Current:Home > InvestMissouri senators, not taxpayers, will pay potential damages in Chiefs rally shooting case-LoTradeCoin
Missouri senators, not taxpayers, will pay potential damages in Chiefs rally shooting case
View Date:2025-01-11 14:41:55
COLUMBIA, Mo. (AP) — Missouri lawmakers will have to pay out of their own pockets if they lose defamation cases filed against them for falsely accusing a Kansas man of being one of the Kansas City Chiefs parade shooters and an immigrant in the country illegally.
Missouri’s Republican Gov. Mike Parson on Monday told his administration not to use taxpayer dollars to pay any potential damages awarded to Denton Loudermill Jr., of Olathe, Kansas, as part of his lawsuits against three state lawmakers.
But Missouri Republican Attorney General Andrew Bailey’s office will continue to represent the state senators, despite Parson earlier this month calling that “problematic.”
“We are not going to target innocent people in this state,” Parson told reporters earlier this month. “This gentleman did nothing wrong whatsoever other than he went to a parade and he drank beer and he was inspected.”
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 was never cited or arrested in the shooting, is seeking at least $75,000 in damages in each of the suits.
“Missourians should not be held liable for legal expenses on judgments due to state senators falsely attacking a private citizen on social media,” Parson wrote in a Monday letter to his administration commissioner.
Loudermill last month filed nearly identical federal lawsuits against three Republican Missouri state senators: Rick Brattin, of Harrisonville; Denny Hoskins, of Warrensburg; and Nick Schroer, of St. Charles County.
The complaints say Loudermill suffered “humiliation, embarrassment, insult, and inconvenience” over the “highly offensive” posts.
A spokesperson for the Missouri attorney general’s office did not immediately respond to an Associated Press request for comment Monday about Parson’s request not to pay for potential damages or the lawsuits filed against the senators.
Loudermill froze for so long after gunfire erupted that police had time to put up crime scene tape, according to the suits. 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. Loudermill ultimately was led away from the area and told he was free to go.
But posts soon began appearing on the lawmakers’ accounts on the social platform X, formerly known as Twitter, that included a picture of Loudermill and accusations that he is an “illegal alien” and a “shooter,” the suits said.
Loudermill, who was born and raised in the U.S., received death threats even though he had no involvement in the shooting, according to the complaints.
The litigation described him as a “contributing member of his African-American family, a family with deep and long roots in his Kansas community.”
veryGood! (74)
Related
- Family of security guard shot and killed at Portland, Oregon, hospital sues facility for $35M
- New York, LA, Chicago and Houston, the Nation’s Four Largest Cities, Are Among Those Hardest Hit by Heat Islands
- How Motherhood Taught Kylie Jenner to Rethink Plastic Surgery and Beauty Standards
- 150 years later, batteaumen are once again bringing life to Scottsville
- Jax Taylor Breaks Silence on Brittany Cartwright Dating His Friend Amid Their Divorce
- Plagued by Floods and Kept in the Dark, a Black Alabama Community Turns to a Hometown Hero for Help
- The Chicks postpone multiple concerts due to illness, promise 'a show you all deserve'
- As social network Threads grows, voting rights groups worry about misinformation
- How to protect your Social Security number from the Dark Web
- The Chicks postpone multiple concerts due to illness, promise 'a show you all deserve'
Ranking
- Early Week 11 fantasy football rankings: 30 risers and fallers
- The Jackson water crisis through a student journalist's eyes
- Tornado damage to Pfizer factory highlights vulnerabilities of drug supply
- Climate Litigation Has Exploded, but Is it Making a Difference?
- 'Joker 2' actor pans DC sequel as the 'worst film' ever: 'It has no plot'
- 4 killed in fiery ATV rollover crash in central Washington
- 3 dead after plane crashes into airport hangar in Upland, California
- Taylor Swift fans can find their top 5 eras with new Spotify feature. Here's how it works.
Recommendation
-
Man gets a life sentence in the shotgun death of a New Mexico police officer
-
Four women whose lives ended in a drainage ditch outside Atlantic City
-
Mandy Moore reveals her 2-year-old son has a rare skin condition: 'Kids are resilient'
-
Dehydration can be exacerbated by heat waves—here's how to stay hydrated
-
Kristin Cavallari's Ex Mark Estes Jokingly Proposed to This Love Island USA Star
-
Sinéad O'Connor, legendary singer of Nothing Compares 2 U, dead at 56
-
Nightengale's Notebook: Cardinals in a new 'awful' position as MLB trade deadline sellers
-
Is 'Hot Girl Summer' still a thing? Here's where it originated and what it means.