Eric Swalwell in 2023: Don’t Take His Word He Did Nothing Wrong With...
The Rig Picture: Nancy Pelosi Warns That Trump Is Planning to Hack Our...
Hacked? UK Home Office Promises Grooming Gangs Inquiry, No More Policing of Social...
Celebs Sign Open Letter Demanding ICE Detention Facility Holding Children Be Shut Down
David French Says Trump Is the Worst Free-Speech President of His Lifetime
The TDS Crowd and Lib Media Do NOT Like Trump and Hegseth's Response...
LGBTQ Crowd Lobbies Worcester City Council to Become a 'Sanctuary City for the...
New Law Forces Boise Mayor to Take Down Pride Flag From City Hall
Rubio Tuesday
Voters Don't Love Republicans — But They're Terrified of Democrats
NBC News: ICE Will Be Stationed Outside Graduation Events for New Marines
Judge Blocks Construction of White House Ballroom Unless Congress Authorizes It
Disappointed Gov. Gavin Newsom Says Conversion Therapy Is Discredited Junk Science
Mehdi Hasan: 'Nothing Justifies October 7 but October 7 Justifies Everything'
The Cult Strikes Back: Chicago Bulls Waive Jaden Ivey for Calling Out Forced...

Man fired after stranger posts photo of him making white power sign with his hand (or cracking his knuckles)

NBC 7 in San Diego is reporting that a San Diego Gas and Electric employee was fired after a stranger posted to Twitter a photo of the man making the white power symbol with his hand while in a company truck. Emmanuel Cafferty says he was just cracking his knuckles, but he was suspended and a few days later, fired.

Advertisement

This story is amazing and frightening:

It all started about two weeks ago near a Black Lives Matter rally in Poway when Emmanuel Cafferty, a San Diego Gas and Electric employee, encountered a stranger on the roadway.

The stranger followed Cafferty and took a picture of him as his arm hung out the window of his company truck.

The picture made the rounds on Twitter accompanied by a claim Cafferty was making a “white power” hand gesture made popular by white supremacists groups.

NBC 7 spoke to the man who originally posted the picture on Twitter. He has since deleted his account and said he may have gotten “spun up” about the interaction and misinterpreted it. He says he never intended for Cafferty to lose his job.

Ah, well, if he never intended to cost the man his job by posting a photo on Twitter then everything’s OK.

Advertisement

Advertisement

We’d love to say that the company performed an investigation and gave the man his job back, but apparently not: “We conducted a good faith and thorough investigation that included gathering relevant information and multiple interviews, and took appropriate action.”


Related:

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Twitchy Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement