Current:Home > FinanceMan cuffed but not charged after Chiefs’ Super Bowl rally shooting sues congressman over online post -Achieve Wealth Network
Man cuffed but not charged after Chiefs’ Super Bowl rally shooting sues congressman over online post
View
Date:2025-04-16 14:18:10
MISSION, Kan. (AP) — A man who was briefly handcuffed in the chaos that followed a deadly shooting at the Kansas City Chiefs’ Super Bowl rally is suing a Tennessee congressman who falsely accused him in social media posts of being one of the shooters and an immigrant in the country illegally.
Denton Loudermill Jr., of Olathe, Kansas, filed the federal lawsuit this week against U.S. Rep. Tim Burchett, alleging that the remarks were “highly offensive, derogatory in the extreme, and defamatory.”
Burchett, a Republican, is serving his third term representing a district in east Tennessee. His spokeswoman, Rachel Partlow, said the office doesn’t comment on pending or active litigation.
The Feb. 14 shooting outside the historic Union Station in Kansas City, Missouri, killed a well-known DJ and injured more than 20 others, many of them children. Loudermill, who is not among those charged, is seeking more than $75,000 in damages.
The suit says that when gunfire erupted, Loudermill froze, standing in the middle of the chaos so long that police had put up crime scene tape when he finally walked away.
As he tried to go under the tape to leave, officers stopped him and told him he was moving “too slow.” They handcuffed him and put him on a curb, where people began taking pictures and posting them on social media, the suit says.
Loudermill ultimately was led away from the area and told he was free to go.
The suit says that Loudermill, who was born and raised in the U.S., was never detained, cited or arrested in the shooting. The suit stresses that he had no involvement and didn’t know any of the teens or young adults who argued before gunfire erupted.
But the next day, a picture of Loudermill was posted on Burchett’s account on X, formerly known as Twitter. Above the picture were the words: “One of the Kansas City Chiefs victory parade shooters has been identified as an illegal Alien.”
A follow-up post on Feb. 18 blamed incorrect news reports for the “illegal alien” identification. But the post, which was included in the lawsuit, still described the cuffed man seated on the curb as “one of the shooters.”
The suit alleges the “false assertions” were reposted and widely circulated to more than 1 million people worldwide.
The suit describes Loudermill as a car wash employee — not a public figure — and a “contributing member of his African-American family, a family with deep and long roots in his Kansas community.”
The suit says he received death threats and experienced periods of “anxiety, agitation, and sleep disruption.”
veryGood! (4575)
Related
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- State Tensions Rise As Water Cuts Deepen On The Colorado River
- In clash with Bernie Sanders, Starbucks' Howard Schultz insists he's no union buster
- Kidnapped Texas girl rescued in California after holding up help me sign inside car
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- A Great Recession bank takeover
- Gwyneth Paltrow’s Son Moses Looks Just Like Dad Chris Martin in New Photo
- Coal Powered the Industrial Revolution. It Left Behind an ‘Absolutely Massive’ Environmental Catastrophe
- Could your smelly farts help science?
- What the bonkers bond market means for you
Ranking
- South Korea's acting president moves to reassure allies, calm markets after Yoon impeachment
- Trump adds attorney John Lauro to legal team for special counsel's 2020 election probe
- Saudis, other oil giants announce surprise production cuts
- A Just Transition? On Brooklyn’s Waterfront, Oil Companies and Community Activists Join Together to Create an Offshore Wind Project—and Jobs
- 'Most Whopper
- Fired Fox News producer says she'd testify against the network in $1.6 billion suit
- Panera rolls out hand-scanning technology that has raised privacy concerns
- Chrissy Teigen Shares Intimate Meaning Behind Baby Boy Wren's Middle Name
Recommendation
Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
GEO Group sickened ICE detainees with hazardous chemicals for months, a lawsuit says
Anne Arundel County Wants the Navy’s Greenbury Point to Remain a Wetland, Not Become an 18-Hole Golf Course
GEO Group sickened ICE detainees with hazardous chemicals for months, a lawsuit says
Sam Taylor
Photo of Connecticut McDonald's $18 Big Mac meal sparks debate online
Disney blocked DeSantis' oversight board. What happens next?
The wide open possibility of the high seas