Man Connected to 'Pizzagate' Conspiracy Killed in Police Shooting

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Man Connected to 'Pizzagate' Conspiracy Killed in Police Shooting
PizzagateConspiracy TheoryPolice Shooting
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Edgar Maddison Welch, who fired a gun at a Washington, D.C. pizzeria based on a false online conspiracy theory, was shot and killed by North Carolina police during a traffic stop.

Chick-fil-A said the fast-food restaurant made a “slight adjustment” to the Waffle Potato Fries recipe to make them stay crispier, longer. Two lanes are closed on US Highway 281 South at Thousand Oaks Drive on Thursday, Jan. 9, 2025, due to high water.Steady, cold rain tapers off overnight, cold and windy FridayHere's how to get fabulous items to make life around the house easier, more organized and tidy — all while saving big.FILE - Edgar Maddison Welch, of Salisbury, N.C.

, surrenders to police, in Washington, Dec. 4, 2016. (Sathi Soma via AP, File)– A man who fired a gun inside a restaurant in the nation's capital after a fake online conspiracy theory called “Pizzagate” motivated him to do so nearly a decade ago was shot and killed by North Carolina police during a weekend traffic stop. Edgar Maddison Welch was a passenger in a vehicle stopped by officers in Kannapolis on Saturday night, according to a Kannapolis Police Department news release. One of the officers recognized the car as the vehicle of someone he had arrested and who had an outstanding warrant for a felony probation violation — Welch, police said.When the officers approached the vehicle to arrest Welch, police said the man pulled out a handgun and pointed it at one of the officers. After he was instructed to drop the weapon but didn't, two officers shot Welch, authorities said. Emergency responders took Welch to the hospital and he died from his injuries two days later, according to the release. None of the officers, nor the driver and another passenger, were injured.to Comet Ping Pong restaurant in Washington after believing an unfounded conspiracy theory that prominent Democrats were operating a child sex trafficking ring out of the pizzeria. The fake theory, dubbed “Pizzagate,” began circulating online during the 2016 presidential election.At the time, Comet Ping Pong's owner, James Alefantis, said the conspiracy theory and subsequent violence from it traumatized him and his staff. Welch later pled guilty to interstate transportation of a firearm and ammunition and assault with a dangerous weapon in 2017. His judge, now Supreme Court Justice Kentaji Brown Jackson, subsequently City of Kannapolis communications director Annette Privette Keller confirmed the man who died was the same one involved in the “Pizzagate” incident. The shooting death of Welch, a resident of Salisbury, is under review by the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation, and the officers who fired at him are on administrative leave, per the department's protocol. Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.Here's how to get fabulous items to make life around the house easier, more organized and tidy — all while saving big

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Pizzagate Conspiracy Theory Police Shooting Shooting North Carolina

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