The stalker looked her in the eye and told her that he would kill her if she let him go.  Now he has been released

The stalker looked her in the eye and told her that he would kill her if she let him go. Now he has been released

Talia Landman doesn’t leave home without pepper spray. The woman learned that the man who was to spend 6 years in prison because of harassing her was released after a few months. The neighbors saw him again outside her house.

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“I carry pepper spray with me. I also have a Go Guarded ring with a small knife hidden in it, in case I need to defend myself,” Talía Landman said in an interview with ABC7. Her stalker is a homeless man, David Kroll. In April 2022, he was convicted of long-term harassment of an American woman and was to spend six years in prison. A few days ago she learned that he had been released. Neighbors sent her a photo of the stalker who was near her house.

“I experienced a shock”

The woman admitted that she was shocked when she learned that Kroll was free. No one informed her that the man had been released from prison. According to ABC7, the man’s record shows that there have been a number of incidents involving him since 2008. Landman was attacked by him several times in 2020. She told her story via social media. “One night he tried to break into my apartment. Fortunately, I woke up and was able to prevent it. Since then, he had a restraining order, but he broke it after a week,” she said. The man attacked her on August 27, 2020. She had pepper spray with her so she could defend herself.

For two years she fought for her safety. Eventually, the man went to court and was sentenced to six years in prison. “He became aggressive in the courtroom, stood up, hit the table, turned around, looked at me and promised that when he was released he would come back to kill me,” she told ABC7. After a few months he was released.

The system has failed

The woman does not know where Kroll is currently. The California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation provided comment to ABC7. True to their words, Kroll was released early on June 28. The department said it could not comment on the circumstances of specific victims or whether they had been notified. Landman feels the system has failed her. “They let me down in many ways. It was such a circus. I’m not even surprised that something like this happened,” she emphasizes. The woman intends to move out of Los Angeles because she simply doesn’t feel safe.

Source: Gazeta

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