EXCLUSIVEExplicit Los Angeles jailhouse recordings show Hannah Tubbs, a 26-year old trans child molester, gloating over her light punishment but admitting that it was wrong to attack little girls.
After pleading guilty to the charges, she boasted that nothing would happen and joked that she wouldn’t be sent back to prison nor have to register as a sex offenders. She made unfitting remarks about the victim.
Tubbs states in one recording, “I’m going to plead out and plead guilty.” They’re going to put me on probation and it’s dropping, it’s done, I won’t have register, will not have to do anything.”
“You don’t need to register?” Later in the conversation, her father questions her on the other line.
Tubbs responds, “I won’t have to do any of that.”
“So, what are they going do to you then?”
Tubbs replies, “Nothing”, and then laughs.
Tubbs pleaded guilty to the cold-case attack last month. It took place in a Denny’s women’s toilet when Tubbs was just two weeks shy (18). The suspect was identified as James Tubbs. Tubbs was arrested eight years later. He began to identify himself as a woman after being taken into custody.
Gascon refused to transfer the case to an adult court and instead sentenced her to two years in a juvenile facility. This was in accordance with one of the progressive prosecutor’s day-one directives that “children” cannot be tried as adults. She can serve up to six months without having to register as an sex offender.
Tubbs’ victim, who was only 10 years old at the time, said that Gascon’s handling had been “insulting” as well as “unfair”.
She said, “The things that he did to and made me do that were beyond terrible for a 10-year-old girl.” I want him to be tried as an adult for all the crimes he committed against my.
She claimed that the light sentence was offensive, hurtful, and offered no true justice.
She added, “I have also heard that my attacker uses she/them pronouns now.” “It’s unfair to also try him as a woman, considering he didn’t act like one at the beginning of 2014,” she said.
Tubbs asked one caller to use female pronouns in one of his calls.
Tubbs states, “So now they’re going put me with other transnies that have seen cases like mine or one tranny such as me that has a similar case to mine.” “So, when you appear in court, address me as she.”
She then says she will go to prison to have sex change surgery. The other person responds, “There are some b—es there too.”
Sunday’s statement by Gascon addressed the matter.
He said that, “Like any responsible office, learning as we go, taking feedback from the community and making necessary adjustments based upon our experiences and the complicated nature of this work” and added that only a few cases require flexibility, which he had denied his prosecutors.
Gascon stated that the Hannah Tubbs case taught him a lot about the importance of a policy safety device.
He also admitted that Tubbs continued to do other crimes after the 2014 attack, including one in which DNA evidence connected her to Denny’s assassination.
Gascon stated that Ms. Tubbs was a juvenile offender and faced several other charges. However, she never received the services her past behavior or subsequent arrests show her clearly in need of. “I became aware of troubling statements she made regarding her case, its resolution, and the young girl she had harmed after her sentencing.”
However, the recordings were made in November and sources told Fox News Digital that they were known to prosecutors.
Sharon Woo, Gascon’s chief deputy, sent a memo last Wednesday to prosecutors to reverse a blanket ban against juveniles being tried in adult court.
Gascon’s office at the time denied that the move was connected to Tubbs. Instead, they said that the change occurred as prosecutors awaited a series state Supreme Court decisions which are expected to send multiple cases back home to Los Angeles.
Gascon then retracted his directives on Friday in five memos that he sent to staff. He said exceptions could be made so that charges could be brought again carrying sentences of life without parole. Gascon will not allow his office to seek the death penalty.
Gascon admitted that he had come to terms with his policies being too rigid after listening to victims, the community and his colleagues.