The wicks on the candles are unburned.
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Replying to @fennec_sasha @any1ofthe99
Enh, you can see the end of the wick in the second photo is burned and the candle was lit
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Replying to @arthur_affect @fennec_sasha
I'm not saying it's a stretch to call a candle lit or unlit thrown at me a 'incendiary device' because it could be described that way. Also , no 1 called it a molotov cocktail, and it is violent to throw heavy objects at a fellow man/woman.
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Replying to @any1ofthe99 @fennec_sasha
The tweet didn't say "incendiary", it said "explosive" The Molotov cocktail is a reference to a different tweet where a different set of cops used that term to refer to an ordinary plastic water bottle
2 replies 2 retweets 19 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @fennec_sasha
where did the story of the candle being peaceably used, in memorial, and just used by
@SeattlePD to create a 100% false narrative come from? We agree on the semantic nonsense. Where did this narrative come from?2 replies 0 retweets 0 likes -
From looking at the fact that this is a photo of a candle in a vase that someone stepped on and asking ourselves how that would happen, after discarding the cops' narrative in the post because they are blatant liars
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I'm not discounting any1 narrative/asking how u know it was stepped on and not thrown. An agency with accountability locally has made one claim, and Arthur Chu has made the other. If you are wrong, not much will happen, if SPD proven wrong, I worry about results. who2believe?
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Police have no accountability. That's the problem.
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If they had accountability they would've bothered to check if their photo of a store-bought candle still had a label on it before presenting it to the public as evidence of IEDs
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this thread is accountability
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Only if someone actually gets fired for making that tweet, which isn't gonna happen
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