…..On VK:
Per Plex
Hero!
Renatus Der-Kahle-R-K
Blew his brain clean out!.
John De Nugent Aufdeutsch replied to Renatus
Renatus, yep!
Paul Deuce
JUSTICE
Sandrine De-Soutier replied to Suzy
Suzy, did the paedophile have any dirt on politicians, police or a judge? That’s normally when they never survive to trial.
Suzy Skye replied to Renatus
Renatus, and he was drunk, wearing sunglasses AND shooting under his arm at a moving target…a true superhero
Suzy Skye replied to Sandrine
Sandrine,the dad of the kid had a lot of friends on the police force… ‘Deeply connected’ was how they considered it but he knew somebody and he made sure he would have an opportunity to take the fucker out. I think in like the last interview that he did before he passed away he said he did not regret it one bit…who would?
I just love that he was drunk and fucking turned on a dime from a phone call with, I guess, his best friend, shot under his arm with sunglasses on and blew the fucker away while he’s walking …
I suck with a gun. I could do it with a crossbow.. you know I totally get it…you do what you gotta do with whatever you have in a moment like that.
He became my hero instantly lol
Bryan Kidd
Look how upset the cop was when he saw him dead, fucking pig.
Suzy Skye replied to Sandrine
Sandrine, right on television for all the press cameras… that was probably the only reason I think it got so much publicity. They didn’t want people knowing that people would go vigilante and kill perps… I remember when it happened.
John De Nugent Aufdeutsch replied to Bryan
Bryan, mmm I think the cop was highly sympathetic and just did not want the outraged dad to have to go to prison. After all, the molester already faced the certainty of a long sentence and also the fury of other prisoners.
Mark Calvin
Mission accomplished!
Suzy Skye
Suzy Skye replied to Bryan
Bryan, those cops were all buddies with that dad… Only reason he was able to get a gun into an airport and be that close to somebody… I don’t think they were in on his plan but, he had the opportunity to get there because of his connections he knew when and by what route… They knew him by name, what they were saying is why Gary why…
Mark Calvin
He knocked the smug face off the rapist
Suzy Skye
Suzy Skye replied to Bryan
Bryan, from what I remember of interviews at the time and the feeling I got about things… They were bummed out. they had the perpetrator he was going to go to jail and somebody they liked now was likely going to get tossed under the bus. But then things worked out, and they had doctors say that he was not capable of making a decision between right and wrong at the time he pulled that trigger. So he basically got off with nothing but community service in the long run…
John De Nugent Aufdeutsch replied to Suzy
Suzy, yes, for once there was justice. And I also am glad that that pedo was not in a government hotel with three meals a day for ten years at our expense.
Renatus Der-Kahle-R-K replied to Suzy
Suzy, Gary Plauché was sentenced to seven years in prison for manslaughter and to serve 300 hours of community service. Normally, plot participants do not “die a natural death” … apart from that, I would also score at this short distance drunk with sunglasses … ok, ok, but I am also a shooter and have trained this …
John De Nugent Aufdeutsch replied to Renatus
Renatus, yes, and he had a perfect motivation to succeed- -vengeance for his poor boy — and time to mentally rehearse what he would do at the moment of truth. And the pedophile was just five feet away, walking straight ahead at a normal speed.
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…..Good article on the case
Gary Plauché, The Louisiana Dad Who Took Deadly Revenge On His Son’s Rapist On Live Television
By Tim Brinkhof | Edited By Erik Hawkins
Published June 15, 2021
Updated September 27, 2021
[source: https://allthatsinteresting.com/gary-plauche]
On March 16, 1984, Gary Plauché waited at the airport for Jeff Doucet, who had kidnapped his son, Jody — then shot him dead as cameras rolled.
A parent’s worst nightmare is likely a child’s abduction — or sexual assault. Gary Plauché, an American dad from Baton Rouge, Louisiana, endured both, then did the unthinkable: He tracked down the man who took his son and shot him in the head. A cameraman captured the murder on tape, turning Plauché’s act of revenge into a national sensation.
Plauché attracted even more attention from the media during his trial. As a judge was deciding his fate, onlookers judged his character. Should he be charged with murdering another man, or celebrated for ridding the world of a dangerous criminal?
Leon Gary Plauché was born on Nov. 10, 1945, in Baton Rouge. He briefly served in the U.S. Air Force, where he earned the rank of Staff Sergeant. After leaving the army, Plauché became an equipment salesman and also worked as a cameraman for a local news station.
All in all, Plauché seemed destined to lead a quiet and ordinary life. Then, one day, everything changed.
Jody Plauché Is Taken By A Trusted Family Friend
YouTubeJody Plauché, pictured with his abductor and rapist, Jeff Doucet.
The series of events that would change Plauché’s life forever was set in motion on Feb. 19, 1984, when, his 11-year-old son Jody’s karate instructor picked him up to go for a ride. Jeff Doucet, a 25-year-old with a large beard, promised Jody Plauché’s mom, June, that they’d be back in 15 minutes.
June Plauché didn’t doubt Doucet: She had no reason to. He instructed three of their four children in karate, and was trusted in the community. Doucet enjoyed spending time with the boys, and they enjoyed spending time with him.
“He’s all of our best friend,” Jody Plauché told his school newspaper a year earlier. According to June, her son quit football and basketball to spend as much time at Doucet’s dojo as possible.
Little did she know that Jeff Doucet wasn’t taking Jody on a ride around the neighborhood. By nighttime, the two were on a bus heading to the West Coast. On the way, Doucet shaved his beard and dyed Jody’s blond hair to black. He hoped to pass Jody off as his own son while also hiding from law enforcement that would soon track them down.
