this post was submitted on 24 Jan 2025
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Actually Infuriating
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tl;dr: Definitely accurate in message, less accurate in details.
Since I don't get my news from memes:
The man's name is Kenneth Vinyard. The incident occurred in Monaca, PA, on November 6, 2022. The gunshot victim, Rashaun Smith, was airlifted, but ultimately died. The shooter, Yeshua Bratcher, was charged with (among other things) homicide. As of January 2023, Bratcher was scheduled to go to trial in May 2023, but that's all I can find about that.
Vinyard was in the vicinity of a gunshot victim when the off-duty Center Township (just minutes from Monaca) police officer John Hawk did indeed push Vinyard to the ground, and Vinyard did indeed die. There is cell phone video of all this, but I haven't found it yet.
I said "vicinity of a gunshot victim" because different articles describe Vinyard as "rushing to the victim's side" and "rendering aid", or approaching on-duty, uniformed police near the crime scene to offer evidence. The two scenarios seem mutually exclusive, but because the latter description is what the AG ultimately based their charges against Hawk on in late 2023, I tend to believe that.
In May 2023, the Beaver County coroner ruled Vinyard's death an accident, saying that the cause of death was "was hypertensive and atherosclerotic disease and said, 'blunt force trauma of the head and associated stress that occurred during the confrontation contributed to his demise.'" In the same month, a lawsuit by Vinyard's family against Center Township was settled for $950K.
Hawk was charged in December 2023 with "involuntary manslaughter, aggravated assault, recklessly endangering another person, and simple assault."
The article just linked seems to contain the most cogent description of events on November 6, 2022, in Monaca:
Anyway - there's a ton of articles out there if you want to dig deeper on this case.
Thanks for collecting the details. Minor remark:
I looked into the link and it says 950K, not 950M.
Thank you! Edited.
These are some of my favorite contributions to social networks. Thank you for taking the time.
I couldn't stop myself. It's too often that "something written in Impact font over a picture" is just accepted as fact. It's no wonder that propaganda "works so well." And this one isn't even that bad. It's substantially true, even.
Memes aren't journalism, and it's important to do the work of fact checking, especially when the meme is rage-bait and/or something you're already primed to agree with.
Yeah but didn't you just write a long ass explanation of how the posted "meme" is correct? Or can I not read.
For this specific case:
My comment above was meant to address my motivation for doing the work in the first place. There was a "picture with Impact font text" on it. That alone demands vetting. The fact that that vetting later showed that this image/text is substantially correct doesn't obviate the need for validating the information.
The errors are not major ones: Vinyard vs "Vineyard". Off-duty cop vs "plainclothes[ed] cop". Offering evidence to uniformed police vs "re[n]dering aid"/"saving lives". That last mistake - which is one that early reporting also made - tends to amplify the rage-bait aspect of the story. This is not to say that people shouldn't be incensed by the events that played out here. It is to say that the actual events that played out are what people should be incensed by.
Facts matter.
I agree facts matter and appreciate you vetting it and all that jazz. I tend to outright dismiss "picture with impact font text(s)" because of what you said.
I just thought for a sec you were saying that the pic was not really truthful, in general (if not specifically), so was confused for a minute. Keep up the good work comrade.
This is how you do journalism, folks.