Negroid Found Guilty of Killing White Man During Trucking Company Shooting

Vernest Griffin.

Hiring blacks is never a good idea.

One, they’re black. Two, they’re not white. And three, they tend to chimp out after getting fired.

And by “chimp out,” I mean “go on killing sprees.”

Fox 2 Detroit:

A jury has found a Sterling Heights man guilty of first-degree premeditated murder for shooting and killing a man in Taylor on a crime spree last year.

Vernest Griffin was charged with first degree murder in the fatal shooting of 60-year-old Keith Kitchen at a trucking company in Taylor in 2018. He’s also accused of stealing a semi-truck and driving to another business in Pontiac, where he allegedly killed another man, 58-year-old Eriberto Perez.

Police say Griffin also went to a third business in Waterford about 20 minutes later. He was seen leaving Assured Trucking, where officials say he asked for someone by name and left. After that, he got back in the semi truck. A few minutes later, he stopped the truck and shot at Waterford Police officers, and then got back in the truck and continued to drive away. A few minutes after that, he got in an accident at Frembes and Dixie.

Griffin was arrested after a shootout with Waterford police officers. Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard says it was “clearly, a planned killing spree.” Authorities recovered an AK-47 from the vehicle, as well as “multiple, multiple” rounds of magazines, Bouchard said.

He is facing charges in two counties — Wayne and Oakland. A jury reached a decision in his murder trial on Friday in the Wayne County shooting at the trucking company in Taylor.

Taylor Police say the suspect was a former employee of BSD Trucking. Police say the suspect returned to the business once since being let go for a payroll dispute, and threatened the same employee with a gun. Taylor Police responded to that incident in November of 2017 and arrested the suspect, Vernest James Griffin. Griffin received multiple charges, including assault and weapons charges, and was out on bond.

Keith Kitchen.