Tim Hort
Daily Stormer
November 16, 2017
Working as a delivery driver in a Black area is probably one of the most dangerous jobs in America.
Maybe they should form a union and demand hazard pay.
Two 14-year-old girls accused of attacking a pizza delivery driver in Ypsilanti Township face a possibility of life in prison, officials said.
The father of four children said he was attacked by two girls with collapsible police batons and robbed.
“I’ve got four kids and a wife to take care of,” Kenneth Stoops Jr. said. “I’m, like, ‘I’m dead.'”
Stoops said he was working on his night off because someone called in sick. He was delivering his last pizza of the night around midnight Sunday when he was beaten, robbed and carjacked, police said.
The alleged thieves are two high school freshmen, who are accused of leading police on a high-speed chase.
“First hit here, I went to the ground,” Stoops said. “Her partner came out of the bushes and hit me on this side, right here. They said, ‘Lay on the ground and do not say anything.’ They took the food, my money, and off they went.”
Stoops said he knew something wasn’t right when the address for his last delivery from Happy’s Pizza turned out bad. He tried the call-back number, and a woman told him she was sitting on a nearby porch on Davis Street. He said he found her.
Once he was on the ground, Stoops said, the girls left his flashlight, phone and GPS because they could be tracked, and took $80 and his mountaineer SUV.
“They took out my driver’s license,” Stoops said. “They took a picture of it, and they said, ‘If you call the police or if we get arrested, we will take care of your family.'”
Azjane Marielle Cummings and Deazijah Nicole McCoy-Yargee, both from Ypsilanti, were arraigned Wednesday. They’re charged with carjacking, armed robbery and resisting arrest.
Police said Cummings was already on probation for an altercation with her mother and for cutting the tether off her ankle to participate in this robbery.
Prosecutors said the teens led the Washtenaw County Sheriff’s Office on a wild chase that reached speeds greater than 90 mph around the neighborhood before police used stop sticks to end it.