Doucet and Jody Plauché checked into a cheap motel in Anaheim, California, just a short walk away from Disneyland. Inside the motel room, Doucet sexually assaulted his karate student. This went on until Jody asked to call his parents, which Doucet allowed. Police, alerted by Jody’s parents, traced the call and arrested Doucet while Jody was put on a flight back to Louisiana.
Gary Plauché’s Murder Of Jeff Doucet Was Broadcast Live
YouTube Gary Plauché, left, the moment before he shot his son’s kidnapper and rapist, Jeff Doucet on live television.
Mike Barnett, a Baton Rouge sheriff’s major who had helped track down Jeff Doucet and was friendly with Gary Plauché, took it upon himself to inform him about what the karate instructor had done to his son. According to Barnett, Gary “had the same reaction most parents do when they find out their children have been raped or molested: He was horrified.”
Plauché told Barnett, ″I’ll kill that S.O.B.,″ the Associated Press reported.
Though his son had been found, Plauché remained on edge. He spent the next few days inside a local bar, The Cotton Club, asking people when they thought Doucet might be brought back to Baton Rouge for trial. A former colleague from WBRZ News, who happened to be out for a drink, told Plauché that the disgraced karate instructor would be flown in at 9:08.
Plauché drove to Baton Rouge Airport. He entered the arrivals hall wearing a baseball cap and a pair of sunglasses. His face hidden, he walked over to a payphone. As he made a quick call, a WBRZ news crew got their cameras ready to record the caravan of cops that were escorting Jeff Doucet out of his plane. When they passed by, Plauché pulled a gun from his boot and shot Doucet in the head.
The bullet that Plauché shot through Doucet’s skull was caught on camera by the WBRZ crew. On YouTube, over 20 million people have watched how Doucet collapsed and how Barnett quickly tackled Plauché to the wall. “Why, Gary, why’d you do it?” the officer shouted at his friend as he disarmed him.
“If somebody did it to your kid, you’d do it, too!” Plauché answered, in tears.
Gary Plauché: True Hero Or Reckless Vigilante?
Twitter/Jody Plauché Locals almost uniformly believed Gary Plauché’s killing of Jeff Doucet was justified.
“I don’t want him to do it to other kids,” Plauché told his attorney, Foxy Sanders, while awaiting trial in jail. According to Sanders, he said the voice of Christ had compelled him to pull the trigger. Although Plauché had killed a child molester, murder was still murder in the eyes of the law. He had to be put on trial, and it wasn’t clear whether he would go free or go to prison.
Sanders was adamant that Plauché would not spend a single day locked up once the world learned how carefully Jeff Doucet had gone about grooming Jody Plauché. Sanders also argued Jody’s kidnapping had pushed his father into a “psychotic state,” in which he was no longer capable of distinguishing right from wrong.
The citizens of Baton Rouge didn’t agree. If you asked them, they said that Plauché was in his right mind when killing Doucet.
“From strangers in the street to the boys at The Cotton Club, where Gary Plauche used to drink Miller Lites,” wrote journalist Art Harris for The Washington Post that same year, the locals had already “acquitted him.”
According to one of these locals, a riverboat captain named Murray Curry, Plauché was anything but a killer. “He’s a father who done it out of love for his child, and for his pride.” Like other neighbors, Curry donated a bit of money to a defense fund set up to help Plauché pay back his $100,000 bail and keep his family afloat while fighting the trial.
The degree to which public opinion swayed in Plauché’s favor was overwhelming. So much so that when sentencing time came around, the judge decided against sending Plauché to jail. Doing so, he had said, would have been counterproductive. He felt certain that Plauché didn’t intend to harm anyone except the already dead Jeff Doucet.
The Plauchés’ Lives After The Vigilante Killing
Twitter/Jody Plauché Jody Plauché, left, and his father appeared on Geraldo Rivera’s daytime show in 1991, sharing the story of Jody’s abduction and Gary’s revenge.
Plauché walked away from his murder trial with five years probation and 300 hours of community service. Before he had completed both, Plauché was already back to living a relatively normal life under the radar. He died in 2014 from a stroke when he was in his late 60s.
His obituary describes him as a man who “saw beauty in everything, he was a loyal friend to all, always made others laugh, and a hero to many.”
As for Jody Plauché, he needed time to process his assault but eventually ended up turning his experience into a book titled Why, Gary, Why?. In it, Jody relates his side of the story to help parents prevent their children from having to experience what he went through. Jody also enjoys cooking and frequently shares his hobby with people online.
Although he has come to accept what happened to him, Jody still thinks about the horrific events of his youth. That’s partly because the internet keeps reminding him of it. “I’ll post a cooking video on YouTube,” he said in an interview with The Advocate, “and someone will comment, ‘Your dad’s a hero.’ They won’t comment, ‘That gumbo looks great.’ They’ll just be, like, ‘Your dad’s a hero.’”
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As I read the below, I kept thinking of how the jews control our tv, entertainment, social media, schools and universities, where they can be “alone” with the mind of our children and teens.
More kike lies https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZuOtYYQsWFY
John, what’s your opinion on the claim that they beat him – was it because he was helping the communists ?
Who was beaten? Not the father; he did not resist arrest; the cops knew him as the bereaved father; and they just cuffed him.
According to the documentary and wiki he was ‘hit in the face’ and sent Buchenwald to work https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gert_Schramm -nowhere in the documentary or wiki does it mention any ‘Brutal Nazi Torture’ lol. All their lies are slowly but steadily falling apart.
Thanks. The poor negro survived the Nazis — as did so many, many others — and lived to be 92. 😉
https://leceneridipinocchio.blogspot.com/2022/09/la-vita-traumatica-e-la-morte-sospetta.html?m=1