A criminal case involving the death of Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska has been paused after officials determined the suspect is not mentally capable of standing trial, according to remarks discussed by Elisha Krauss.

Krauss reported that the case against De Carlos Brown Jr. cannot proceed under current conditions due to his mental state.

“The offender and murderer De Carlos Brown Jr, is incapable to proceed on the state murder charge,” Krauss said, adding that the case involves “the killing of that refugee Iryna Zarutska.”

She noted the current status of the proceedings, explaining, “They're saying that he is mentally incapable,” and that “as of now, the trial is at a standstill.”

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The case has drawn attention beyond legal proceedings, including commentary about how incidents are portrayed publicly.

Adam Carolla addressed the broader reaction, referencing the response to memorials connected to the case.

“There's a lots of lots of disturbing stuff about this,” Carolla said. He pointed to vandalism issues, stating, “The murals that they put up with her on it always get defaced.”

Carolla argued that public discourse often centers on storytelling rather than verifiable details.

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“What the left has. All they have is narratives,” he said. “That's all they have is narratives.”

He cited multiple examples he believes are used to shape public perception.

“This poor kid, he got his Yoda backpack on,” Carolla said, describing one type of narrative. He continued, “and his dad is being chased by ICE, and ICE has left him alone.”

Carolla also referenced other situations, saying, “This guy, the what's his name? He's a pediatric nurse who just went out to help and he got shot.”

He tied those examples to commonly repeated phrases.

“Hands up. Don't shoot,” Carolla said. “He's a gentle giant.”

Carolla continued by describing how he views the reliance on those themes.

“And so when all you have is narratives, and you don't have any facts or anything works in your direction,” he said, adding that “you think about everything with ICE, everything is ICE.”

He listed claims he believes are part of that narrative framework.

“They're kicking open doors. There's no badges. They don't identify themselves,” Carolla said. He continued, “They're grabbing citizens, and they're disappearing them into sweatshops and Honduras.”

Carolla said situations like the Zarutska case disrupt those narratives.

“And then once a while, it pops up that with your narrative,” he said, describing a case “which is a Ukrainian blonde girl being brutally killed by a black man who goes through your system.”

He continued by referencing policy debates.

“And by the way, you're the system that created, oh, the school to prison pipeline,” Carolla said. “He fell through the cracks. We need no cash bail.”

Carolla argued that such cases challenge previously established viewpoints.

“And black man, your narrative now has been destroyed by this, and you hate it,” he said.

He contrasted how different events are handled in public discussion.

“You're either helping the narrative,” Carolla said, citing an example. “You take Kyle Rittenhouse and turn him into a rogue racist assassin.”

He added, “You have your bullsh*t narrative, and then you have ones like these, and these bother you.”

Carolla described what he believes happens next in those situations.

“And so what you have to do with these narratives and your two narratives,” he said. “You have your bullsh*t narrative that you need to boost.”

He listed examples, including “body counts and January 6 and all the other bullsh*t.”

He then contrasted those with what he said are stories that receive less attention.

“And then you got ones you need to tamp down,” Carolla said. “And the ones you need to tamp down were like Joe Biden has lost his mind.”

He referenced how such moments are explained.

“Oh, that's just a cheap fake,” Carolla said. “That's just a little slice somebody took that at the Juneteenth Celebration.”

Krauss followed up with another example involving Biden.

“Or him wandering away at the G8 summit,” she said.

Carolla responded by describing how that situation was framed.

“Right?” he said. “He was helping out a paratrooper that had landed in a sandbar, yeah.”

He continued by tying it back to his broader point.

“Okay, so that, this is bad for them needs to be tamped down,” Carolla said.

He returned to the topic of public memorials tied to the case.

“And the murals remind people of their broken narrative,” he said.

Carolla concluded by describing how local responses may unfold.

“So then the person who runs the city where the mural goes up, if he's a lefty, and he probably is,” he said. “has to get up there and explain people are upset.”

He added that the reaction is tied to broader concerns.

“Well, they're upset because it's hurting their narrative,” Carolla said. “So we'd like it taken down.”

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