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Justice Hasn’t Been Served, As a Convicted Pro-Abortion Domestic Terrorist Gets a Mere Slap On the Wrists (Guest: Rev. Jim Harden)

The CEO of CompassCare is frustrated with the light sentence handed down to Hridindu Sankar Roychowdhury for his heinous crimes.

On April 10, 2024, U.S. District Court Judge Conley, an Obama appointee, handed down the first sentence of a pro-abortion domestic terrorist after over 310 attacks on pro-life people and entities. Hridindu Sankar Roychowdhury was sentenced to no criminal fines, 90 months in federal prison, minus time served with 3 years of probation for one count of malicious damage by fire or explosives of property used in interstate commerce, U.S.C. Title 18 section 844 (i). The sentence ignores conspiracy and domestic terrorism, giving a him lighter charge for a lighter sentence. This contradicts U.S. Attorney O’Shea of the Western District of Wisconsin’s statement in a DOJ press release, “Arson and other acts of domestic terrorism are crimes that will be punished and have no place in a healthy democracy.”

According to legal experts, the guideline for Roychowdhury to be eligible for parole is 60 months with time served. After a year already served with good behavior, he will likely be out in five years. Compare that to the 33-year-old man who firebombed a Planned Parenthood in Peoria, IL sentenced last year to 10 years in prison and ordered to pay $1.45 million. 

Roychowdhury pled guilty to firebombing a Madison, WI pro-life organization. Jane’s Revenge, a pro-abortion terrorist front for Antifa, took responsibility for the attack, giving a 30-day ultimatum for all pro-life pregnancy centers to shut down or face a similar consequence. 30 days later, CompassCare was firebombed. Jane’s Revenge took responsibility for the attack as the direct fulfillment of their threat.

Rev. Jim Harden, CompassCare CEO says, “Our private investigators have reason to believe there is a connection and want to know if Roychowdhury turned state’s evidence, revealing his accomplices in the terror attack; the identity of the ‘grant’ funders to which he referred in his text messages; as well as identifying the mid-level and upper echelon Antifa leaders.”

The stark disparity is the deprivation of pro-life people of their First Amendment rights and equal protection under the law. After the Dobbs decision overturning Roe, the DOJ aggressively targeted pro-life Christians with trumped-up, previously dismissed charges—even conducting dawn SWAT-like raids in PA and TN. The DOJ indicted and convicted five pro-life citizens protesting late-term abortions in Washington D.C. Two other groupsin Nashville, TN were found guilty on FACE charges facing up to 11 years in prison with up to $250,000 in fines. Rev. Harden states, “This judicial disparity hauntingly reinforces Jane’s Revenge clear warning, it’s ‘open season’ on pro-lifers.”

Rev. Harden also noted, “The sentencing would lead the public to believe this is a simple case of misguided arson instead of a political act representing a multi-national Marxist revolution. Roychowdhury’s apology letter reads like an Antifa manifesto, a message that will no doubt be hailed as heroic. Once the dust settles after the 2024 election, his comrades will likely demand his release as a political prisoner so he can write what he deemed an ‘academically rigorous autoethnography.’”

Rev. Harden joins us now to discuss the matter further.

Q&A:

  1. There are text messages that you have access to that demonstrate that Roychowdhury had accomplices, received money, and built explosives for distribution. Has there been any word on whether or not he exchanged the names of his accomplices for a lighter sentence?
  2. Why did it take the FBI so long to arrest him, and why haven’t they gone after his co-conspirators despite having so much evidence?
  3. CompassCare had to hire private investigators when the FBI stopped responding. These investigators believe there is a connection between the Roychowdhury’s co-conspirators and the arsonists who burned CompassCare’s Buffalo medical office. What you tell us about the status of the investigation?
  4. Is it just a coincidence that the FBI set up a billboard asking for information about the CompassCare firebomber in the wrong city just before this sentencing?
  5. This sentence seems to be a contradiction to U.S. Attorney O’Shea’s statement about crimes not having any “place in a healthy democracy.” What do you think O’Shea would say about this?
  6. Speaking of which, people need to remember that the video footage of the attack on CompassCare’s medical office was withheld from you, your lawyers, and your investigators. You had to sue to get it back. Does the FBI care at all about investigating crimes against pro-life people?
  7. Do you believe that abortion will be the most important discussion point with the forthcoming 2024 Presidential Election?
  8. Where can people go to learn more about CompassCare and the services you provide?
    1. Go to CompassCareCommunity.com.

About Rev. Harden:

Rev. James Harden, M.Div., is CEO of firebombed pro-life medical network, CompassCare. He has one wife and ten children.

Rev. Harden says, “Money follows morality.” He is raising the alarm regarding corruption in federal law enforcement and public policy in a post-Roe America. He writes extensively on medical ethics, executive leadership, and pro-life strategy, predicting Dobbs in 2018 and the death of the “Red Wave” in 2022.

Contact: Jerry McGlothlin 919-437-0001 or geraldmcg@outlook.com

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