Why Karen Bass' Brother Is Suing Her
City Forces Orthodox Jew to Get Permit to Pray With Friends in Own...
Trump Is Setting His Sights on This Country After the Iran War Ends
Democrats Are Big Mad That Trump Ended the War in Iran
James Talarico Demands That Epstein Enablers Be Exposed – He Can Start With...
Where My Story Really Begins
West Virginia Lowers Permitless Carry Age to 18
Elon Musk Is Now a Trillionaire. Here's Why That's a Good Thing.
Israel Weighs in on Iran Deal
No, America Is Not Providing Iran With a $300 Billion Reconstruction Fund
Here's an Update on the Voter Fraud Investigation in California
The FREE Act 'Frees' Permitting Stakeholders From Regulation
Giants Players Infuriate Sports Media by Promoting Bible Versus on 'Pride Night'
Here's What Dems Were Up to During Trump's UFC Freedom 250 Fight
The EU Is Aiding Chinese Tech Leadership
Tipsheet

WaPo Deleted This Tweet About George Floyd, But the Damage Was Already Done

WaPo Deleted This Tweet About George Floyd, But the Damage Was Already Done
AP Photo/Manuel Balce Ceneta

On May 24, the eve of the two-year anniversary of George Floyd's death, The Washington Post tweeted something rather curious and quite obviously false about his death.

Advertisement

According to the now-deleted tweet, which was up for 40 full minutes and generated plenty of reaction before then, "George Floyd was shot and killed in police custody. His death sparked outrage, wide scale protests and calls to change policing."

In reality, Floyd's cause of death was found to be cardiopulmonary arrest. There was no shooting involved.

As Andy Ngô highlighted over Twitter, and by sharing a post from The Post Millennial's Libby Emmons, The Washington Post also used the same false language in a post to solicit responses from readers on their thoughts about the changes since Floyd's death. 

Advertisement

In addition to deleting the tweet, The Washington Post issued a subsequent tweet which simply read "Tell The Post: How have things changed in your community since George Floyd's death?" Another tweet in the thread read that "We've deleted a previous tweet for this form that included language that was changed after publish."

Such vague language still invited scrutiny, from Ngô, and many others. 

Advertisement

Those "wide scale protests" that the original, since-deleted tweet refers to amounted to burning cities across the country and carried with it a price tag of more than $2 billion for insurance. 

Former Officer Derek Chauvin, who kneeled on Floyd's neck for several minutes, was found guilty in April of last year on all charges of second-degree unintentional murder, third-degree murder and second-degree manslaughter in the death of Floyd. Last June he received his sentence of 22.5 years. The other officers involved were found guilty in February of civil rights charges related to Floyd's death. Former Officer Thomas Lane pled guilty last week to a state charge of aiding and abetting second-degree manslaughter.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement