A Somali migrant named Mohamed A. Mohamed allegedly raped an unconscious woman on the steps of a Nashville church. She died shortly after.
He had been arrested at least twelve times before this. Drugs. Criminal trespass. Public indecency. Public intoxication. Driving infractions.
Every single case was dismissed. Every single judge who let him walk was a Democrat.
And now those judges have written a letter claiming they’re the victims — because a Republican congressman called them out on Twitter.
You cannot make this up.
The Crime That Should Haunt Every Judge Who Let This Monster Walk
The surveillance footage tells the story.
A homeless woman, clearly impaired, stumbles toward a church and sits on the steps. Mohamed approaches. He sits beside her. She goes in and out of consciousness, trying to push him away.
He lifts her off the steps. Puts her on the ground. And sexually assaults her repeatedly.
She was taken to a hospital. She died.
“Raped to death” — that’s what people are calling it now. Because that’s what happened. A woman was raped until she died, on church steps, by a man who should have been in jail or deported years ago.
Instead, he was free. Because twelve different times, the system looked at Mohamed A. Mohamed and said, “You can go.”
Twelve Arrests. Zero Consequences. One Dead Woman.
Rep. Andy Ogles of Tennessee laid out the timeline.
Mohamed was let into the country during the Obama administration. Since then, he’s been arrested over a dozen times. The charges ranged from minor to serious — criminal trespass, public indecency, drug offenses.
Every case dismissed. Every time, he walked out and continued living in Nashville, free to commit more crimes.
Ogles named the judges. He posted their photos. He called for their impeachment. He said Tennessee should “send the Guard to Nashville.”
Strong words? Sure. But a woman is dead because of their decisions. What exactly is the appropriate level of outrage here?
The Judges Responded — And Their Letter Is Absolutely Unbelievable
Instead of apologizing, the judges wrote a letter to Governor Bill Lee claiming they’re being victimized.
They called Ogles’ tweet “violent rhetoric” that could “embolden the most extreme elements and lead to tragic consequences.”
They’re asking for state funds to pay for their security details.
They want Tennessee to “take appropriate action to counter the dangerous and inflammatory rhetoric issued by Mr. Ogles.”
Read that again. Slowly.
A woman was raped to death by a man these judges released twelve times, and their response is to demand taxpayer-funded bodyguards because a congressman was mean to them on the internet.
“Preventable Tragedy” — The Phrase They Used Without a Hint of Self-Awareness
Here’s the line from the judges’ letter that should live in infamy:
“Tennessee must not become the site of the next preventable tragedy.”
Preventable tragedy. They actually wrote those words.
You know what was a preventable tragedy? The rape and death of that woman on the church steps. That was preventable. All it required was one judge, at any point in Mohamed’s twelve arrests, to say “no more” and keep him locked up.
None of them did. And now they’re lecturing everyone else about preventing tragedy.
The lack of self-awareness isn’t just stunning — it’s disqualifying. These people should not be making decisions that affect public safety. They’ve proven they can’t be trusted with that responsibility.
Ogles Didn’t Back Down — And Neither Should Tennessee
Rep. Ogles responded exactly the way he should have:
“Instead of apologizing to the family of that young woman who was raped to death, instead of apologizing to the people of Nashville, these judges have the gall to publicly complain about my oversight and call it ‘dangerous rhetoric.'”
He continued: “Where were these Judges when she was being raped? Where were they when she lay dying? Do they care at all about the safety of my constituents?”
That’s not dangerous rhetoric. That’s accountability. That’s an elected official doing his job — representing the people who are endangered by reckless judicial decisions.
The judges want security details? How about the homeless woman who was raped on church steps — where was her security? Where was the protection the justice system was supposed to provide by keeping a serial offender off the streets?
This Is What “Woke Justice” Actually Looks Like
Every time conservatives warn about soft-on-crime policies, the left rolls their eyes. “Fear-mongering,” they say. “Racist dog whistles,” they claim.
Then a case like this happens.
A migrant with a dozen arrests walks free every single time. Not because the evidence was weak. Not because he was innocent. But because progressive judges in a progressive city decided that consequences are mean, and jail is racist, and maybe if we just give him another chance…
Twelve chances later, a woman is dead.
This isn’t an abstraction. This isn’t a policy debate. This is a real woman, raped on church steps, dead in a hospital, while the judges who enabled her killer now demand sympathy for themselves.
Accountability Isn’t Violence — But Ignoring It Obviously Is
The judges claim Ogles’ tweet constitutes “violent rhetoric.”
No. Violent rhetoric is what Mohamed A. Mohamed did to that woman. That was violence — actual, physical, fatal violence.
Calling out judges by name for their failures isn’t violence. It’s democracy. It’s oversight. It’s exactly what elected officials are supposed to do when the system fails.
If these judges feel threatened by public criticism, perhaps they should consider why the public is so angry. Perhaps they should reflect on whether dismissing twelve cases against a dangerous offender was the right call. Perhaps they should ask themselves if their commitment to progressive ideology was worth a woman’s life.
But they won’t. Because they don’t think they did anything wrong. They think they’re the victims here.
Tennessee Needs Impeachments, Not Security Details
Governor Lee shouldn’t spend a dime protecting these judges from mean tweets.
He should be working with the legislature to impeach them. He should be demanding answers about why Davidson County’s judicial system is a revolving door for violent criminals. He should be standing with the family of the dead woman, not coddling the judges who enabled her death.
Rep. Ogles is right: If Tennessee doesn’t want more preventable tragedies, the solution isn’t bodyguards for bad judges. It’s removing those judges and replacing them with people who understand that the justice system exists to protect victims, not to give endless second chances to predators.
Twelve arrests. Twelve dismissals. One dead woman.
And the judges think they deserve protection.
Tell that to the woman who died on the church steps.
