
A Jew who was serving a 30-year sentence for beating an infant almost to death — and then murdering a police officer while attempting to escape from prison with six other inmates — will be granted a new trial in an attempt to overturn his death sentence because — his army of 100 pro bono Jewish attorneys claim — the presiding judge in his trial “hated” Jews for no reason whatsoever.
Randy Halprin, 44, was originally set to be executed on Oct. 10, 2019 but won a stay from the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals after he alleged that the judge who presided over his 2003 murder trial was biased against Jews and referred to him using anti-Semitic slurs, including “f—in’ Jew” and “k-ke.” The stay sent Halprin’s case back to Dallas County, where Judge Lela Lawrence Mays heard Halprin’s arguments in June and this week issued a decision granting Halprin a new trial.