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Kalamazoo Shooting (2016)

Sheriff: Kalamazoo suspect's Uber lawsuit is hoax

Trace Christenson
Battle Creek (Mich.) Enquirer
This image provided by the Kalamazoo County Sheriff's Office shows Jason Dalton of Kalamazoo County.  Dalton was arrested early Sunday, Feb. 21, 2016, in downtown Kalamazoo following a massive manhunt after several victims were shot at random.

KALAMAZOO, Mich. —  A lawsuit against Uber that was reported widely to have been filed by the Kalamazoo, Mich., mass-murder suspect is a hoax.

Kalamazoo County Sheriff Department Undersheriff Paul Matyas said Thursday his department has confirmed that the two-page handwritten suit filed in federal court against the Uber ride-sharing service was not sent by Jason Dalton from the county jail.

"It was not from him," said Matyas. "We talked to him and we talked to his attorney and they said 'We did not do this.' "

Matyas said the envelope is not from the sheriff's department and a comparison shows that the handwritten complaint sent to the court was not written by Dalton.

Sheriff: Kalamazoo suspect's Uber lawsuit is hoax

Matyas said his department was not a victim so it is not investigating further but it has notified the FBI.

Dalton, 45, has been held since his arrest last month on charges he killed several people in three separate shootings Feb. 20, in between picking up passengers as an Uber driver.

The suit was filed in Federal District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan on Tuesday. According to a copy, Dalton was suing the company for $10 million claiming he worked for Uber for years and he was not paid back wages or overtime, didn't have holiday benefits, and was in prison because of Uber.

A spokeswoman for Uber said Wednesday that Dalton had only worked for the company for two weeks before his arrest.

After he was arrested Feb. 21 on charges he killed six people and injured two in three different locations in Kalamazoo, Dalton told investigators he received instructions on a Uber app to shoot people.

Dalton's court appointed attorney, Eusebio Solis of Battle Creek, told the Battle Creek (Mich.) Enquirer again Thursday he had no knowledge of the suit.

The lawsuit envelope bore a Philadelphia postmark but did contain Dalton's jail inmate number, which can be obtained from the county jail website.

Follow Trace Christenson on Twitter: @TSChristenson

Kalamazoo suspect: Uber app made me kill

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