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NYC Parole Officer Levies Anti-White Racism Charges Against Black Supervisors in Lawsuit

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By:  Jared Evan

The New York Post has an exclusive report of a parole officer suing her supervisors for harassment.

Samantha Rys, 51, filed a lawsuit in Manhattan Federal Court this week against her two supervisors, Sabrina Davis and Tanya Johnson, both of whom are black, alleging that they did nothing to protect her when one of her parolees began threatening to rape, kill and dismember her last year, writes Jacob Geanous of The New York Post.

Rys said that coworkers met her with disbelief and discrimination immediately after beginning her job as a parole officer in May 2021. One once told her that she needed a spray tan and hat because white people assigned to the Red Hook area of Brooklyn only “came to arrest people or take their child”. Colleagues also told her she would not be able to safely do her job because of her race according to court papers obtained by The New York Post.

One can guarantee this would be a front-page story, covered feverishly with hundreds of hours dedicated on MSNBC, CNN, and the usual outlets, if the roles were reversed. This case is relegated to obscurity in the NY Post and not in the public lexicon because of the implicit bias against Caucasians which is deeply engrained in American media.

The New York Post Reports that In August 2021, the Office of Special Investigation concluded that the the parolee posed a credible threat against Rys and her family, recommending that AR should report to a different location, but he never was, according to court filings. Rys ultimately decided to resign due to anxiety her bosses’ refusal to transfer either her or her parolee, which is what happened in the past when any of her non-white coworkers received threats, the lawsuit claims.

“When it came to this feeling that you’re in danger and nobody here gives a rats a– about me,” Michael Sussman, attorney for Rys, said. “I think that was just the final straw for her.”

Davis and Johnson were unable to be reached for comment by The New York Post.

One reason why parole officers are unable to put parole violators back in jail is a change in New York law has made it tougher to put parolees back behind bars when they are accused of a new crime, critics say.

An exclusive report by The New York Post found that flaws in the “Less is More” act – signed into law by Gov. Kathy Hochul last year — have been exposed by several recent high-profile crimes involving suspects on parole who were re-arrested for heinous acts, only to then be freed again thanks to the so-called reforms, according to critics.

“Before, if someone was on parole and they got arrested, they would have to go back to jail and finish their sentence. Now parolees aren’t afraid of getting arrested and going back to jail,” a Queens cop said to The New York Post.

Anti- White racism, while ignored and disregarded as nonexistent, by academics, media and Democrats is a serious issue in America, and just as prevalent as Antisemitism. Intellectually bankrupt pseudo-academics such as Robin DiAngelo write entire books explaining away the plague of vehement hatred of white people in America.

Her book “White fragility” is basically several hundred pages of white bashing.  Books like DiAngelo’s are celebrated in the media and read with enthusiasm by self-loathing, white liberals.

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