by Chris Bradley
In reading Vermont statutes, one becomes aware of terms such as “shall” and “may”. When you see a statute that describes a crime and it stipulates that something “shall” happen, it means that the Legislature intended that it should happen. It’s not optional, because if it was optional the Legislature would have used the word “may”.

Let’s consider aggravated assault with a deadly weapon (13 VSA § 1024(a)(5) for example.
Of all Vermont criminal statutes involving firearms or deadly weapons, this crime had the highest number of active cases across the state in both 2021 (102 active cases) and 2022 (125 active cases). Per that statute, a person is guilty of aggravated assault with a deadly weapon if the person is “armed with a deadly weapon and threatens to use the deadly weapon on another person”.
It then states: “A person found guilty of violating…this section shall be imprisoned for not more than five years or fined not more than $5,000 or both.”
That language seems simple and straight-forward. Based on that wording, I believe a layman would understand that if a perpetrator was found to have committed aggravated assault while threatening a person with a deadly weapon, society would be protected because the perpetrator would be punished by some prison time, possibly a fine, or both. That’s what the Legislature wanted: There SHALL BE punishment for this serious violent crime.
Looking at court case reports for Chittenden County from Vermont’s new Odyssey case-tracking system, we see that there were 19 active cases involving that crime at the end of 2021. Across 2021, 7 cases were dismissed for that crime, and 1 found guilty.
At the end of 2022, case data for Chittenden County showed 35 active cases involving that crime, with 11 dismissed and 4 found guilty.
A total of 54 active cases across two years; with 18 cases dismissed and only 5 found guilty?
When a case is brought to court, it is assumed that a prosecutor has done the required due diligence to ensure that there is enough evidence to make a given charge “stick.” If that is indeed true, how can it be that we are dismissing so many cases, and finding so few guilty?
Let’s look at another law, committing a felony while carrying a weapon (13 VSA § 4005). This law states that a “a person who carries a dangerous or deadly weapon, openly or concealed, while committing a felony shall be imprisoned not more than five years or fined not more than $500, or both”.
According to 2021 court data: There were ZERO active cases, ZERO dismissed and ZERO guilty of that offense in Chittenden County. 2022 court data for Chittenden County shows 1 active, ZERO dismissed and ZERO guilty.
With so much crime being committed in Chittenden County, and with all the violence we have been reading about there, how can that be? Only one criminal case could be prosecuted across 2 years where a perpetrator was found in Chittenden County to have committed a felony while carrying a dangerous or deadly weapon?
And what about persons prohibited from possessing firearms (13 § 4017(a))? This law states: “A person shall not possess a firearm if the person has been convicted of a violent crime”. It then states: “A person who violates this section shall be imprisoned not more than two years or fined not more than $1,000, or both”.
At the end of 2021, Chittenden County had 4 active cases for that crime, with 2 dismissed and ZERO guilty verdicts. For 2022, Chittenden County had 3 active, 2 dismissed and again ZERO guilty verdicts.
How can that be? For two years there was not even 1 felon found in Chittenden County that possessed an illegal gun who deserved to face the legal consequences of being found guilty?
The primary explanation for these numbers appears to be that violent crime is not being aggressively prosecuted in Chittenden County, which in turn goes a long way towards explaining the notable rise in violent crime in that county. Above are just 3 examples, and as one might expect, there are more.
Yes, there is “judicial discretion”. However: Consistently failing to impose consequences in defiance of the Legislative intent of existing laws is another matter altogether. It is Judicial over-reach; their job is to apply our laws – not actively work to undermine them – and ignoring laws that have demonstrably kept Vermont safe can only result in exactly what we are seeing: More and more violent crime.
For years and years and years, Vermont was CONSISTENTLY in the top 3 safest states in the nation regarding Violent Crime and Property Crime per the FBI. Thanks to our Legislature but especially our Judicial System, we have now slid to 4th safest state for violent crime, and 8th safest state for property crime.
Violent crimes require punishment. That means getting tough on criminals, not coddling them and therein lies the problem: Chittenden County is actively coddling violent criminals in defiance of state law, and law-abiding citizens are not safer as a result.
Author is President and Executive Director for the Vermont Federation of Sportsmen’s Clubs (VTFSC).
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Categories: Commentary









Hey, if they don’t coddle criminals that would mean that they wouldn’t be able to lake away the rights of the honest people who obey the law. It’s all about power.
“We are fast approaching the stage of ultimate inversion: the stage where the government is free to do anything it pleases, while the citizens may act only by permission, which is the stage of the darkest periods of human history, the stage of rule by brute force”. – Ayn Rand
The intent with all of these recent Second Amendment/ Vermont Article 16 restrictions is for selective prosecution. It’s the marxist way.
So if you let the criminals slide, and when you have a law-abiding citizen defending there rights, they will feel the hand of liberal justice……. fools in charge and we let it happen, Vermont was one of the safest states in the union, I think last year it was rated thirty-seven out of fifty states !!
The cesspool called Burlington is leading the pack for firearm events, the thugs from the cities, know they’ll walk………………………..how pathetic !!
It used to be, if you can’t do the time, don’t do the crime, today its do the crime as you won’t get any real time ……………….
I have disagreed with gun lobbyist Chris Bradley in the past; however, his statistics regarding the lack of prosecutions in Chittenden County are quite convincing. They deserve a formal response from Chittenden County’s State’s Attorney.
A formal response , unfortunately, does not necessarily equate toa rational response where Sara George is concerned.
You have all the right facts which raise all the right questions Chris.Unfortunately we are talking about Sara George, so you can throw logic out the door.
Chris…see previous article Chittenden county enough said