Template:Did you know nominations/Shooting of Benjamin Marconi
- The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.
The result was: promoted by Cwmhiraeth (talk) 07:10, 2 January 2017 (UTC)
DYK toolbox |
---|
Shooting of Benjamin Marconi
[edit]- ... that the suspect in the shooting death of Detective Benjamin Marconi got married the following morning and was arrested later that day?
- ALT1:...
that a Texas County Judge apologised for commenting "Time for a tree and a rope..." on Facebook below a mug shot of the black suspect in the shooting death of white police officer Benjamin Marconi? - ALT2:...
that a Texas County Judge apologised for implying on Facebook that the black suspect in the shooting death of white police officer Benjamin Marconi should be lynched?
- ALT1:...
- Reviewed: Template:Did you know nominations/The Global Dilemma: Guns or Butter
- Comment: Article was created at 21:57, 20 November 2016 (UTC) by Chief Red Eagle, and the three authors I named have added most of the text (what I added was mostly reverted). Article as kept at an AfD, which delayed my starting this nomination. @Chief Red Eagle, Parsley Man, and E.M.Gregory: As the three authors who I have named, do you have any comments on this nomination?
Source for ALT0 is an article in Independent Journal Review, titled "Suspect in San Antonio 'Cop Killing' Got Married Hours After the Shooting...And It Could Change the Trial." Both the text and the time line in the report supports the hook fact.
Sources for ALT1 and ALT2 are, firstly, this Huffington Post article titled "Texas Judge Suggests Lynching Black Suspect, Denies It's About Race." Relevant text includes: A Texas judge is under fire over a comment he posted to Facebook suggesting that a black man suspected of killing a local police officer should be lynched. “Time for a tree and a rope,” he posted on Monday to the San Antonio Police Department’s Facebook page ... The article he posted contained news of an arrest made in Sunday’s shooting death of San Antonio Police Detective Benjamin Marconi. Otis Tyrone McKane, who is black, was arrested on suspicion of murdering Marconi one day after the detective, who was white, was fatally shot inside his patrol car. The article also reproduces the Facebook post made by the police, which contained the mug shot. The New York Post article titled "Judge apologizes for suggesting ‘cop killer’ be lynched" confirms Oakley saying: "It is for that reason that I deleted it soon after posting and apologize for not being more thoughtful and comprehensive in my expression."
The judge is James Oakley (judge) but I have not include a wikilink out of concern for the overly negative aspect of covering BLPs, though this could be changed if it is thought desirable. I prefer ALT1 or ALT2 over ALT0, but have included all as I recognise that ALT1 and ALT2 might not be found acceptable for the main page. The Oakley article is also new and I would fold it in here if that was found acceptable, otherwise I will make a separate nomination for it.
Created by Chief Red Eagle (talk), Parsley Man (talk), and E.M.Gregory (talk). Nominated by EdChem (talk) at 04:43, 28 November 2016 (UTC).
Discussion resolved, collapsing for readability for reviewer EdChem (talk) 12:51, 2 December 2016 (UTC) |
---|
The following discussion has been closed. Please do not modify it. |
|
- Following discussion with E.M.Gregory, article on James Oakley has been move to James Oakley (politician). I have struck ALT1 and ALT2 based on E.M.G.'s objections, ALT3 on mine, and collapsed the above discussion as resolved. @E.M.Gregory: Please object / undo if you have a problem with this action. EdChem (talk) 12:51, 2 December 2016 (UTC)
- ALT0 is still an option, with no mention of or reference to Oakley. As alternatives, there are wordings which refer to Oakley, but not link to his article (out of concerns about unduly negative formulations), such as ALT4 from E.M.G. which I reproduce from the collapse box as ALT4a. The "a" ALTs are based on E.M.G.'s formulation describing Oakley as a "politician", which he is but not explicitly described as such in the article. The "b" ALTs use the sourced description of the County Judge position as "chief legislator and executive":
- (ALT0): ... that the suspect in the shooting death of Detective Benjamin Marconi got married the following morning and was arrested later that day?
- (ALT1a):... that a Texas politician apologised for posting "Time for a tree and a rope..." on Facebook below a mug shot of the black suspect in the shooting death of white police officer Benjamin Marconi?
- (ALT1b): ... that the "chief legislator and executive" of Burnet County, Texas apologised for posting "Time for a tree and a rope..." on Facebook below a mug shot of the black suspect in the shooting death of white police officer Benjamin Marconi?
- (ALT4a): ... that a Texas politician apologised for implying on Facebook that the black suspect in the shooting death of white police officer Benjamin Marconi should be lynched?
