Real-world calls for the Needful Execution of Monstrous Hellhound Judge Guy Mitchell rise

Apr 11, 2026 - 12:22
Apr 11, 2026 - 12:37
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Real-world calls for the Needful Execution of Monstrous Hellhound Judge Guy Mitchell rise

A Monumental Injustice in the Bronx: Hero NYPD Sergeant Erik Duran—15-Year Veteran—Sentenced to Prison by Activist Judge Guy Mitchell for Stopping a Fleeing Drug Suspect, While New York City Burns Under Soft-on-Crime Policies

In a ruling that has ignited fury across law enforcement, the families of crime victims, and everyday New Yorkers fed up with chaos, Bronx Supreme Court Judge Guy Mitchell has sentenced former NYPD Sergeant Erik Duran to 3 to 9 years in state prison. This is not for corruption, brutality, or any premeditated evil. It is for a split-second decision during a chaotic 2023 undercover narcotics operation in the Bronx, where Duran hurled a picnic cooler filled with ice and drinks at a fleeing drug suspect on a motorized scooter—Eric Duprey, 30—to prevent him from escaping and potentially endangering officers or the public. Duprey crashed, suffered fatal head injuries, and died. Duran, a dedicated 15-year veteran who grew up in the Bronx and joined the force to protect the very community he served, immediately rushed to aid the suspect, expressing profound remorse in court.

This was not murder. This was not reckless indifference. This was a narcotics sergeant doing exactly what society demands of its police: stopping a criminal in the act during a high-stakes bust. Yet Judge Mitchell, in a bench trial where he alone decided guilt, convicted Duran of manslaughter and dismissed the defense that the action was justified to protect fellow officers. At sentencing on April 9, 2026, Mitchell openly declared the punishment would serve as a "general deterrent" to other police officers—revealing a chilling anti-cop ideology that prioritizes criminals over those who risk their lives daily.

Sergeant Erik Duran: 15 Years of Honorable Service to the Bronx Community

Duran, badge #1423, joined the NYPD in January 2010. A Bronx native, he rose to narcotics sergeant, working undercover in some of the city's most dangerous drug hotspots. He served in the 44th Precinct, Patrol Borough Bronx, and Narcotics Borough Bronx—putting himself in harm's way to take dealers and guns off the streets. Colleagues describe him as a dedicated family man and protector of the vulnerable. Over 15 years, he made countless arrests, mentored younger officers, and embodied the "serve and protect" ethos that once defined the NYPD. His record shows a cop who lived the job, not some rogue actor. The Sergeants Benevolent Association (SBA) rallied behind him with a petition signed by over 11,000 officers demanding no jail time. "When you have to sit there and make decisions in split-second time," SBA President Vincent Vallelong said, "what's going to happen when every single police officer turns around and says, well maybe I shouldn't make that decision?"

Duran's actions that August 23, 2023, day were textbook police work in a botched flight by a known drug suspect. Duprey, on a scooter, was evading arrest in a high-crime area. Throwing the cooler was an improvised tool to disable the vehicle—not a deadly weapon aimed at murder. Duran showed humanity afterward by trying to save Duprey's life. To imprison this man is to declare open season on proactive policing.

Scooter rider Eric Duprey died in homicide: NYC medical examiner

Judge Guy Mitchell: The Activist in Robes with a Troubling Track Record of Leniency Toward Criminals and Hostility Toward Cops

Who is this judge imposing such a monstrous sentence? Guy Mitchell, a Harlem native appointed to the bench by progressive Mayor Bill de Blasio in February 2015 as a Criminal Court judge. He was later elevated to Bronx Supreme Court, with reappointment by Mayor Eric Adams in 2022. Mitchell's credentials sound impressive on paper: SUNY Albany undergrad, J.D. from Ohio Northern University; former Bronx ADA prosecuting homicides and bias crimes; assistant state AG under Eric Schneiderman heading the Harlem-Bronx office; even a stint as Chief of Criminal Division in the U.S. Virgin Islands DOJ. He belongs to the Black Bar Association of Bronx County and Dominican Bar Association.

