A career criminal with 23 prior arrests and 70 charges was allowed to roam free until she stabbed a pregnant woman in broad daylight outside a Harris Teeter in Charlotte’s Cotswold Village Shopping Center on March 18.
The 38-year-old victim was loading her car with her three-year-old child nearby when Marvina Marie Hardy (also known as Marvina Marie Hardy-Butler), 40, of Waxhaw, attacked her with a steak knife, stabbing her in the sternum.
The victim fought back. Both she and her unborn baby are expected to recover.
? HOLD JUDGES ACCOUNTABLE — RIGHT NOW.
— Gunther Eagleman™ (@GuntherEagleman) March 31, 2026
Career criminal with 23 prior arrests and 70 charges just stabbed a pregnant woman in a North Carolina parking lot.
She should’ve been locked up for life years ago.
Mercy to the guilty is cruelty to the innocent pic.twitter.com/cW3vQUzVvV
Hardy was tracked to Flagler County, Florida, after public tips and surveillance video from inside the store helped identify her.
She now faces extradition to North Carolina on charges of assault with a deadly weapon with intent to kill/inflict serious injury and battery of an unborn child. The motive remains unknown.
This preventable horror is the direct result of a revolving-door justice system that treats violent repeat offenders like minor nuisances.
The same deadly pattern has repeated across blue cities and states. In Chicago, a man fresh out of jail threatened to kill white people with hammers on a CTA train, ranting racial threats just two days after release.
That city’s transit system has faced the same chaos, with officials scrambling to meet federal demands after repeated attacks — including one where a career criminal with 72 prior arrests set a woman on fire on the Blue Line.
Even more grotesque is the case of a cannibal axe murderer released back into society despite his sick crimes. In 2012, Tyree Smith hacked a homeless man to death with an axe in Bridgeport, Connecticut, then ate portions of his brain and eyeball.
Found not guilty by reason of insanity, he was committed to a psychiatric hospital — only for the Connecticut Psychiatric Security Review Board to grant him conditional release after just over a decade, citing “clinical progress” through medication.
As we have highlighted, there are so many examples of recurring failures occurring weekly:
These stories expose the same broken system: activist judges and soft-on-crime policies that rack up dozens of arrests and charges for predators, then slap them with low bonds or early releases.
From pregnant women in parking lots to transit riders, random innocents pay with blood while officials chase “rehabilitation” and “equity.”
The public stepped up with tips that helped catch Hardy in Florida. That same energy must now demand real accountability from judges who keep unleashing monsters. Law-abiding Americans deserve to shop, ride trains, and walk streets without fear.
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