• You must be logged in to see or use the Shoutbox. Besides, if you haven't registered, you really should. It's quick and it will make your life a little better. Trust me. So just register and make yourself at home with like-minded individuals who share either your morbid curiousity or sense of gallows humor.

Sugar Cookie

Veteran Member
Bold Member!
A violent career criminal, who has more than 50 arrests, forced his way into an 83-year-old woman’s apartment and tried to rape her Saturday, breaking her ribs when she fought back, cops said.

The attacker, identified by police as Gary Mallette, 51, is still on the loose. Cops hope the public — perhaps someone in his Bronx stomping grounds — can help detectives find him.

Mallette knocked on the woman’s door in the Castle Hill Houses at about 12:50 p.m. When she answered, he shoved his way into her apartment, cops said.

“Where’s the money?” he demanded.

He struck her several times as he tried to rape her, but the woman fought back, cops said. Before he ran, he grabbed her cell phone and jewelry, cops said.
Medics took the woman to a nearby hospital with broken ribs and facial injuries, cops said.

Police in the 43rd Precinct, which covers Castle Hill, know him well — his past 11 arrests were within the precinct’s borders, and many of those arrests happened in public housing buildings, sources said.

Mallette served time in 1992 for robbery, grand larceny and drug dealing. He returned to prison in 1994 on another robbery charge.
14281
 

MALLETTE, GARY​


Crime​

Class​

BURGLARY 3RD​

D​

BURGLARY 2ND SUB 1​

C​

Aggregate Minimum Sentence​


6 Years, 0 Months, 0 Days

Aggregate Maximum Sentence​


7 Years, 0 Months, 0 Days

Earliest Release Date​


07/01/2025

Parole Eligibility Date​


07/01/2025

Conditional Release Date​


07/01/2025

Maximum Expiration Date​


07/01/2026
 
Mallette's an habitual and escalating criminal

Prison as punishment is for the loved ones of victims to feel.

Criminals are gamblers, bad ones, so we're kidding ourselves if we think deterrence is what penalties and prisons are doing.

There's a shot at rehabilitation if they're young, but an habitual criminal? Forget it.

All I expect from the prison system is to keep bad people away from us.
 
Back
Top