Shooting of Korryn Gaines
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Shooting_of_Korryn_Gaines
The shooting of Korryn Gaines occurred on August 1, 2016, in Randallstown, Maryland, near Baltimore, resulting in the death of Gaines, a 23-year-old woman, and the shooting of her son, who survived. According to the Baltimore County Police Department, officers sought to serve Gaines a warrant in relation to an earlier traffic violation. She had refused to vacate her vehicle or show her driver's license, and resisted arrest. Immediately after the first officer entered her home to serve the warrant, Gaines pointed a shotgun at him, prompting him to withdraw without shots being fired. The Baltimore County SWAT team responded and a standoff began. She recorded and live streamed to Facebook where Gaines's friends told her to "continue on". She is seen to have told her son that "the police are c
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Korryn Gaines est morte à 23 ans le 1er août 2016 à Randallstown, Maryland, près de Baltimore, au cours d'un fusillade dont son fils a réchappé. Selon la version de la police, les agents venaient délivrer à Gaines un mandat d'arrêt lié à une infraction routière. Elle aurait refusé de quitter son véhicule et de montrer son permis de conduire, et avait résisté à une arrestation. Gaines aurait pointé un fusil vers l'officier entré en premier chez elle, l'incitant à se retirer sans que des coups de feu ne soient tirés. L'équipe du SWAT est intervenue.
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Mort de Korryn Gaines
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Shooting of Korryn Gaines
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Korryn Gaines
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Kodi
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Shot by police after pointing a firearm at officers attempting to serve a warrant
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2016-08-01
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Carriage Hill Circle, Randallstown, Maryland, U.S.
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Korryn Gaines, Kodi Gaines, Baltimore County police officers
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Korryn Gaines est morte à 23 ans le 1er août 2016 à Randallstown, Maryland, près de Baltimore, au cours d'un fusillade dont son fils a réchappé. Selon la version de la police, les agents venaient délivrer à Gaines un mandat d'arrêt lié à une infraction routière. Elle aurait refusé de quitter son véhicule et de montrer son permis de conduire, et avait résisté à une arrestation. Gaines aurait pointé un fusil vers l'officier entré en premier chez elle, l'incitant à se retirer sans que des coups de feu ne soient tirés. L'équipe du SWAT est intervenue. Certaines parties de l'affrontement ont été filmées par Gaines et postées sur des réseaux sociaux ; on l'y voit charger le fusil de chasse, annonçant à tous les officiers de police devant sa maison qu'elle essayait de protéger son fils et qu'ils n'avaient pas le droit de s'introduire chez elle. Devant son refus de les laisser entrer, un agent enfonce la porte à coups de pied. À la demande de la police, les comptes Facebook et Instagram de Gaines ont été désactivés, ce qui a suscité des critiques sur l'implication de la société dans l'incident. En 2018, un jury a accordé 38 millions de dollars de dommages et intérêts à la famille Gaines après avoir conclu que le premier coup de feu, tiré par Royce Ruby et qui a tué Gaines, n'était pas raisonnable. Ce verdict a été annulé en février 2019, puis rétabli en appel le 1er juillet 2020.
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The shooting of Korryn Gaines occurred on August 1, 2016, in Randallstown, Maryland, near Baltimore, resulting in the death of Gaines, a 23-year-old woman, and the shooting of her son, who survived. According to the Baltimore County Police Department, officers sought to serve Gaines a warrant in relation to an earlier traffic violation. She had refused to vacate her vehicle or show her driver's license, and resisted arrest. Immediately after the first officer entered her home to serve the warrant, Gaines pointed a shotgun at him, prompting him to withdraw without shots being fired. The Baltimore County SWAT team responded and a standoff began. She recorded and live streamed to Facebook where Gaines's friends told her to "continue on". She is seen to have told her son that "the police are coming to kill us". Upon her refusal to let them in, police got a key from the rental office but found the chain lock blocked their entry. An officer then kicked in the door. Police say Gaines pointed a shotgun at an officer, telling him to leave. Upon police request, Facebook deactivated Gaines' Facebook and Instagram accounts, leading to criticism of the company's involvement in the incident. In 2018, a jury awarded the Gaines family $38 million in damages after finding that the first shot, fired by Royce Ruby and killing Gaines, was not reasonable, and thus violated their civil rights. That verdict was overturned in February 2019 by Judge Mickey Norman who ruled that physical evidence suggests Gaines' was raising her weapon when shot, thus posing a threat to Ruby and his team. Judge Norman described Ruby's actions as 'objectively reasonable'. In July 2020, an appeal court reinstated the $38 million award.
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Korryn Gaines
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Upon police request, Facebook deactivated Gaines' social media accounts featuring live coverage of the standoff
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37708