Talk:1984 New York City Subway shooting/Archive 4

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Archive 1 Archive 2 Archive 3 Archive 4

NPOV Issues

A lot of the NPOV issues are discussed above or explicitly identified in the article, but I think it's worth creating a new talk-page section to discuss them. My two chief concerns with the article are:

  1. A variety of synth issues that, collectively, have a single POV (for example, the treatment of the panhandling explanation, including the comment that it was "discredited", even though, in the same paragraph, it's admitted that there was a dispute over whether the supposedly discrediting evidence actually discredited that story).
  2. An over-emphasis on explaining the timing of the shots. I think this over-emphasis wrongly makes the controversy over the shootings appear to be solely based on the timing of the shots, which, while certainly a component of contemporary dispute, is really secondary to the overall question of whether Goetz's racist motivations contributed to or even ultimately resulted in the shooting.
  3. An under-emphasis on that overall question, despite it being the enduring controversy.

I've tried to address a few NPOV issues already, as detailed above, and I'm confident we can all make progress towards a more neutral article.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:40, 16 February 2023 (UTC)

No disagreement on anything except that "there is an over-emphasis on the timing of shots." The sequence and timing of shots is fundamental to how Cabey was shot, a key issue in the article. 209.150.58.4 (talk) 13:53, 17 February 2023 (UTC)
I've modified that point slightly. I also think generally this is something that could be stated in a paragraph rather than in several subsections—it sounds, at least, like it is relatively clear what happened, at least some of the theories presented are also presented as inconsistent with the facts and discredited, so why is each theory presented in the section covering what happened? Shouldn't that go in a media section?--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:16, 17 February 2023 (UTC)
There's too much information for one paragraph. If you look at all the sources its not clear to many what happened although it might be clear to you. There are/were 2 major hotly contested issues in the 1984 subway shooting: (1) Whether or not an attempted robbery was taking place. (2) Exactly what happened during the shooting, which the sequence and timing of shots sections address. Whether Cabey was shot on the 4th shot, 5th shot, or shot twice is crucial to this article. 209.150.58.4 (talk) 17:45, 17 February 2023 (UTC)
That first issue is, comparatively, given very little attention, although I'd also suggest that a third controversy (and the enduring one) was the reasonableness of using deadly force—that's the one still written about when the case gets brought up today. And again, there are subsections that describe theories that the subsections themselves discredit—clearly, for example, Cabey wasn't hit by two shots. Also—the only really pertinent issue with your second point of contention is whether Goetz paused before shooting Cabey—Goetz originally said he did, but the vast majority of trial witnesses said they hadn't heard a pause in the shooting. Otherwise, it's of little significance whether Cabey was shot by the fourth or fifth bullet. I can't work on WP anymore today, but next week I'll try to draft a compromise condensed version. --Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 17:51, 17 February 2023 (UTC)
If you think the reasonableness of using deadly force in the first place is inadequately covered, just add more.
Minor detail - nobody suggested Wachtler & bribery.
Its a huge issue if Cabey was shot on the 4th or 5th shots or even shot twice, this was fiercely debated at the criminal trial and in the media, and thats why its in the article.
There are very many sources discussing the reasonableness of using deadly force based solely on Cabey being shot twice. Thats what the "reasonable man" ruling is primarily about, not so much about the reasonableness of shooting in the first place, but the reasonableness of the last shot: shooting Cabey once or twice with the words "You don't look so bad, here's another." Try googling: "Goetz you don't look so bad". Most media sources will say Cabey was shot twice, and for more than a year after the shooting probably the only source that said Cabey was shot once is:
https://www.upi.com/Archives/1985/02/28/Goetz-to-victim-You-dont-look-so-bad-Heres-another/6427478414800/
If you think its relatively clear what happened, which shooting version do you think happened? Should the other shooting versions be deleted? Remember many readers come to this article believing Cabey was shot twice.
A primary goal of this article is to report and clarify what happened, something sorely wanting in the MSM. 209.150.58.4 (talk) 22:48, 17 February 2023 (UTC)
I think a potentially recurring issue with a few of the edit disputes here is that they run amok of WP:SYNTH. It doesn't matter what I think happened, and I'd even hesitate to say something like "A primary goal of this article is to report and clarify what happened." The primary goal of any Wikipedia article is to reflect what reliable sources say about an issue. If, for example, it's known via modern reliable sources that Cabey was shot only once, then the "theory" that Cabey was shot twice shouldn't be presented as a potential fact—instead, even if dated reliable sources reported as such; if anything, it can be presented as a fact the media initially reported, but that's it. Relatedly, for example, the analysis that the medical evidence contradicted one witness's claim that Goetz was shot in the stomach is an example of a WP:SYNTH issue: the source cited did not explicitly say that the medical evidence contradicted the witness's testimony; clearly, an editor has tried to "put two and two together" and conclude that there was a contradiction—that's original research.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:11, 21 February 2023 (UTC)
"Clearly original research" - please see ref "Subway Gunman" pages 306 & 307. What else makes you dispute the neutrality of this article? 209.150.58.4 (talk) 17:50, 22 February 2023 (UTC)
If there are other sources that support a claim, then those need to be cited with the claim. As I stated, the source cited (which I believe was a court opinion? can go back in the history and check) did not support the "contradiction" claim. A WP:Synth issue emerges when you take different information from two different sources and combine them to make a conclusion.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 17:52, 22 February 2023 (UTC)
The source "Subway Gunman" is only one source and it states on pages 306 & 307 that the medical evidence contradicted the witness's testimony (both Goetz and Boucher). Suggest you read it, or at least those 2 pages ... it's probably the biggest source in the article, referred to most frequently. The links in this article were made into a mess several years ago when the article was switched from "Bernhard Goetz" to "1984 Subway Shooting". Not my doing. 209.150.58.4 (talk) 18:07, 22 February 2023 (UTC)

