A soft-on-crime, George Soros-backed Orleans Parish District Attorney Jason Williams and his elderly mother were victims of a carjacking in New Orleans, in which the perpetrators reportedly wielded high-powered automatic rifles, Fox 8 Local reports.
Soros funded New Orleans District Attorney Jason Williams @orleansparishda, and his 78-year-old mother, were carjacked at gunpoint by two Black male suspects last night.
Williams was elected in 2020 with the help of $220k in PAC spending from George Soros. pic.twitter.com/RYpqcQ0G4O
— National Conservative (@NatCon2022) October 17, 2023
The incident occurred as Williams was helping his mother into his vehicle, with the assailants approaching and threatening them at gunpoint, demanding the surrender of the car.
The suspects quickly fled with the vehicle but later abandoned it at an undisclosed location. Within a half-hour timeframe, they committed another carjacking, targeting a young woman in the vicinity.
“OPDA confirms that DA Williams and his 78-year-old mother were carjacked at gunpoint as he was helping her into a car,” office spokesman Keith Lampkin said.
'My 5-year-old growing up without his dad, that would be a big deal' – DA Jason Williams reflects on being carjacked at gunpoint with mother in this WWL-TV exclusive with Mike Perlstein.
Click link for more: https://t.co/9lGbVnC5L6 pic.twitter.com/HRXhc0OH0M
— WWL-TV (@WWLTV) October 17, 2023
Williams retained the key fob, preventing the carjackers from making a successful escape. In response to the incident, Williams has expressed his intention to recuse himself and his office from the case if the perpetrators are apprehended, with the criminal division of Attorney General Jeff Landry’s office taking over.
This event follows Williams’ earlier warning about escalating violence in New Orleans and across the nation.
As is the case with a number of Soros-backed District Attorneys, Williams is incredibly soft on crime, with Williams declining to prosecute 65% of all criminal cases in New Orleans in 2021. He started prosecuting more cases as crime rates increased.