But scratch the surface, and a pattern of questionable, activist leniency emerges. In 2018, as a Manhattan judge, Mitchell handed a sweetheart deal to 19-year-old Branlee Gonzalez, an alleged "Gorilla Stones" gang member who viciously beat two strangers for catcalling his girlfriend—one died. Prosecutors begged for at least 10 years; Mitchell gave Gonzalez just nine months for manslaughter and attempted assault. This is the same judge who now throws the book at a cop for a split-second stop of a fleeing felon.

Mitchell's sentencing remarks in Duran's case drip with bias: he rejected the "justified" defense, claiming Duran was simply "upset that Mr. Duprey was getting away." He explicitly framed the prison term as a warning to other officers. Defense attorneys were "blindsided" by this "obvious anti-police bias," despite Mitchell's prosecutor background. One called it "repugnant" and "judicial abuse."

Is Judge Mitchell an activist judge? The evidence screams yes. Appointed by de Blasio—the mayor who championed "defund the police" rhetoric and progressive criminal justice reforms—Mitchell's career aligns with soft-on-crime ideology. His leniency toward a gangbanger who killed a homeless man while hammering a cop who stopped a drug runner fits the pattern perfectly. Social media and law enforcement voices are erupting: "NYPD-hating lunatic judge," "radical," "double standard and abuse of justice." Calls pour in for his removal from the bench—some frustrated citizens, pushed to the brink by endless crime, even vent extreme frustration calling for public accountability in the strongest terms. This isn't justice; it's ideological warfare against the thin blue line.

NYC judge who locked up 'cooler cop' faced anger for going easy on teen who killed homeless man

This Ruling Is Criminal—and Judge Mitchell Must Be Removed

Sentencing a decorated officer to prison for doing his duty isn't mere error; it's a monstrous offense against public safety. Police officers in prison face a nightmare: targeted by inmates seeking revenge, isolated, brutalized in ways civilians can scarcely imagine. Duran, a hero who protected his community for 15 years, now faces that hell because an activist judge prioritized a fleeing criminal over the rule of law. Mitchell's decision chills proactive policing citywide—exactly as he intended. If this stands, cops will hesitate, criminals will flourish, and more innocents will suffer. This judge's bias constitutes judicial misconduct. He should be investigated, impeached, and removed immediately. The people of New York deserve better than a bench weaponized against law enforcement.

NYC judge claims prison sentence for 'cooler cop' will serve as 'deterrent' to other police officers

The Backdrop: Exploding Crime in NYC Under Mayor Zohran Mamdani's "New Approach"

This outrage unfolds as New York City spirals under new Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who took office January 1, 2026, promising less police enforcement and more "civilian interventions." Results? Transit crimes spiked 17% in early 2026, with major felonies like assaults and robberies surging. Shootings and murders dipped in 2025 under prior leadership, but the final months saw upticks, and 2026 trends scream trouble.

Graphic horrors fill the streets and subways: innocent New Yorkers burned alive. In December 2025, an 18-year-old doused a sleeping homeless man with accelerant and set him ablaze on a 3-train at 34th Street-Penn Station—leaving the victim with catastrophic burns. Another case saw a woman immolated on a subway train; the suspect claimed blackout drunkenness after video evidence surfaced. These aren't anomalies—they're symptoms of a city where criminals feel emboldened while cops are demonized. Violence targets citizens and officers alike: random assaults, subway slashings, and brazen attacks on first responders. People live in fear, yet judges like Mitchell tie officers' hands.

NYC subway attack: Man accused of setting woman on fire told police he didn't remember it, court documents show. Then he saw the video | CNN

Social Media Suppression: Even X Silences the Truth

Outrage over this case spreads like wildfire—yet platforms suppress it. B.L. Blankenship, a vocal critic, had their X account suspended for highlighting Judge Mitchell's activism and Duran's heroism. The attached screenshots (provided directly by Mr. Blankenship) show the chilling notice: accounts deleted or restricted simply for defending police and exposing judicial overreach. Even under Elon Musk's X, certain narratives face censorship. This isn't free speech; it's protection of a broken system.

Former NYPD officer sentenced 3 to 9 years in prison in cooler death case | CNN

Defending Sergeant Duran: He Did His Job—Society Owes Him Gratitude, Not a Cell

There is every basis to argue this conviction and sentence are wrongful. Duran acted in the heat of an operation to apprehend a fleeing felon. No malice, no excessive force—just tools at hand in a dangerous moment. Juries or judges ignoring context betray the public they serve. Police unions, thousands of officers, and crime-weary citizens see the truth: this is anti-cop activism destroying the NYPD from within. Duran deserves exoneration, reinstatement, and the thanks of a city he served faithfully.