- (ALT4b): ... that the "chief legislator and executive" of Burnet County, Texas apologised for implying on Facebook that the black suspect in the shooting death of white police officer Benjamin Marconi should be lynched?
- The other approach is to include a link to Oakley's article as a second bolded article, (which I recognise as the most likely to be judged to be unduly negative), which are included as "c" ALTs. Since the second bolded link does not count to the 200 characters, I think these are acceptable on length grounds. If these are not accepted, Oakley's article will be subject to a separate DYK nomination:
(ALT1c): ... that the "chief legislator and executive" of Burnet County, Texas, James Oakley, apologised for posting "Time for a tree and a rope..." on Facebook below a mug shot of the black suspect in the shooting death of white Detective Benjamin Marconi?(ALT4c): ... that the "chief legislator and executive" of Burnet County, Texas, James Oakley, apologised for implying on Facebook that the black suspect in the shooting death of white Detective Benjamin Marconi should be lynched?
-
- Why, exactly, is this James Oakley fellow identified by a job description in scare quotes? Why don't we identify him by his title, County Judge? If we had a DYK for Michael Higgins, we would presumably say "that Michael Higgins, the President of Ireland did such and such" not "that Michael Higgins, who takes precedent over all other persons in Ireland did such and such" even though the latter is how the office of President is described [1] in Irish law. LavaBaron (talk) 08:39, 3 December 2016 (UTC)
- They are not "scare quotes", they are direct quotations of this source on the role of County Judge. And, E.M.Gregory objected to the use of the title as Oakley's role is essentially an executive / administration role rather than judicial. EdChem (talk) 08:47, 3 December 2016 (UTC)
- Addendum: The quotation marks could be removed without worrying me, and I originally favoured simply describing Oakley as County judge, and I have been expanding an article on that title / term, so the term could even be returned as a bold link... though E.M.Gregory would likely have objections. Anyway, it's up to the reviewer. EdChem (talk) 10:32, 3 December 2016 (UTC)
- Why aren't we just saying "local official" or "county official" or something? It seems unusual to identify someone by their job description. LavaBaron (talk) 21:18, 3 December 2016 (UTC)
- My objection is to identifying him as a "judge," because it is seriously misleading even though his formal title is "county Judge." (click "show" to see my reasons in tan colored bar, above) old discussion above I'm good with "local official" or "county official" "county administrator" or "politician," which I proposed a while back. E.M.Gregory (talk) 12:54, 5 December 2016 (UTC)
- I endorse E.M.Gregory's objection to using the term "judge" and I also reaffirm my objection to using the term "chief legislator and executive" as it has an unnecessary Judge Dredd quality to it. "Bulletproof" LavaBaron (Survivor of 4 DYK TBAN Attempts) (talk) 08:57, 6 December 2016 (UTC)
- My objection is to identifying him as a "judge," because it is seriously misleading even though his formal title is "county Judge." (click "show" to see my reasons in tan colored bar, above) old discussion above I'm good with "local official" or "county official" "county administrator" or "politician," which I proposed a while back. E.M.Gregory (talk) 12:54, 5 December 2016 (UTC)
- Why aren't we just saying "local official" or "county official" or something? It seems unusual to identify someone by their job description. LavaBaron (talk) 21:18, 3 December 2016 (UTC)
- Why, exactly, is this James Oakley fellow identified by a job description in scare quotes? Why don't we identify him by his title, County Judge? If we had a DYK for Michael Higgins, we would presumably say "that Michael Higgins, the President of Ireland did such and such" not "that Michael Higgins, who takes precedent over all other persons in Ireland did such and such" even though the latter is how the office of President is described [1] in Irish law. LavaBaron (talk) 08:39, 3 December 2016 (UTC)
- Full review needed. BlueMoonset (talk) 17:13, 19 December 2016 (UTC)
- Article was 6 hours past the limit for nomination, but that can be ignored. It is large enough. There are sufficient references, and it is neutrally written from my point of view. (Though the extreme point of view that police should be shot is not represented here). Copyvio check finds no problem. Correct person credited. QPQ done. There are so many alternative hooks, mostly dismissed, that I will stick with (alt0) saying that it is in the article, and is short enough. It has a reference that is confirmed. And I am ruling out ALT1c and ALT4c as there are too many links before the article link. If you make this a double DYK nom then it could be OK, but needs separate assessment. All those hooks about a retracted facebook post are making James Oakley (politician) sound like the focus. So with a bit of leniency it is good to go only with (alt0) (not original hook which is confusing). Graeme Bartlett (talk) 11:50, 31 December 2016 (UTC)