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The $10-million lawsuit filed last week on behalf of accused Kalamazoo shooter Jason Dalton against his former employer Uber turned out to be a joke.
The handwritten complaint was filed on March 15, but authorities raised suspicions about the Philadelphia postmark on the envelope it had been mailed in since Dalton is currently housed in a Michigan jail.
The Kalamazoo County Sheriff Department told reporters that they determined the complaint to be a hoax, saying the handwriting in the complaint did not match Dalton’s. Also, Dalton’s attorney verified that he did not file the complaint.
The $10-million lawsuit filed last week on behalf of accused Kalamazoo shooter Jason Dalton against his former employer Uber turned out to be a joke.
The handwritten complaint was filed on March 15, but authorities raised suspicions about the Philadelphia postmark on the envelope it had been mailed in since Dalton is currently housed in a Michigan jail.
The Kalamazoo County Sheriff Department told reporters that they determined the complaint to be a hoax, saying the handwriting in the complaint did not match Dalton’s. Also, Dalton’s attorney verified that he did not file the complaint.
The $10-million lawsuit filed last week on behalf of accused Kalamazoo shooter Jason Dalton against his former employer Uber turned out to be a joke.
The handwritten complaint was filed on March 15, but authorities raised suspicions about the Philadelphia postmark on the envelope it had been mailed in since Dalton is currently housed in a Michigan jail.
The Kalamazoo County Sheriff Department told reporters that they determined the complaint to be a hoax, saying the handwriting in the complaint did not match Dalton’s. Also, Dalton’s attorney verified that he did not file the complaint.