What kind of man gets excited and celebrates when a heinous murderer gets released from prison? Pennsylvania Democratic Senate candidate John Fetterman is who. Charles “Zeke” Goldblum was sentenced to life in prison for killing a man. He stabbed him 26 times with garden shears, killing him in the bloodiest way possible. He was sentenced to life in prison. While out on bail, he tried to hire an undercover cop to kill his accomplice.
Steve Bannon: Fetterman is Satanic— and this is exactly what a Devil would do— release hardened criminals to prey on a defenseless population.. Look @ his eyes— not even close to Human Why is he NOT out in public — too Demonic to even come forth and be cast out

As lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania, Senate hopeful John Fetterman voted in 2019 to release Goldblum. Three times Fetterman tried to get Pennsylvania to release1/3 of the people in prison. Imagine how he would vote in the Senate. I’ll bet he would offer up a bill to close all federal prisons or at least release many of them.
The Washington Free Beacon reported:
Charles “Zeke” Goldblum was sentenced to life in prison for killing a man with garden shears in a parking garage in downtown Pittsburgh and later trying to hire a hitman to kill his accomplice in the brutal murder. As lieutenant governor of Pennsylvania, Senate hopeful John Fetterman voted to set Goldblum free in 2019 and said he was “happy” when the killer was released from prison last year.
VISIT OUR YOUTUBE CHANNELGoldblum was convicted of first-degree murder in the 1976 killing of George Wilhelm as part of an insurance fraud cover-up. According to prosecutors, Goldblum and an accomplice, Clarence Miller, lured Wilhelm to a parking garage in Pittsburgh, where Goldblum stabbed the man 26 times. While out on bail, Goldblum tried to hire an undercover police officer to murder Miller, who had fingered Goldblum for the crime.
Goldblum, who has maintained his innocence, was poised to die in prison, having unsuccessfully appealed for clemency seven times. But in 2019, Pennsylvania’s Board of Pardons, which Fetterman chairs, voted unanimously to release Goldblum from jail, overriding the wishes of Wilhelm’s family. To justify its decision, the board points to the judge and prosecutor on Wilhelm’s case, who have since concluded he was the accomplice rather than the principal assailant.
But in 2007, a federal appeals court rejected Goldblum’s request for an evidentiary hearing, writing, “there is just too much evidence here establishing Goldblum’s guilt.”
Fetterman cheered when Goldblum was released from jail last year, saying he was “happy that he’s going to be going home to his family” and that Goldblum was “not a threat to public safety.”



















