Lawsuit militia posts Facebook, "organize and further their conspiracy"

 Lawsuit militia posts Facebook,  "organize and further their conspiracy".

After Wisconsin unrest over Jacob Blake's shooting by police turned deadly last month, a new lawsuit filed by witnesses and loved ones of victims claims Facebook provided an outlet for groups to "organize and further their conspiracy" ahead of the shootings.

The suit - which also names, the so-called "Kenosha Guard," its commander Kevin Mathewson, and 17-year-old alleged gunman Kyle Rittenhouse, who was charged with the fatal shootings of two protesters during unrest in Kenosha - claims Facebook failed to delete pages and posts by the Kenosha Guard, which called for armed civilians to enter Kenosha amid the protests that erupted after police shot Blake, a Black man, in the back seven times, leaving him paralyzed.

The plaintiffs, citing a Buzzfeed story, argue that Facebook received more than 400 complaints about the post but that the company's content moderators conducted several reviews and decided the post didn't violate Facebook's anti-violence policies. The Kenosha Guard removed its post the day after the shootings and Facebook took down the militia group's entire page later that day, Buzzfeed reported.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Tyler Technologies ransomware, but insisted customers were safe

Spain choir practice COVID-19, infects 30 of 41 members with virus

Chuck E. Cheese animated show, Jumping to Movies and Cartoons