Sunday, April 4, 2010

Dad charged with stabbing "estranged" wife 70 times before 13-year-old daughter pulled him away (Minneapolis, Minnesota)

The 18-year-old daughter is smarter than the damn judge. "He [her father] shouldn't have been out. He just got done abusing her (her mother), why would you let (him) out of jail two-three days later?"

Why indeed. Because this is what happens with alarming frequency, but the judges either refuse to "get it" or just don't care. I don't care what pretty speeches are released about how the judge Regina Chu "really cares" about victims of domestic violence. Actions speak louder than words.

Back on March 24, dad BILLY NASH was charged with misdemeanor domestic violence for "allegedly" kicking and slapping his wife and dragging her by the hair for refusing to have sex with him. (Does this piece of sh** have some sort of caveman fantasy?)

He was released from jail JUST TWO DAYS after being charged with NO BAIL. But he got a firm finger wagging at him. Yes, sir. Don't contact your wife! We mean it now!

Of course Daddy paid no mind. With a two-day jail stay and no bail, why should he take any of these warnings seriously? So now the piece of sh** attacks his wife "almost immediately," stabbing her 70 times before the poor traumatized 13-year-old daughter manages to pull him away. The mom later died at the hospital.

So now Daddy is being held on a $1 million bond. Too late for his wife, isn't it?

Stop letting abusers out on no bail! This is basically a death sentence for too many mothers.

http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hExFfRTVaT8qW_VsTnFGtXd5Sa5AD9ERQJ7O0

Minn. man charged with stabbing wife 70 times
(AP) – 1 day ago

MINNEAPOLIS — A man punched his estranged wife and stabbed her 70 times in the chest and head before his 13-year-old daughter pulled him away, disarmed him and fled with the knife, police said Saturday.

The fatal attack came about one week after the suspect was charged with assaulting the same woman. He had been released without bail on the condition that he not contact her.

Billy Nash, 46, of Minneapolis was charged Friday with first-degree murder, which carries a maximum penalty of life in prison. He was ordered held on $1 million bail.

Online court records didn't list an attorney for Nash on Saturday. A message left at the Nash home wasn't immediately returned.

Police identified the victim by the initials P.N. The Star Tribune of Minneapolis identified her as Pauline Nash, 42.

Billy Nash had been charged March 24 with misdemeanor domestic assault for allegedly kicking and slapping his wife and dragging her by the hair after she refused to have sex with him.

He was released from the Hennepin County jail two days later and ordered not to contact his wife. Judge Regina Chu allowed his conditional release because he had no prior domestic-assault convictions and because Pauline Nash said "this has never occurred in the past," according to a court transcript.

But he violated the no-contact order almost immediately, said Brittany Nash, 18, the fifth of the couple's sixth children.

"He shouldn't have been out. If he just got done abusing her, why would you let (him) out of jail two-three days later?" she told the Star Tribune. "That doesn't make any sense to me."

Chief Hennepin County Judge James Swenson released a statement defending Chu's decision to release Billy Nash.

"Judge Chu has spent much of her judicial career working on the issue of domestic violence," Swenson said. "She cares passionately about protecting victims of domestic violence, and for her, the death of this morning is a particularly sad and tragic occurrence."

Brittany Nash said she awoke to hear her mother's terrified screams Friday about 3 a.m. She ran to her mother's room and found her father attacking her, the criminal complaint said. Brittany Nash dialed 911 as her 13-year-old sister grabbed the bloody knife and fled.

Police found Pauline Nash bleeding in the bedroom. She was taken to a hospital where she died.

Billy Nash told investigators, "I'm sorry, sergeant, that you had to come here tonight for this. ... She was driving me crazy. ... I killed the (expletive)," the complaint said.

He said he was angry at the way his wife was handling money, court documents said. As the couple argued he grabbed a paring knife and repeatedly stabbed her, the documents said.

As police led him away he looked at his children but said nothing, Brittany Nash said.

The teenager said she wants people to remember her mother, a personal-care attendant, as a loving, caring soul who treated others as she wanted to be treated.

"What are we going to do without our mom?" Brittany Nash said. "We have no parents now. What are we going to do?"

Information from: Star Tribune, http://www.startribune.com