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A $10 million lawsuit that was reportedly filed against Uber by a man accused of shooting eight people while working as a driver for the company in Kalamazoo, Michigan, has turned out to be a hoax, according to law enforcement officials. The handwritten, rambling letter was purported to be from Jason Dalton, who is awaiting trial on charges of killing six people on 20 February 2016 (between picking up fares as an Uber driver). Dalton, 45 — who faces 16 charges related to the shootings, including six counts of murder and two of attempted murder — told police that a devil in the Uber app took over his body, and that his memories of the shootings are spotty. The hoax lawsuit, which was mailed to U.S. District Court in Detroit and filed Tuesday, claims that Dalton had worked for Uber for years, although the company has said he was only approved in late January, less than a month before his shooting spree: The letter also alleges that the company would call him late at night and tell him that if he didn't go to work, he was fired. (Uber doesn't set schedules for its drivers.) He said he has no idea what it is, Kalamazoo County Undersheriff Pali Matyas told local news outlets. He said he didn't send it, didn't authorize it, doesn't know who did. In a previous e-mail statement, Matyas wrote: Dalton was arrested 21 February 2016, and has been incarcerated at the Kalamazoo County Jail since.
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