In a world where justice seems to play hide and seek with reality, the recent case involving a man found unfit to stand trial offers a glaring example of a system that’s more cracked than an antique vase in an earthquake. Carlos Brown Jr., a man with a criminal résumé longer than a CVS receipt, was found unfit to stand trial for the murder of Arena Zestrua, a Ukrainian refugee. She came to seek safety and unfortunately found herself as a tragic headline instead.
Now, let’s pause and rewind—this isn’t Brown’s first rodeo with the law. He was capable of being tried, convicted, and sent away on not one, not two, but fourteen different occasions. Yet, after his latest escapade, somehow he’s deemed incapable? That’s quite a convenient twist only those scriptwriters in Hollywood could dream up. The argument circles around his sudden “mental incapacity,” the kind that miraculously appeared right when it seemed inconvenient to hold him accountable.
This decision to let Brown slip through the judicial cracks has some believing they’re bestowing some form of restorative justice. But let’s call a spade a spade. It’s a free pass for a self-confessed killer who celebrated his crime with as much pomp as a New Year’s Eve countdown. The system set to protect the innocent seems to prefer playing host to criminals instead, offering them their own misguided version of “three-star accommodation” instead of a deservedly harsh sentence.
The public’s outrage is palpable, the kind where pitchforks and torches feel metaphorically summoned. The sentiment suggests a return to good old-fashioned justice—perhaps harsher sentences, a touch of deterrence in the form of swift and firm punishment, and a justice system that faces forward rather than backward. Instead, society watches as courtroom theatrics take precedence over actual justice, leaving one to question who’s truly protected under such a system.
It’s time to confront these legal loopholes and missteps that allow dangerous individuals a golden parachute. A judicial shake-up could be the ticket, one that holds evildoers accountable and prioritizes the safety of the law-abiding rather than the law-breaking. Until then, the case of Zestrua serves as a harrowing reminder that justice delayed often feels like justice denied. Pray for change, everyone; it seems the system could use a generous dose.






