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Chiefs Fan Dies After Being Wrongly Accused Of Super Bowl Parade Shooting

Chiefs Fan Dies After Being Wrongly Accused Of Super Bowl Parade Shooting

Yahoo14-04-2025

In the midst of the last Kansas City Chiefs' Super Bowl parade there was mayhem. And in the aftermath there was a misidentification.
A Kansas man who was wrongly accused of being responsible for the mass shooting at the February 2024 celebration has died, according to his family's attorney. Denton Loudermill Jr. was found dead April 11. Attorney Arthur Benson confirmed the sad news.
Loudermill Jr. was 49.
He was wrongly accused by several Republican lawmakers and social media influencers of being the sole shooter responsible for the Feb. 14, 2024 violence following the Chiefs' victory parade. The false rumor, in which several GOP lawmakers also referred to him as an "illegal alien," started on social media after a user shared a photo of Loudermill Jr. sitting on a curb in handcuffs following the shooting.
In reality, Loudermill Jr. had been improperly detained by police for allegedly moving too slowly while evacuating the scene of the shooting and was let go shortly after he was handcuffed. Lawsuits were filed last year against Republican Rep. Tim Burchett and three Republican Missouri state senators: Rick Brattin of Harrisonville, and Denny Hoskins of Warrensburg and Nick Schroer of St. Charles County. The suits were thrown out a month later, however, by a federal judge who cited issues with jurisdiction.
Loudermill Jr. filed the lawsuits in a federal court in Kansas, rather than Missouri, the state where the lawmakers were from. The shooting happened in downtown Kansas City, Mo.
Loudermill Jr.'s attorneys vowed to continue fighting his case in court after his death.
'If you thought we were determined before, you haven't seen anything yet!' Saunders wrote on social media. 'Mr. Loudermill should not have spent his final days burdened with stress and chasing down a lie that went viral due to the careless and heartless actions of a Congressman, Missouri senators, and social media influencers, who couldn't be bothered to verify the truth before destroying a man's life.'

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