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  • 2019-12-09 (xsd:date)
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  • UPS Thanks Police for Killing Driver Frank Ordonez – Truth or Fiction? (en)
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  • UPS Thanks Police for Killing Driver Frank Ordonez Claim The @UPS Twitter account sent a tweet thanking law enforcement for their service just after an innocent UPS driver who had been taken hostage by robbery suspects was shot and killed in a police shootout. Rating True Like this fact check? Reporting On December 5 2019 — after law enforcement officers in south Florida shot and killed a hostage, a bystander, and two suspected thieves during a daytime shootout in a busy intersection during rush hour — a number of popular tweets claimed that UPS had publicly thanked police for killing the hostage, who was one of their drivers: https://twitter.com/dennismhogan/status/1202981341534527490 The tweet above — sent a day after UPS driver Frank Ordonez , bystander Richard Cutshaw , and robbery suspects Lamar Alexander and Ronnie Jerome Hill were shot dead in the rush-hour police chase turned gun battle, mused: When the cops shoot you dead in the street your boss will thank the cops Twitter was alight with tweets excoriating the parcel service for thanking police after the shootout: https://twitter.com/freedaaron/status/1202986421339996160 cops went fucking buck wild lighting up the ups truck killed the driver AND another innocent bystander and ups tweets out a thank you to the cops what the fuck pic.twitter.com/fcnnRAzMMm Florida is where wokes go to die... Please enable JavaScript Florida is where wokes go to die — jordan (@JordanUhl) December 6, 2019 You don’t have to thank the cops for murdering somebody — Bran New Man (@bransonreese) December 6, 2019 Their first tweet included a thank you to the murderous cops that killed Frank. UPS is a despicable company with great package handlers and drivers but horrible management. Upper management doesn’t give a rats ass that an employee was murdered and their 1st statement proves that pic.twitter.com/TnHto339Pv — SocMediaIsSometimesOk (@socmediaisdumb) December 7, 2019 Dear Cops, Thank you for your service. Please don't come over here and kill the rest of us. We love you, UPS — Troy (@MetalOriginal) December 6, 2019 Yeah i too would thank the cops for killing my employee yes thank you — srko (@tayoIor) December 6, 2019 However, no such tweet was visible on the verified @UPS Twitter account. A tweet sent at 3:20 PM Eastern time on December 6 2019 mentioned Ordonez by name and alluded to a senseless act of violence: pic.twitter.com/RgWb94o3C6 — UPS (@UPS) December 6, 2019 A CBS News article published three hours later maintained that the deaths of Ordonez and Cutshaw were being questioned due to an overwhelming use of force by police: The overwhelming use of force is being questioned after a chase in Florida ended in a deadly shootout with police. It started when two men, who the FBI said were already wanted for two similar heists near Miami, robbed a jewelry store and hijacked a UPS van. After a 23-mile chase, the officers opened fire when the gunmen shot at them, leaving drivers in rush-hour traffic panicked and scrambling. The two men who police said robbed the jewelry store were killed. But so was 70-year-old Richard Cutshaw, who was waiting in his car at the intersection. The UPS driver who was taken hostage, Frank Ordonez, was also killed. Ordonez’s stepfather Joe Merino told reporters that his family was beyond devastated by his stepson’s death: For this to happen, I think, it was just unnecessary ... Other tactics should have been applied, and they weren’t, so when I say the word devastated, it’s an understatement. Although @UPS appeared to have deleted their original tweet, it was archived on a third-party website. It was sent at 6:38 PM on December 5 2019, and it read: We are deeply saddened to learn a UPS service provider was a victim of this senseless act of violence. We extend our condolences to the family and friends of our employee and the other innocent victims involved in this incident. We appreciate law enforcement’s service and will cooperate with the authorities as they continue the investigation. Although the tweet did not say thank you specifically, it is true that UPS initially tweeted and deleted an initial statement thanking law enforcement for their service, service which resulted in the deaths of their driver Frank Ordonez, bystander Richard Cutshaw, and two robbery suspects, cousins Ronnie Jerome Hill and Lamar Alexander. Posted in Fact Checks , Viral Content Tagged bad tweets , frank ordonez , public relations , twitter , UPS , ups killed by cops , ups thanks police , viral tweets (en)
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