

That’s what I figured after thinking about it, that there had to be some procedural reason for it.
That’s what I figured after thinking about it, that there had to be some procedural reason for it.
Which, funnily enough, would also qualify the murders as first-degree under Minnesota state law: https://www.revisor.mn.gov/statutes/cite/609.185
The suspect faces several charges of second-degree murder.
This baffles me. Looking up your fucking victim’s addresses isn’t enough evidence of premeditation to qualify for first-degree charges?
As someone with a lot of web backend engineering experience, this had me yelling at the screen at a few points, but really cool nonetheless.
My phone struggled to load the site to order a single cold brew, pop-ups to install the custom App kept obscuring the options, and I had to register with my phone number, email address, and first and last name to buy a $5 cup of coffee.
Then walk out. Don’t reward the bullshit with your money. The coffee shop ain’t gonna give a shit if you keep buying coffee just to go home and complain on your blog.
The article is full of typos, too.
Who let this dreck out the door? Did Forbes lay off all their editors or what?