Jasmine Crockett rushes to defend the security guard killed by Dallas SWAT, who allegedly impersonated police, ran a fraudulent business
Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-TX) is defending the man who worked security for her after he was killed during a law enforcement standoff at a children's hospital in Dallas on Wednesday.
Thirty-nine-year-old Diamon Mazairre-Robinson had barricaded himself inside a parking garage at Children's Medical Center Dallas while police tracked him down on an active warrant, Breitbart News reported.
Police video showed SWAT officers issuing commands and deploying tear gas before Robinson appeared to reach toward his waist and point a gun at officers, who then opened fire. The gun he was holding during the standoff was also reportedly stolen.
That alone would be a grim local story. What elevates it is everything else.
A Man of Many Names
Robinson didn't just work security for a sitting congresswoman. He did so under a fake identity. In addition to going by the name Mike King, Robinson was accused of impersonating a policeman, wearing fake uniforms that made him appear to be a federal agent, and running a fraudulent business called Off Duty Police Services to hire legitimate police officers for off-duty gigs.
A Fox 4 report showed mugshots of the suspect stretching from 2010 to 2017. This was not a man with a single youthful indiscretion buried in his past. This was a pattern.
And yet Crockett's office apparently noticed none of it. In a statement on Monday, the congresswoman said her team "followed all protocols by the House to hire additional security." She added that Robinson had been around her team "for many years."
Years. A man accused of impersonating a federal agent, operating a fraudulent security company, and carrying a stolen firearm was embedded in a congresswoman's security detail for years.
Crockett's Defense
Rather than distance herself from the situation or acknowledge the obvious vetting failure, Crockett leaned in. Her Monday statement read like a character reference at a sentencing hearing:
"As a former public defender, I've always believed people are more than the worst thing they've ever done. I believe in redemption. The man we knew showed up with respect, care, and commitment to protecting others."
She also claimed her team was "unable to locate any violent offenses" in Robinson's background. Given the mugshots, the impersonation accusations, and the fraudulent business, this raises an obvious question: what exactly were they looking for?
Crockett went further, framing Robinson's exposure as a kind of tragedy of mistaken identity:
"What we're now learning about his past doesn't fit the person we came to know as Mike King… Our hearts grieve the loss of someone we knew and the lost good that could have come from his redemption."
Of course, it doesn't fit. "Mike King" was a fabrication. The person they came to know was a character performed by a man running from an active warrant. That's not redemption interrupted. That's a con that worked until it didn't.
A Pattern Bigger Than One Congresswoman
This episode fits a familiar pattern from a certain kind of elected official: the instinct, when confronted with a clear failure, to pivot immediately to systemic sympathy rather than personal accountability.
Crockett, in September, suggested that poverty can drive people to commit certain crimes and later claimed that committing a crime "doesn't make them a criminal." That framing does real philosophical work if you let it. It severs the link between actions and consequences, between choices and character. It makes accountability something that only applies to systems, never to individuals.
Apply that framework here, and you get exactly what Crockett delivered on Monday: a man who impersonated law enforcement, ran a fraudulent business, carried a reportedly stolen weapon, barricaded himself in a parking garage at a children's hospital, and pointed a gun at SWAT officers becomes a story about "the lost good that could have come from his redemption."
No mention of the officers who had to make a split-second decision. No mention of the families and children at that hospital. No mention of the legitimate police officers who may have been unknowingly funneled through a fake business. The empathy flows in one direction.
The Vetting Question Nobody Wants to Ask
Crockett insists her office followed House protocols. If that's true, those protocols need serious scrutiny. A man using a fake name, with mugshots spanning nearly a decade, who was actively wanted by law enforcement, passed whatever screening exists for people entrusted with protecting a member of Congress.
Either the protocols are inadequate, or they weren't actually followed. Neither answer is reassuring. And neither answer is addressed by quoting your public defender credentials and talking about redemption.
Members of Congress have access to sensitive information, secure facilities, and the public trust. The people guarding them should, at a minimum, be who they say they are. That's not a high bar. Robinson cleared it for years anyway.
Where Accountability Goes to Die
The real story here isn't one congresswoman's bad hire. It's the reflexive machinery that kicks in afterward. The appeal to redemption. The passive framing. The quiet suggestion that scrutinizing a man's criminal history is somehow less compassionate than ignoring it. The seamless pivot from "we didn't know" to "it doesn't matter."
A man pointed a reportedly stolen gun at police officers outside a children's hospital. The congresswoman who employed him wants you to remember the good times.



