Everyone Needs To See This Viral Testimony From This Grieving Father

Sep 30, 2025 - 15:28
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Everyone Needs To See This Viral Testimony From This Grieving Father

In the early morning hours of May 3, 2025, a 30-year-old man named Alexander Devonte Dickey parked a stolen vehicle on the side of the road on Cypress Street in Columbia, South Carolina. He then broke into a home and stole several items, including a firearm, car keys, and a wallet. Dickey then entered the unlocked door of another nearby home, where he encountered a 22-year-old aspiring teacher from North Carolina named Logan Federico, who was in town visiting friends. After dragging Federico out of bed, Dickey pressed his firearm up to her ribcage, and shot her to death. He also stole several items from the home, including credit cards.

Authorities didn’t respond to the home until nearly noon the next day, when Federico’s body was discovered. By that point, Dickey had used his stolen credit cards to purchase numerous items in West Columbia. He also stole another vehicle, committed arson, and so on. Watch:

Credit: @LawAndCrime/YouTube.com

The media describes this murder as “random,” but of course, there was nothing “random” about it. For one thing, interracial homicides like this are overwhelmingly committed by black criminals against white victims. And of course, this murder was the predictable and intended result of a judicial system that exists, not to punish violent felons, but to unleash them on unsuspecting, law-abiding Americans.

Take a look at the mugshots that “Alexander Devonte Dickey” managed to assemble in just 30 years on this Earth.

Screenshot: WIS 10, Columbia, SC

Screenshot: WIS 10, Columbia, SC

The local news station WIS News 10 took a close look at Dickey’s rap sheet.

Here’s what they found:

In total, Dickey faced nearly 40 charges within the past decade, with many of the counts ultimately dismissed. While the criminal pattern dates back to 2013, his first conviction came the following year. He was only sentenced in eight cases that involved charges such as robbery, drug possession, and larceny. In 2023, records show Dickey pleaded guilty to third-degree burglary. While he was sentenced to five years, he was given credit for over 410 days already served. Dickey was also placed on probation, which was set to end next month, but it was shortened ‘for compliance.’

In one of his first run-ins with the law, back in 2014, Dickey was arrested for repeatedly breaking into parked cars, as well as driving a stolen car. And then, over the next decade, he would repeatedly commit similar crimes, without spending any significant period of time in prison.

The article goes on to explain that, for some reason, prosecutors claim that they weren’t aware of Dickey’s rap sheet when they prosecuted him in 2023. They suggest there was a paperwork error with his fingerprints that prevented them from accessing information about his prior crimes. But even if that’s true — and it probably isn’t — it doesn’t matter. He clearly should’ve been imprisoned for life, many times over. The very first time someone robs several cars and then steals one, he forfeits his freedom. Believe it or not, that law is already on the books in South Carolina. The maximum penalty for two counts of first-degree burglary is life imprisonment.

Quoting directly from South Carolina’s penal code

Burglary in the first degree is a felony punishable by life imprisonment. The court, in its discretion, may sentence the defendant to a term of not less than fifteen years.

That sentence should’ve been handed down, immediately. Normal, functioning members of society do not commit these crimes. You cannot rehabilitate anyone who does. And even if you can theoretically rehabilitate them, it’s not worth the risk to the general public. Critics will object and say, “Are we really going to just give up on people like this?” The answer is yes, we should. Once you have demonstrated that you have no interest in being a part of civilized society, we should give up on you. You can spend the rest of your life locked in a cage like an animal. It is not our responsibility to help you or give you another chance or try to domesticate you like some feral cat. We’re done with you. Goodbye forever. That should be the approach. If it were the approach, this criminal never would have had the opportunity to murder this young woman. The time for “discretion” is over. Any judge who abuses this “discretion” to release violent criminals like this should be held liable for the murders that inevitably result.

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Until now, there really hasn’t been much popular support for a change like this. That’s because Logan Federico’s murder, as utterly horrifying as it is, is similar to murders that occur every day in this country. What makes the murder of  Logan Federico different, from a practical perspective, is that — for the first time in memory — the family of the victim isn’t resorting to Leftist platitudes in response. They’re not urging everyone to “come together,” or preaching about “unity” and “keeping politics out of it.” We saw something like that after the killing of Austin Metcalf. As thousands of Leftists — primarily black people — danced on Austin Metcalf’s grave, the father insisted that it wasn’t a racial issue, that one kid had just made a poor decision, and that he should be forgiven. That’s not to disparage the father in that case. It’s difficult to imagine being in his position. But his response, if adopted on a societal and systemic level, is how you get more violence.

That’s not happening this time.

Instead, the family of Logan Federico — particularly her father, Stephen Federico, is pledging to devote the rest of his life to changing the laws that allowed Alexander Devonte Dickey to murder his daughter. He’s not letting the left-wing narrative take hold, even for a moment. He’s a big part of the reason why, the other day, lawmakers in Charlotte, North Carolina, met for a hearing on violent crime. Here’s what Stephen had to say. Watch:

Credit: @CollinRugg/X.com

This is righteous anger. And it’s exactly what we need to see. He’s enraged because he feels that the system essentially chose the violent thug who murdered his daughter over his daughter. It swapped one for the other. And he’s right.

