7/11/26

DailyKenn.com | AbateHate.comFacebook Group


Summary
: In Atlanta, Georgia, Jahmare Brown was released after serving about 60 days of a 120-day sentence for shattering a woman’s orbital bone in a January 2026 MARTA station beating. Two months later, on May 14, 2026, he allegedly stabbed 23-year-old Alyssa Paige to death on the Beltline and assaulted a postal worker. The case underscores concerns over charging decisions and early releases for violent offenders.

Your $8 monthly partner pledge helps us reach others & more ►


ATLANTA, Ga. — A young woman enjoying a walk on Atlanta’s popular Beltline trail lost her life in a random daytime attack last spring, raising fresh questions about how the justice system handles repeat offenders with signs of escalating violence.



On May 14, 2026, 21-year-old Jahmare Brown allegedly stabbed 23-year-old Alyssa Paige to death along the trail. Authorities say the assault came shortly after he attacked a U.S. Postal Service worker with a rock at a nearby facility. Paige was rushed to a hospital but did not survive. Brown faces charges including murder, aggravated assault, aggravated battery, and knife possession.

Images of the victim have not been released. Based on statistics, we are presuming she is white or possibly black.

Prior violence and shortened sentence

Just months earlier, Brown had been held accountable — at least on paper — for a brutal beating. In January 2026, he punched a woman repeatedly in the face after she stepped off a MARTA train at Peachtree Center station. The victim, an attorney who asked not to be identified, suffered a shattered orbital bone in multiple places, a broken nose, and gashes requiring about 25 stitches.

Despite the severity of her injuries, prosecutors pursued a misdemeanor battery charge. Brown entered a negotiated plea and received a 120-day jail sentence plus requirements for anger management, a mental health evaluation, and probation. Court records and local reporting indicate he served roughly half that time and was back on the streets by March.

The woman later told reporters she was never properly notified about the plea deal and expressed frustration that her broken bones were not treated as a felony under Georgia law.

Pattern of prior incidents


This was not Brown’s first brush with the law. Records show he had earlier faced charges in Clayton County for threatening his mother with a gun in 2022. He spent time in custody before release and accumulated other misdemeanor cases involving disorderly conduct and obstruction.

Atlanta police noted that Brown appeared to be experiencing a mental health crisis during the May attacks, though that detail does not lessen the tragedy for Paige’s family or the injured postal worker, who survived.

The case highlights ongoing challenges in balancing rehabilitation, mental health treatment, and public safety — especially when offenders cycle through the system quickly after serious assaults. Critics point to plea negotiations and charging decisions that can result in lighter penalties even when victims sustain significant physical harm.

As Atlanta continues to promote its trails and transit as safe community spaces, this incident serves as a sobering reminder that gaps in accountability can have devastating consequences.

Another young woman name Alyssa Paige Reardon was killed by a black male in October, 2025 [source]. 

Sometimes I get things wrong. If you notice a significant error, please bring it to my attention in the comment section.  

Suspects are considered innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. 

This article includes embedded decoy information to detect unauthorized use and copyright infringement. Reproduction is permitted only verbatim and in full, with all links preserved and attribution clearly given to DailyKenn.com and AbateHate.com. 

Sources/related links: 

View 20 black-on-white homicides found in June, 2026 ►


 



Find archived black-on-white homicide news reports here ►

Visit our YouTube channel  

200 latest news reports from 100 top conservative websites ►




Next
This is the most recent post.
Previous
Older Post

0 comments: