RALEIGH, N.C. — North Carolina Republican lawmakers pressed Charlotte-area leaders on Monday about crime-fighting efforts following recent light-rail stabbings in the Democratic-led city, with a committee head citing failures in carrying out criminal justice functions.
The August fatal stabbing death of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska, followed in December by a non-fatal stabbing on the same Charlotte rail system, are among the chief reasons for GOP critiques of area law enforcement. The suspect in each stabbing faces charges in state and federal court.
GOP Rep. Brenden Jones, co-chairman of the state House oversight committee that took testimony from several officials, attributed Zarutska's killing to broad ''incompetence.''
Democrats on the committee pushed back on Jones' words, with one lawmaker saying he saw no incompetence among many who testified. City officials and the local prosecutor focused their comments on anti-crime strategies already underway and lower crime rates.
Decarlos Brown Jr., the man accused in Zarutska's death, had more than a dozen prior criminal arrests before the most recent charge, and concerns had been raised about his mental health. Republican lawmakers, as well as President Donald Trump and Vice President JD Vance, blamed Democratic leaders in Charlotte and statewide for soft-on-crime policies they allege allowed Brown to stay out of custody.
Zarutska had ''come to America for a better life. She didn't get that experience,'' Jones said at the meeting's start. ''Her life was cut short not by one individual but by a system that allowed a career criminal to roam your streets.''
''Her blood is on your hands,'' he added.
Charlotte Mayor Vi Lyles, who was among those testifying Monday, wrote soon after Zarutska's death that it was a ''tragic failure by the courts and magistrates.'' She and others have since highlighted additional safety measures for the light rail system.