A fiscal policy analyst working under failed vice-presidential candidate Tim Walz will not be charged for causing roughly $21,000 in damages to multiple Tesla vehicles.
Dylan Bryan Adams, 33, who works as a fiscal policy analyst for the Minnesota Department of Human Services under Gov. Tim Walz (D), was seen on multiple videos keying different Tesla vehicles across the Minneapolis area. According to one of the victims, Adams attempted — and failed — to carve a swastika into her car.
Adams’ crimes came after Walz openly bragged about Tesla stocks being down and attacking Tesla CEO Elon Musk, and many people believe that Walz’s comments effectively gave Adams and other Tesla vandals permission to commit their crimes.
Despite being caught on camera and admitting to vandalizing six Teslas, the local Democrat county attorney is refusing to charge Adams. This appears to be the first instance of a Tesla vandal not receiving any criminal charges amid the ongoing leftist domestic terror attacks against Tesla vehicles, charging stations, and dealerships.
“Our main priorities are to secure restitution for the victims and hold Mr. Adams accountable,” Hennepin County Attorney’s Office spokesman Daniel Borgertpoepping claimed. “As a result, we will file for pre-charge diversion to best facilitate both of those goals. This is an approach taken in many property crime cases and helps to ensure the individual keeps their job and can pay restitution, as well as reducing the likelihood of repeat offenses. Criminal prosecution remains a possibility should unlawful behavior continue.”
“Participants in the county attorney’s diversion program are expected to sign a contract which could include conditions like community service and restitution payments,” the Minnesota Star Tribune explained.
However, reports indicate that the manner in which Adams is being “punished” is woefully inadequate, as the policy of Hennepin County “caps diversion at $5K in damages” — while Adams caused more than four times that amount in damages.
“The Minneapolis Police Department did its job,” O’Hara said in response to the move. “It identified and investigated a crime trend, identified and arrested a suspect, and presented a case file to the Hennepin County Attorney’s Office for consideration of charges. This case impacted at least six victims and totaled over $20,000 in damages. Any frustration related to the charging decision of the Hennepin County Attorney should be directed solely at her office. Our investigators are always frustrated when the cases they poured their hearts into are declined. In my experience, the victims in these cases often feel the same.”
Adams has not yet been fired from his job as of April 22. The Minnesota Department of Human Services issued a statement about the incident, noting that they are “reviewing the matter at this time” and adding: “State employees are expected to follow our code of conduct and hold themselves to the highest ethical standards through their words and actions.”
It is no surprise that Soros-backed Hennepin County Attorney Mary Moriarty did not pursue charges against Adams, as she is a former public defender who has vowed to focus on making police “accountable” and changing the “culture of an office she believes had long overemphasized punishment without addressing the root causes of crime” — meaning that she’d rather hold the criminal’s hand and explore their past instead of actually forcing them to face real consequences. The culture within Moriarty’s office is reportedly unbearable, with one former employee stating that “People are afraid to talk” and the “morale is horrible.”