Saints delete tweet showing Drew Brees in #SayHerName shirt after complaints it was for pro-Trump shooting victim Ashli Babbitt



The New Orleans Saints deleted a tweet showing quarterback Drew Brees wearing a #SayHerName shirt before Sunday's playoff game against the Chicago Bears — which he and other players have worn all season to draw attention to the Breonna Taylor shooting — over complaints Brees actually wore it for Ashli Babbitt, a supporter of President Donald Trump who was fatally shot by police during last week's Capitol siege, USA Today's For the Win reported.

What's the background?

Brees apparently is having a tough time living down off-season controversy in which he stood against NFL players kneeling during national anthem and said he'll "never agree with anybody disrespecting the flag of the United States of America."

Teammate Malcolm Jenkins ripped Brees for his stance, saying in a now-deleted video that "we're done talking, Drew. And people who share your sentiments, who express those and push them throughout the world, the airwaves, are the problem ... it's unfortunate because I considered you a friend. I looked up to you. You're somebody who I had a great deal of respect for. But sometimes you should shut the f*** up."

The next day Brees apologized: "I would like to apologize to my friends, teammates, the City of New Orleans, the black community, NFL community and anyone I hurt with my comments yesterday," he wrote in a lengthy post. "In speaking with some of you, it breaks my heart to know the pain I have caused."

Then after Trump argued that Brees shouldn't have backed down, Brees pushed back with a message to the president, saying "we can no longer use the flag to turn people away or distract them from the real issues that face our black communities."

Twitter mob triumphs again

So even after Brees' massive mea culpa, the Twitter mob apparently didn't take kindly to the Saints' tweet showing Brees in the #SayHerName warm-up shirt — and For the Win said "fans speculated in the Saints' mentions that Brees was possibly co-opting the Breonna Taylor social justice hashtag for Ashli Babbitt."

Here's what other woke detractors had to say:

  • "Drew Brees got on a say her name shirt for that white lady that got killed at the capital but wouldn't stand on black issues," one Twitter user noted. "Yeah Saints losing by 10."
  • "Brees definitely wore that Tee shirt for the lady killed in D.C.," another user said. "He has always been a closet racist in my mind."
  • "Nah, man Saints fan explain this s**t!!!!!!" one Twitter user exclaimed.
  • "Drew Brees wearing a #sayhername shirt is almost hilarious," another commenter said. "After all the crap he said about kneeling. He wants us to believe this now?"
  • "So... is Drew Brees wearing that shirt for Breonna Taylor or for that dumb chick who got shot down like a possum after rioting in the Capitol? another user asked.
  • "I'm pretty offended seeing Drew Brees rock a sayhername shirt," another commenter said.

With that, the tweet was deleted — but as you no doubt know by now, all things tend to survive on the Internet:

Image source: Twitter

The Saints soon tweeted another photo — without Brees as the visual focal point — noting that the shirt "is for the Saints Players Coalition initiative to amplify the voices and experiences of black women."

#SayHerName shirt is for the Saints Players Coalition initiative to amplify the voices and experiences of black wom… https://t.co/bXBjLdRHKk
— New Orleans Saints (@New Orleans Saints)1610311435.0

Oh, and the Saints failed to lose by 10, as the aforementioned Twitter user predicted — rather they won by 12, with Brees tossing two touchdown passes in a 21-9 victory over the Bears.

Louisville police set to fire two more officers involved in the Breonna Taylor shooting



The Louisville Metro Police Department has moved to fire two off the officers involved in the fatal shooting of Breonna Taylor when police executed a "no-knock" search warrant at her home earlier this year.

Taylor was shot six times and killed during the March 13 raid. Officers had returned fire after Taylor's boyfriend, Kenneth Walker, shot his gun mistakenly believing he and Taylor were the targets of a robbery. Police suspected that Taylor's apartment was being used to traffic drugs, but no drugs or money were found during the search.

The incident quickly ignited public outrage and fueled anti-police brutality protests around the country as well as raised questions about the efficacy and morality of no-knock warrants.

The two officers — Detective Joshua Jaynes and Officer Myles Cosgrove — were notified of their termination on Tuesday and will answer the notices in a forthcoming hearing with the department's chief, ABC News reported.

"We plan to attend the pre-termination hearing on December 31st, although I expect the result has already been pre-determined," Thomas Clay, Jaynes' lawyer, said. "I fully expect Mr. Jaynes will be terminated after the 'hearing' no matter what the evidence is to the contrary. We will appeal any disciplinary action taken against Mr. Jaynes because I believe the evidence shows he did nothing wrong."

Jaynes was not physically present at the shooting but is the officer who prepared the search warrant for Taylor's apartment.

Cosgrove, on the other hand, was present at the shooting. A ballistics analysis reportedly determined that he fired the shot that proved fatal for Taylor. His lawyer, Jarrod Beck, likewise confirmed that he had received a pre-termination notice.

In a statement, Louisville's River City Fraternal Order of Police said, "The FOP is aware that two of our members received pre-termination opportunity to respond notices today, outlining the chief's current intent to terminate their employment. In the near future both members will have an opportunity to have a hearing before the chief of police and respond to the information contained in the notices. After those hearings, when the chief makes her final determinations, our members have the right to appeal any discipline that may be issued."

To date, only one officer involved in the incident has received disciplinary action. Brett Hankison was fired by the department in June. He was also indicted by a grand jury in September on three counts of wanton endangerment for recklessly spraying bullets into the building and nearby apartments.

The department has not fired Sgt. Jonathan Mattingly, who also was there and fired into the apartment. Mattingly was shot in the leg by Taylor's booyfriend during the raid.