I don't think that UK tabloids count as "news". And since when did we start taking the main steam media as gospel?
Last I knew they were all out to create clickbait, the more outrageous the better. That's partially why we're in such a stupid mess as we are.
To be honest I don't know the situation at hand (to reiterate, that article was biased shit) so I can't really say much more than I have.
This is an outlier and shouldn't be held up to justify other recent actions.
It's just something that's had me on edge because the protests as a result from this shooting are in the relative vicinity to me and very close to where many of my relatives live. I'd rather keep these cop/race-based protests away from here since I see what they can do to a city.
Just to add an extra point why things were tense about this last night :
"Columbus Police Shoot And Kill Black, Teenage Girl" from NPR - no mention of knife until 8 paragraphs in.
"Ohio police fatally shoot Black teenage girl just before Chauvin verdict" from WaPo, no knife til second paragraph.
"This never should have happened’: Mother of 16-year-old killed in police shooting wants answers" local CBS news from an 'Emmy award winning reporter'. Knife appeared once in the article and it's a lot about police brutality and racial injustice.
Non-tabloid shit media was framing this as another unjust killing for 90% of people who don't read the articles. If Chauvin wasn't convicted, articles like that could have sparked burning and looting in Ohio.
There were various news articles with headlines quoting things like "she was gunned down like a dog in the street" and describing her as a teenage honor roll student. There were protests in multiple areas in Columbus after the killing and a lot of absurd tweets from BLM people talking about how the cops didn't need to intervene - it was just teenagers fighting - or "she only had a knife and he had a gun" sort of retardedness. Oddly there were no articles interviewing the girl in pink's family about how relieved they are that the officer saved their life, only interviews with the deceased's family.