Parole Board had sprung Washington in Kingston Frazier kidnapping
Madison-Rankin County District Attorney Bubba Bramlett issued the following statement.
District Attorney John K. “Bubba” Bramlett announced today that D’Allen Tyrek Washington was sentenced to twenty years as a habitual offender for the sale of methamphetamine in Rankin County Circuit Court. All time will be served without the possibility of early release or parole. In early 2024, agents with the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics began a multi-county investigation into methamphetamine and fentanyl sales throughout the metro. Working with both undercover officers and confidential informants, officers determined that Washington was selling large amounts of controlled substances. On February 23, 2024, Washington sold thirty dosage units of methamphetamine to a confidential informant in Flowood. Officers were conducting surveillance of the transaction and attempted to apprehend Washington after the sale was completed. He attempted to escape officers on foot. However, after a short foot pursuit, Washington was taken into custody, and investigators turned the case over to the Rankin County grand jury. District Attorney Bubba Bramlett stated, “We want to thank the Mississippi Bureau of Narcotics, the Rankin County Sheriff’s Department, and the Madison Police Department for their combined and continued efforts to stem the flow of drugs into our communities. Mr. Washington had been twice previously convicted of felony offenses and refused to stop breaking the law. And for that, he will spend the next twenty years in prison.”D'allen Washington pleaded guilty in Madison County Circuit Court today to accessory after the fact to kidnapping in the Kingston Frazier case. He also pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of simple robbery. He was indicted for armed robbery before six year-old Kingston Frazier was kidnapped and murdered. Judge William Chapman presided over the guilty plea.
Judge Chapman sentenced Washington to serve 20 years in prison for the accessory charge but suspended 5 years of the sentence and sentenced him to serve six years in prison for the armed robbery conviction.
Unfortunately, the Mississippi Parole Board, as it is so want to do, released him after he served only five years of the sentence. The Parole Board knuckleheads justified the release in a press release: :
Washington, 22, is required to be on electronic monitoring for a year. His conditions also include monthly reporting, random drug testing, a midnight curfew, and non-affiliation with convicted felons. He cannot possess a gun, use alcoholic beverages, go to places with bad reputations, change his residency without notifying his supervising agent or leave the state without permission. He must pay all court costs and supervision fees. His supervision ends Dec. 21, 2028, followed by five years of probation

8 comments:
took long enough.......still should be charged with murder...
KF, how about doing a short article on the Parole Board along with pics of its members?
4 years for participating in the murder of a 6 year old... parole board needs to be tarred and feathered. They are the enemy.
With that big gourd, you think he would know better.
all ms parole boards have been either corrupt and / or incompetent since the early 1980s...................
rember clem jimpson
maybe douglas Hopgkins?
the list goes on and on..........................
so this thug was released by the parole board and he goes right back to trafficking in narcotics..............what did the parole board think he was going to do?
become a baptist minister?
every person on that parole board should be kicked off by the governor, but tate just taint got the nuts to do it.
Surely you didn't expect him to serve time anywhere near what he deserved, did you? This is Mississippi, after all.
12:05 - Our governor is the definition of lame duck.
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