Master Sergeant
07-05-2018, 01:28 PM
https://www.thestate.com/news/local/crime/article213920674.html
The police incident report describes an intense encounter.
A SLUT WHORE COAL BURNER awoke to find her former NIGGER boyfriend, USC defensive back Javon Charleston, in the room where she was sleeping, according to the report. She told police she eventually ran from the home, but Charleston caught up with her and grabbed her by the neck, called her a "dirty slut" and pushed her down some stairs.
But the woman, COAL BURNING SLUT WHORE Sophia Thomas, 19, told The State the incident was more complicated than that. Charleston is not a criminal, she says.
The State reported about the arrest of Charleston, 22 — and his subsequent suspension from the University of South Carolina football team — on June 17. Afterward, Thomas stated on Twitter: "Don't believe what you read! the allegations against Javon Charleston should be dropped immediately. ..."
She also said Charleston never hit her and that "justice will do him right."
For some people in Thomas' situation, the criminal justice system isn't always the best avenue for becoming safer or for bettering their lives, according to one victim's advocate. Still, in a state with one of the nation's highest rates of women being killed by men, prosecutors and law enforcement officers say they ardently pursue criminal cases.
"We might not have had the best relationship," Thomas says. "But together or not, that’s my best friend and [I'd] never want to put him through anything like this."
The police incident report describes an intense encounter.
A SLUT WHORE COAL BURNER awoke to find her former NIGGER boyfriend, USC defensive back Javon Charleston, in the room where she was sleeping, according to the report. She told police she eventually ran from the home, but Charleston caught up with her and grabbed her by the neck, called her a "dirty slut" and pushed her down some stairs.
But the woman, COAL BURNING SLUT WHORE Sophia Thomas, 19, told The State the incident was more complicated than that. Charleston is not a criminal, she says.
The State reported about the arrest of Charleston, 22 — and his subsequent suspension from the University of South Carolina football team — on June 17. Afterward, Thomas stated on Twitter: "Don't believe what you read! the allegations against Javon Charleston should be dropped immediately. ..."
She also said Charleston never hit her and that "justice will do him right."
For some people in Thomas' situation, the criminal justice system isn't always the best avenue for becoming safer or for bettering their lives, according to one victim's advocate. Still, in a state with one of the nation's highest rates of women being killed by men, prosecutors and law enforcement officers say they ardently pursue criminal cases.
"We might not have had the best relationship," Thomas says. "But together or not, that’s my best friend and [I'd] never want to put him through anything like this."