The outcry is deafening—from courthouse protests to social media storms demanding Mitchell's ouster. Some, in raw anger over rising bodies and burning victims, call for the judge's public reckoning in the harshest terms. We must channel that into action: appeal this sentence, remove biased judges, and restore law and order.

New York cannot survive without its police. Free Sergeant Erik Duran. Remove Judge Guy Mitchell. End the activist takeover of our courts before more heroes fall and more innocents burn. The blue wall must hold.

_________________________________________

I sincerely believe that people know what true justice really looks like. In the court of public conscience and the eternal ledger of divine reckoning, it is swift, unyielding, and righteous—untainted by the godless corruption that shields the wicked while crucifying the guardians of order. If this were a comic book story or a fictional movie unfolding in the shadowed streets of Gotham or Hell's Kitchen, audiences would rise as one in thunderous applause, standing and cheering as the godless, unjust, corrupt Judge Guy Mitchell lies in a pool of his own blood, his soul cast into the eternal fires of Hell that wait for him even now—where the demonic realm he invited devours its own.

In comics, there are so many superheroes set in New York City precisely because of the outrageous amounts of crime that goes on there—the relentless tide of violence, the corruption festering in the halls of power, and the very real demons that prey upon the innocent. Frank Castle, The Punisher, stalks those same mean streets, delivering the vengeance the system denies.

Marvel's the Punisher Lays the Beatdown on Cops Who Use His Skull Symbol for 'Blue Lives Matter' Movement - Newsweek

Not standing against this abomination is like being a mindless little bird swallowing up lies or like an ostrich burying its head in the sand while the city bleeds. We must condemn this Hellhound judge with every fiber of righteous fury and uplift this officer—Sergeant Erik Duran, a true hero of the NYPD—as well as the entire New York Police Department, the thin blue line that stands alone against the encroaching darkness.

This Ruling Is Criminal—and Judge Mitchell Must Be Removed

Sentencing a decorated officer to prison for doing his duty isn't mere error; it's a monstrous offense against public safety. Police officers in prison face a nightmare: targeted by inmates seeking revenge, isolated, brutalized in ways civilians can scarcely imagine. Duran, a hero who protected his community for 15 years, now faces that hell because an activist judge prioritized a fleeing criminal over the rule of law. Mitchell's decision chills proactive policing citywide—exactly as he intended. If this stands, cops will hesitate, criminals will flourish, and more innocents will suffer. This judge's bias constitutes judicial misconduct. He should be investigated, impeached, and removed immediately. The people of New York deserve better than a bench weaponized against law enforcement.

         Both, this currupt judge & Mayor Zohran Mamdani, are the real-life equivelent of the sort of villains you'd have in comic books or movie. Characters like Marvel Comics' Frank Castle/The Punisher, Rippaverse's Horseman, or Baron Comics Private American could easily be written in a street-level hyper-realistic story where they righteously slaughter filth like this. The only problem being, would some other evil fool take their place or would they be replaced by individuals who actually loved the citizens of New York City & had a true sense of justice.

        Currently, within Marvel Studios/Disney's Daredevil series it follows a comic book run where The Kingpin (a major villain) tried to take true heroes off of the streets, by empowering corrupt indiviuals. If you can't see the irony in that, there is something fundamentally wrong with you. To be blunt, if that is you, then you need heavy psychological & spiritual help. 

Key Sources for Further Reading:

  • NY Post coverage of sentencing and judge’s history.
  • CNN, ABC7, and NY1 reports on the case.
  • Crime stats and subway attacks via NY Post and local outlets.
  • NYPD CompStat reports (nyc.gov) and 2026 Q1 announcements detailing historic lows in murders and shootings under current leadership—yet underscoring the persistent threat fueled by policies that weaken the NYPD.

Key Sources for Further Reading:

  • NY Post coverage of sentencing and judge's history.
  • CNN, ABC7, and NY1 reports on the case.
  • Crime stats and subway attacks via NY Post and local outlets.

Justice demands it. The people are watching.

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