stoltergeist
9.6K posts

stoltergeist
@stoltergeist
| Based Dad | 3rd Gen Carpenter | Herr Der Lage | Not Verified But Pretty Sure |

I built CourtWatch.us — a free public database for American citizens who deserve safer communities. You can track which judges released defendants who then got rearrested, skipped court, or violated their release conditions. All public records. All free. I started with Orange County FL and will be expanding to all 67 Florida counties and eventually every state in the country. This first batch of info is from 2024 and since public reports are released in March/April for the previous year, data is behind. But I wanted to see if this is plausible. After adding 2024,I'll add 2025 and then figure out how to get real-time-data uploaded. It's in beta — would love to know what you think 👇 Numbers don't lie, but criminals do. courtwatch.us @bennyjohnson @jockowillink @GrantCardone @LauraLoomer @nickshirleyy @j_fishback




🚨 A man charged with attempted murder & attempted rape was back on Florida streets in 48 hours. A judge let him go. Nobody was held accountable. This is why I built CourtWatch. 🚨 Honest post: I launched CourtWatch 8 days ago. The data had errors. That's on me — and I spent the past week fixing every record. But here's what I learned that every Floridian (and soon to be every citizen in America) deserves to know: In October 2025, Jacoby Tillman — charged with attempted murder and attempted sexual battery of a jogger on the Little Econ Greenway Trail in Orange County — was arrested, then released in just TWO DAYS on a $9,500 bond. The judge acknowledged his record was "atrocious." She released him anyway. The State Attorney's own office said publicly: "Our office felt that the release of the defendant was not appropriate, and he presents a danger to our community. We argued this point to the Judge... Ultimately the Judge, in her authority, made the decision." — State Attorney Monique Worrell Orange County Sheriff John Mina said: "This is atrocious. He should have never been released." Even the people whose job it is to keep criminals off the streets were overruled — and there was nothing they could do. Now here's the part that should make you angry: Florida's Citizens' Right to Know Act (FSS 907.043) requires pretrial release programs to publicly disclose defendant names, charges, and case numbers. That's a good law. But it has a gap — it NEVER requires the name of the judge who authorized the release to be made public. The court's own public portal only shows who is currently assigned to the case. Not who let them go. There is no public record connecting a pretrial release decision to the judge who made it. The data exists. The accountability doesn't. 🚨One sentence added to FSS 907.043 fixes this: "The name of the judge who authorized pretrial release shall be included in the public register required under this section."🚨 That's it. One line. Then Floridians can see exactly which judges are releasing violent suspects — and vote accordingly. 470 cases. 18 judges. 1 county. 2024. All verified. All public. All at courtwatch.live I'm working on getting the rest of 2024 handled for Florida, then 2025 data. I've got some new features in the works and I'm building a pipeline so all of you can help put this data together across the nation. 📨 Get the CourtWatch newsletter — we'll notify you as Florida-wide coverage drops county by county: courtwatch.live @GovRonDeSantis @SodFatherFL @CarlosGSmith @DougForApopka @AnnaForFlorida @JohannaForFL @RitaForFlorida @Paula4FLHouse47 @MoniqueHWorrell — The State Attorney said the release was wrong. The Sheriff said it was wrong. The public said it was wrong. And yet there is still no law requiring the releasing judge's name to be public record. Will you champion a one-line fix to FSS 907.043? Yes or no?












Cannabis is detrimental to sperm: even if they can fertilize, there can be DNA damage. Many miscarriages and (in the case of IVF) “day 3 crashes” which is when paternal DNA normally kicks in, are cannabis related. Dr Natalie Crawford on the Huberman Lab podcast out now.




























