Kalamazoo shooter files handwritten, $10M lawsuit against Uber
The Kalamazoo man who blamed his deadly shooting spree on a possessed Uber app is suing the ride-sharing company for $10 million.
The Kalamazoo man who blamed his deadly shooting spree on a possessed Uber app is suing the ride-sharing company for $10 million.
A fight that started at Northwestern High School ended with the shooting of two teenagers at a gas station in Detroit this afternoon.
A Detroit medic was bleeding from the head after an angry resident threw a firefighter’s radio through an ambulance window.
An abandoned building in the Cass Corridor served as a drug and prostitution den, where exposed needles, used condoms and broken liquor bottles were scattered around the property.
A family visiting Kalamazoo was horrified about the news of a man randomly shooting people Saturday night, so they called for an Uber for a ride back to their hotel.
The suspect in the Kalamazoo shooting spree was taking fares as an Uber driver on the day he killed six people.
The Kalamazoo shooting rampage began at 6 p.m. Saturday and ended with his arrest at 12:40 a.m. Sunday.
“We have somebody just driving around, finding people and shooting them dead in their tracks,” the Kalamazoo County undersheriff said.
Firefighters found two bodies believed to be connected to an Amber Alert issued hours earlier for a missing 4-year-old girl.
Tucked behind a large vacant house in the Cass Corridor is a two-story building that serves as a makeshift prostitution and drug den.