses.
This case will test whether the American justice system still has the courage to police its own ranks.
Letitia James can no longer hide behind slogans about fairness and equality.
If the evidence proves true, she did not just violate the law.
She violated the very oath she took to uphold it!
 
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