Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Uber Eats deliverer charged in customer shooting

- By Lindsey Bever

The Washington Post

An Uber Eats driver has been charged with murder in the shooting death of a customer Saturday in Atlanta.

Authoritie­s said Robert Bivines, 36, opened fire on 30-year-old Ryan Thornton late Saturday night in the city’s Buckhead neighborho­od. Witnesses told police that after Mr. Bivines delivered the customer’s meal, he fired multiple shots, hitting Mr. Thornton, and then fled from the scene.

Mr. Bivines turned himself in Monday and was booked into the Fulton County Jail on a murder charge, his attorney, Jackie Patterson, said.

Mr. Patterson said there was an argument before the shooting and that his client had tried to protect himself. “There’s no question that my client was defending himself,” he told The Washington Post on Monday, saying that the customer had become aggressive — reaching into his coat pocket and charging at the driver.

“It was clear self-defense.” the attorney said.

Officers responded to the scene about 11:30 p.m. Saturday as the victim was being rushed to a nearby hospital in critical condition. Police said Mr. Thornton suffered multiple gunshot wounds and later died of his injuries.

Witnesses told police that the victim had used Uber’s food delivery service to order a meal. They said that when the delivery arrived, Mr. Thornton met the driver and received his order; then, as Mr. Thornton walked away, “words may have been exchanged” between the two men, police said in a statement.

Police said shots were fired from the delivery vehicle, striking Mr. Thornton.

Mr. Patterson said that Mr. Bivines told him that Mr. Thornton was agitated by the time Mr. Bivines arrived because the driver had issues finding the location. Mr. Patterson said that when Mr. Bivines gave Mr. Thornton his food order, Mr. Thornton “jerked it” away and cursed at the driver. Mr. Thornton then reached into his jacket pocket and shouted “I’m going to fyou up,” according to Mr. Bivines’s attorney.

Mr. Patterson said Mr. Bivines thought the customer had a gun and that he tried to defend himself.

An unidentifi­ed man who said he was Mr. Thornton’s uncle told NBC affiliate WXIA that his nephew had recently received a political science degree from Morehouse College in Atlanta and had started a new job. “Ryan was a good boy,” he told the station.

An Uber spokesman said that the company is cooperatin­g with investigat­ors in the shooting.

Uber launched Uber Eats, several years ago as a food delivery app in which drivers pick up meals from local restaurant­s and deliver them to customers.

According to Uber, drivers are required to undergo a screening process, which checks driving histories and criminal histories, including the national sex offender registry. In addition, Uber bars both drivers and riders from carrying firearms in the vehicles, “to the extent permitted by applicable law,” according to the company’s firearm policy.

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