When last we reported on it, Lexington had seen 28 homicides in 2021, the last on September 3rd. Lexington’s 29th murder happened early this morning:
Update: Man dies after shooting at Lexington apartment complex
By Christopher Leach | Updated: October 5, 2021 | 4:37 PM EDT
A 23-year-old man died shortly after he was found shot at a Lexington apartment complex early Tuesday, according to police.
Jayontai McCann of Lexington died at the University of Kentucky Chandler Hospital at 5:17 a.m., according to the Fayette County coroner.
Also see: Paul Mirengoff on Powerline, Wokeness kills.
However, let’s tell the whole truth here.
Suspect arrested for shooting that injured EKU player
By Echo Gamel | July 24, 2019
LEXINGTON, KY. (WTVQ) – Police announce an arrest in a shooting last month in Lexington that left an Eastern Kentucky Football player injured.
The Lexington Police Department says 21-year-old Jayontai McCann is facing charges for the shooting on June 23 near Two Keys Tavern.
According to officers, two men got into a fight then one went to his car to get a gun and shot the other man.
The victim was later identified as Cameron Catron, a player on the EKU football team.
McCann is charged with assault, possession of a handgun by convicted felon, and tampering with physical evidence.
The Lexington Herald-Leader reported[1]The Herald-Leader actually printed Mr McCann’s mugshot in that story, but it was before the silly McClatchy Mugshot Policy was written.:
- According to court records, McCann was on probation at the time of the shooting after pleading guilty in August. He was charged with cocaine possession and attempted evidence tampering. His prison sentence and jail sentence on the two charges were suspended and he was given probation for two years.
He had previously been charged with other drug and gun crimes and pleaded guilty in some instances.
The obvious question is: why was Mr McCann out on the streets Tuesday morning? He had been a previously convicted felon, and had a suspended sentence hanging over his head. He should have been locked up for the two years of his suspended sentence, even before facing charges for shooting Mr Cameron.
Did law enforcement do Mr McCann any favors by treating him leniently? If he had been in prison, where he should have been, he would (probably) be alive today. By letting him loose, loose to return to whatever life he led before, law enforcement left him out to become stone-cold graveyard dead.
The odds are pretty good that, if and when the Lexington Police figure out who murdered Mr McCann, we’ll discover that he, too, had a rap sheet and could, and should, have been in jail himself early Tuesday morning.
The Urban Dictionary defines a “self-cleaning oven” as:
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when a criminal becomes the victim of a crime because he victimized someone at an earlier time; in other words, karma comes back on the criminal, the problem takes care of itself without the need for police or legal intervention. In theory, eventually all crime should diminish because of this theory, the oven should clean itself.
“Man, that banger got shot because he jacked those same dudes last week…it’s okay because now his crew will roll back on them…they don’t want to make a police report, it’s a self-cleaning oven.”
On one of my favorite television shows, Blue Bloods, it’s called a public service homicide.
It is, however, possible that Mr McCann was turning his life around, and whatever his past crimes, he didn’t deserve to die. But bad lives can lead to bad ends, whether he was turning his life around or not.
References
↑1 | The Herald-Leader actually printed Mr McCann’s mugshot in that story, but it was before the silly McClatchy Mugshot Policy was written. |
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