- Next story Retire And Move To Florida, They Said, Part Two: The Whirlwind
- Previous story Subject of Viral “Woman On A Stretcher” Ukraine Photo Dies
Search
Ten Second News
[caption id="attachment_361266" align="alignnone" width="640"] Screengrab from WIVB Buffalo Channel 4 News[/caption]
Still a developing story, but what we know so far points to an utterly depraved act of violence at a Buffalo supermarket.
Comment →Ten people were killed and three others suffered non-life-threatening injuries and were transported to local hospitals after a mass shooting at a supermarket on Buffalo’s East Side Saturday afternoon.
The shooter was an 18-year-old white male who was heavily armed with tactical gear and was live-streaming during the mass shooting, officials said. City of Buffalo Mayor Byron Brown said the shooter is not from Buffalo and traveled “hours” from outside the area.
“This was pure evil,” Erie County Sheriff John Garcia said. “A straight-up racially motivated hate crime.”
The shooter was identified in court Saturday evening as Payton S. Gendron of Conklin, New York, about 200 miles southeast of Buffalo.
Gendron was arraigned on one count of first-degree murder without bail.
The 18-year-old will be back in court on Thursday at 9:30 a.m. for a felony hearing.
When Gendron exited his vehicle at the supermarket, authorities said, he shot four people in the parking lot. Three of them died and one is in the hospital. The shooter entered the store and opened fire on customers.
Twitch deletes shooter’s live-stream video of Buffalo mass shooting
A retired Buffalo Police officer, Aaron Salter, who was working as a security guard, shot Gendron but he was unharmed because he was wearing armor, Gramaglia said. The retired officer was shot and killed.A law enforcement source told CBS News that the gunman had a racial slur written on his weapon. The attack is being treated as a hate crime.
Erie County District Attorney John Flynn will not confirm the existence of the shooter’s manifesto. He said they believe there was a “racial component” to the attack but won’t say more.
This attack is being investigated by the FBI as a hate crime and as violent extremism.
Police officers could frame people, file bogus charges, conjure evidence out of thin air—and, in most of the U.S., they would still be immune from facing any sort of civil accountability for that malicious prosecution. Until yesterday.
---
Yesterday, the highest court in the country struck that requirement down, ruling that Thompson should indeed have a right to sue the officers at the center of his case. "A plaintiff such as Thompson must demonstrate, among other things, that he obtained a favorable termination of the underlying criminal prosecution," wrote Justice Brett Kavanaugh for the U.S. Supreme Court. "We hold that a Fourth Amendment claim…for malicious prosecution does not require the plaintiff to show that the criminal prosecution ended with some affirmative indication of innocence."
From THOMPSON v. CLARK ET AL.:
Held: To demonstrate a favorable termination of a criminal prosecution for purposes of the Fourth Amendment claim under §1983 for malicious prosecution, a plaintiff need not show that the criminal prosecution ended with some affirmative indication of innocence. A plaintiff need only show that his prosecution ended without a conviction.
Thompson has satisfied that requirement here.
Thompson v. Clark was decided 6-3. (Alito wrote the dissent, with Thomas and Gorsuch joining.)
Comment →Ordinary Pivot
Features
Hot Posts
-
Government By Performativeness is a Failure
May 17, 2022
-
The Return of the Bedroom Police
May 9, 2022
-
Student Loan Forgiveness: Watch What Unfolds from Here
April 28, 2022
-
April 26, 2022
-
The Demise of the Big Tent Made Us Stupid
May 6, 2022
Subscribe to Blog via Email
Devcat Says

Recently comments that included the strings "zed" or "doug" were sent immediately to trash. This should be fixed now.
Recent Comments
Jaybird in reply to Chip Daniels
Ignoredon Government By Performativeness is a FailureDid education in this country used to be better? If it did, and there's reason to believe that it did, maybe w…Dark Matter in reply to Slade the Leveller
Ignoredon Government By Performativeness is a FailureI’m not of the mind that we should give up on any Americans. Shielding people from their own bad choices is a…Dark Matter in reply to Chip Daniels
Ignoredon Government By Performativeness is a Failureone wonders why decades of bootstraps and the miracle of free markets and moral righteousness hasn’t had a bet…Pinky in reply to Chip Daniels
Ignoredon Government By Performativeness is a FailureI was thinking of school choice and charter schools. They're not exclusive to Republican jurisdictions but the…Chip Daniels in reply to Pinky
Ignoredon Government By Performativeness is a FailureHow do you experiment whilst standing athwart history yelling "Stop!"? What solutions do conservatives propose…Pinky in reply to Chip Daniels
Ignoredon Government By Performativeness is a FailureHistory is filled with people trying to help others, so I disagree with your thesis. And your accusations were…Chip Daniels in reply to Michael Cain
Ignoredon Government By Performativeness is a FailureYes, all very true and one wonders why decades of bootstraps and the miracle of free markets and moral righteo…Chip Daniels in reply to Pinky
Ignoredon Government By Performativeness is a FailureYes, exclusion and punishment "work" by freeing the high performers from any obligations to the low performers…
ICYMI
Ordinary Twitter

There are worse ways that a movie of a man arriving home earlier than usual can end.Report