FIRESTORM: Judge Who Freed Iryna Zarutska’s Murderer Faces Worst Day Of Her Life

The outrage across America is boiling over.
Just weeks ago, 23-year-old Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska was brutally killed on a Charlotte light rail train — and the man accused of doing it should never have been free in the first place.

According to reports, Decarlos Brown Jr., the suspect now charged with her murder, had a long criminal record — at least 14 arrests, multiple violent offenses, and a history that should have kept him behind bars.
But Magistrate Judge Teresa Stokes released him in January under cashless bail, despite his record and warnings from prosecutors.

Now, as the details come out, the community’s grief has turned into fury.
Residents, activists, and even lawmakers are demanding answers — and accountability.

“She’s gone because the system failed her,” one local said through tears. “That judge has blood on her hands.”

Judge Stokes, who once quietly worked in the Mecklenburg County courthouse, is now at the center of a political and moral firestorm.
She’s reportedly facing intense backlash, protests outside the courthouse, and calls for her immediate removal from the bench.

North Carolina Congressman Tim Moore has already led a letter demanding her ouster, saying the release decision was “reckless” and “cost an innocent woman her life.”

As of now, Brown is back in custody — this time under federal charges for committing a violent act on public transportation, which could carry a life sentence.
But for Iryna’s family, no punishment can undo the horror.

A friend of hers said softly, “She fled a war to find safety here… and died because someone thought her killer deserved another chance.”

For Judge Stokes, this may be the worst day of her career — and the one she’ll never escape.