Unitarian Universalists give Get Out Of Jail Free Cards at Valley Street Jail in Manchester
The Unitarian Universalist “Church” (UUC) is more like a liberal club, but Church is in the name, and they maintain a patina of belief, but mostly in secular, culture-destroying Marxist-progressive ideals. DEI, CRT, LGBTQ, and so on, and part of embracing that madness includes a community bail fund. You’ll have heard about these.
The group gathers money to bail out individuals arrested or detained in local jails. This mission highlights principles such as “The goal of world community with peace, liberty, and justice for all” and “The inherent worth and dignity of every person,” which seem like noble intentions on the surface. There are always going to be people who have been detained who are not a threat but can’t raise or afford bail. Helping those folks is kindness.
But what about the dignity and the worth of the victims of sex predators and domestic abusers? That’s who the Unitarian Universalists are alleged to be bailing out from the Valley Street Jail in Manchester along with the non-violent offenders.
According to whistleblowers with knowledge of the practice, some of the individuals benefiting from the UUCs bail fund are not non-violent offenders. Some have been charged with domestic violence, aggravated assault, and sexual assault.
Do donors to UU Action know that their funds might be being used to bail out men who, for example, have been charged with beating their spouse, only to be released within hours, potentially endangering their victims again?
The whistleblowers have provided a list of names and the sums spent by the UUC on bail. We are working on the list to confirm the nature of the charges before publishing it, but those sources say this practice has been ongoing for a while and continues.
This story is developing.
Note: If you happen to have the skill set for running down the names to confirm the arrests, release, and to identify the crimes charged, I could use a volunteer to help with that for our follow-up piece. A shared byline is available if interested.