James holmes aurora shooting, Rachel Maddow appeared an Outrage-O-Meter on her show Thursday night, and rapidly put it under serious scrutiny with an anecdote about the continuous trial of James Holmes, who opened fire in a motion picture theater in Aurora, Colorado, in July 2012.
Maddow opened her show with unfortunate footage of the Aurora trial. She highlighted the affirmation of Brenton Lowak, whose companion Jessica Ghawi - a 24-year-old yearning games columnist - kicked the bucket in the shooting.
Here's the part that set off the Outrage-O-Meter: Jessica's guardians have been requested by a judge in Colorado to pay $220,000 to the firearm producers who sold Holmes his weapon.
The folks unsuccessfully sued the retailers who made the gun that executed their little girl. Colorado state law obliges that offended parties who sue the producers of firearm items pay the organizations' legitimate expenses in the event that they lose.
"That is not a mistake," Maddow said, including, "The mother and father of the casualty who passed on in the Aurora mass shooting have quite recently been requested to pay a quarter-million dollars to the firearm producers who sold the shots that were utilized as a part of the Aurora mass shooting - the folks of the young lady who was slaughtered."
"On the off chance that you, for reasons unknown, sue anybody needing to do with the making of firearms and if, for any reason, you lose that claim, you're going to need to pay - enormous," Maddow proceeded. "It just goes that one bearing, as well."
Maddow opened her show with unfortunate footage of the Aurora trial. She highlighted the affirmation of Brenton Lowak, whose companion Jessica Ghawi - a 24-year-old yearning games columnist - kicked the bucket in the shooting.
Here's the part that set off the Outrage-O-Meter: Jessica's guardians have been requested by a judge in Colorado to pay $220,000 to the firearm producers who sold Holmes his weapon.
The folks unsuccessfully sued the retailers who made the gun that executed their little girl. Colorado state law obliges that offended parties who sue the producers of firearm items pay the organizations' legitimate expenses in the event that they lose.
"That is not a mistake," Maddow said, including, "The mother and father of the casualty who passed on in the Aurora mass shooting have quite recently been requested to pay a quarter-million dollars to the firearm producers who sold the shots that were utilized as a part of the Aurora mass shooting - the folks of the young lady who was slaughtered."
"On the off chance that you, for reasons unknown, sue anybody needing to do with the making of firearms and if, for any reason, you lose that claim, you're going to need to pay - enormous," Maddow proceeded. "It just goes that one bearing, as well."
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