You’ll see a lot of theories online about why, when someone is killed in a very preventable homicide, the family members of the victim usually don’t have this reaction. We usually don’t see them enraged like this, even though they must be enraged, and should be. Some people will tell you that, in the past, government agents spoke to the victims’ families and coached them on what to say. But the more likely explanation is that, for many generations — in no small part because of the rhetoric of both parties — it’s been considered impolite and bigoted to point out the truth. You’re not supposed to talk about the fact that homicides are both preventable and predictable, for the same reason you’re not supposed to talk about crime statistics, or practice pattern recognition when you’re out for a walk late at night.

As this hearing in Charlotte demonstrated, that dam has now broken. Witness after witness exposed the degree to which Democrats have deliberately allowed violent criminals to terrorize entire communities.

Here’s one more of these statements. It’s from Justice Campbell, a police officer with the Charlotte-Mecklenburg Police Department. His life has also been changed forever by one of these violent career thugs. Watch:

Credit: Forbes Breaking News/YouTube.com

Confronted with testimony like this, it’s abundantly clear that Democrats have no idea what to do. Without total narrative control, they are in very serious trouble. In particular, there are now so many victims of violent crime, as a result of Democrats’ policies, that Democrats can’t even keep them straight anymore. So many victims are now coming forward that they can’t keep track of the whole roster.

It’s gotten so bad that, at this hearing in Charlotte, one Democrat representative — a woman named Deborah Ross — appeared to confuse Logan Federico with Iryna Zarutska, the Ukrainian refugee who was murdered on the light rail car several weeks ago.

Stephen Federico had to correct Deborah Ross, mid-statement. Watch:

Credit: Forbes Breaking News/YouTube.com

So there’s a hearing to discuss victims of violent crime.  There are three key witnesses, none of whom were killed by anyone suffering from a mental illness. And Logan Federico’s picture, along with her father, was directly in front of Deborah Ross when she made her statement.

Credit: House Committee On The Judiciary

Credit: House Committee On The Judiciary

And yet, despite all of these cues, Deborah Ross apparently thought she was looking at Iryna Zarutska. She starts talking about mental health issues, which have no relevance to the murder of Logan Federico, or any of the other witnesses in front of her. And Stephen Federico wasn’t going to stand for that.

Nor should anyone. If you look at the media coverage of this case, you’ll find a lot of excuses for why Alexander Devonte Dickey was constantly being let out of jail. 

Here’s just one example, from Law & Crime:

Credit: @LawAndCrime/YouTube.com

The analysts talk about the law as if it’s something we can’t immediately change. It’s just a fact of life, we’re told, that criminals can repeatedly commit acts of violence without receiving mandatory life imprisonment or the death penalty. As we discussed earlier, that’s not even true in South Carolina. This guy could’ve been sentenced to life a long time ago. But to the extent this is true anywhere else, that law needs to change.

Instead of engaging with any of this, Democrats will say that, in reality, the solution is spending more tax money on shelters and mental health treatment. That’s what happened at the hearing in Charlotte. And there was a viral post on X to the same effect. It racked up several million views. In reference to the murder of Iryna Zarutska — who again, was stabbed on the light rail car, by an apparently schizophrenic black man who said “I got that white girl” as he walked away —  the person wrote the following.

The right has zero solution to this. Paranoid schizophrenic violent outbursts require an integrated care system to ensure he has access to and is taking his medication. They just defunded school lunches. They won’t fund this.

This is the framing that the Left has settled upon. They apparently believed that, unless we fund school lunches and daycare for schizophrenics, then we simply have no conceivable way of stopping innocent women like Iryna Zarutska from having their throats slit on the subway. We’re completely powerless.

But there actually is a pretty clear solution, one that most people on the Right would endorse. As I said on X, my solution to violent, criminal sociopathic lunatics is to convict them in a court of law and then kill them. That is my solution. Kill them. Sometimes violence is the answer. It’s the answer here. Legal, constitutional violence, used against convicted criminals, and administered by the state. That kind of violence. But violence all the same. This solution would have saved Iryna’s life. It would save hundreds of lives every year. Believe it or not, you can just kill the worst and most dangerous people. This solution has been deployed to great effect by almost every civilized society on Earth for thousands of years. We can deploy it again.

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What this hearing in Charlotte demonstrates is that, for the first time since the crime crackdown of the 1990s, there’s a real popular will for punishing degenerates and violent criminals as harshly as possible. Now we need to start handing out those punishments. And in doing so, like Stephen Federico, we should be unapologetic and forceful. That is the fight that this righteously angry father has just devoted his life to. And every single American — people who don’t want their daughters to be executed as they sleep — should join him.

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Fibis I am just an average American. My teen years were in the late 70s and I participated in all that that decade offered. Started working young, too young. Then I joined the Army before I graduated High School. I spent 25 years in, mostly in Infantry units. Since then I've worked in information technology positions all at small family owned companies. At this rate I'll never be a tech millionaire. When I was young I rode horses as much as I could. I do believe I should have been a cowboy. I'm getting in the saddle again by taking riding lessons and see where it goes.