This was the statement as it appeared in the article:

At trial, one witness testified that Goetz approached to within "two to three feet" of a seated Cabey, then demonstrated how Goetz stood directly in front of Cabey and fired downward shooting Cabey in the stomach, a description that matched Goetz's published statements,1,2 but contradicted medical evidence that Cabey was shot once in the left side.3

Only the third reference was offered in support of the contradiction claim, and that third reference was a link to the appellate court opinion, which obviously did not support the contradiction claim. That said, now that you mention that the book is the principle source in the article ... I have some more concerns. I'm not sure a book by a juror in the trial should be what's principally relied on. Is there any other source that says that Goetz couldn't have shot from above (or at his stomach) because the bullet went through Cabey's left side? I cannot currently find anything.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 18:10, 22 February 2023 (UTC)

Is another source needed? The book "Subway Gunman" is probably the best source because the book is mostly just a rehash of detailed criminal trial testimony taken directly from the court transcript.

I'll correct the link in the article and then revert the original statement. Your edits had some improvements but in balance significantly degrade the article. You've deleted Goetz's description of the shooting from his website .... its a significant source with the most detailed description of the shooting. The only detailed description of the shooting you left is "Time Magazine's theory (April 8, 1985)" which is discredited but should probably still be in the article as an example bad media reporting. The "Sequence and Timing of Shots: section should be restored. The article is titled "1984 Subway Shooting". It should be primarily about the shooting, with the details to describe the shooting, and not about societies reaction, legal aftermath, and songs about the incident. Reconsider your edits that delete details of the shooting since they greatly reduce the informative nature of this article. Is that what you want? 209.150.58.4 (talk) 18:39, 22 February 2023 (UTC)
  1. You're mistaken, Goetz's description is still there—but we do need to properly contextualize that the account was written decades after the fact in the context of his run for political office.
  2. Also I strongly disagree about the balance of the article. Perhaps we can go to a 3rd party for resolution of that issue.
  3. My biggest concern—as noted above—is that the prior version of the article directed readers towards a conclusion and contained original research. Those issues have been reduced, but not eliminated. I also think there's still some (though fewer) issues of undue weight in the article; I'm surprised that I just inserted the first source on the controversy of whether Goetz had shot two of the men in the back (since the medical examiner said the bullets had travelled from their backs to their fronts).
  4. I'm not sure what you mean by correcting the link–unless you mean the book should have been cited instead of the court opinion. As I asked above, is there any source besides for a book by one of the jurors that includes that "contradicted" statement?
  5. I also think you've maybe misnoticed how much content I've actually removed. Where there were previously discussions of trial testimony that were in the section on the shooting, I've moved those to the criminal trial section—they're all still there. (In certain cases, I removed duplicate information.) --Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 18:45, 22 February 2023 (UTC)

I'm happy to go to WP:3O, if you'd like, but I think we should try to narrow down what the exact disputes are.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 18:56, 22 February 2023 (UTC)

  1. 1. Where is Goetz's description from his website? You left it in previously but it looks like you just deleted it today. Maybe you deleted it mistakenly.
    3. Your concern about original research is unwarranted. The medical examiner saying the bullets had travelled from their backs to their fronts is misleading at best and is contradicted by other testimony in the same sources.
    4. The references cited on that statement are the books "Subway Gunman" and "Crime of Self-Defense". A court opinion was not cited for the statement. If you want add a court opinion as a ref on this statement, if there even is a court opinion on this detail. This paragraph is incorrect chronologically and confusing. I'll rewrite the order of this paragraph a little later and update the link. Again, read pages 306 & 307 of the source if you can.
    5. In the criminal trial section you provide Charles Hirsch's testimony from one newspaper source stating that the bullets that hit Allen and Cabey had traveled from back to front, but omit later testimony that this description is factually incorrect. 209.150.58.4 (talk) 19:50, 22 February 2023 (UTC)

Answering your points:

  1. In the Aftermath section—the full blockquote is there.
  2. As to the medical examiner, that's what the medical examiner testified. It's fine to present additional sources, but it's not our job to personally evaluate them and decide which ones are the truth.
  3. I'm having some trouble discussing this with you because you seem to be denying some basic things: Here is a prior version of the article that had the sentence we're disputing. The portion of the sentence that notes the contradiction is following by footnote 31. Footnote 31 is the court opinion.
  4. The source that I cited said that Hirsch's testimony came on the last day of testimony. I'm not sure how there could be "later testimony," but I'm certainly happy to have more testimony included! You'll note I also added the defense's witness and his semi-circle claim, which would go against Hirsch's theory.

I get that this is an ongoing process, so I'm not frustrated by the time (and obviously I still have some major edits to do myself, which I'll get to another day), but I do think remembering our function is key. --Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 20:00, 22 February 2023 (UTC)

1. Aplologies, my mistake. I didn't notice it because I generally disregard this section.
2. Yes, and other sources state Hirsch's statement is factually incorrect and misleading. Not just defense expert medical criminal trial testimony, but ALSO footnote 31 (People v Goetz) long before the criminal trial: "The bullet entered the rear of Cabey's side and severed his spinal cord." Roughly the same situation with Allen but I don't have the source handy: Both Allen and Cabey were sideways to Goetz the instant they were shot, so its rather misleading to state they were shot in the back.
4. Ok, I should have said earlier or other trial testimony instead of later trial testimony, and also perhaps use the footnote 31 reference.

It looks like we disagree on very little.

Suggest the Time Magazine's theory (April 8, 1985) be deleted. It serves no purpose, you decide if it should be deleted.

Also suggest removal of "The key question for the jurors was how to separate the vague perception of intimidation from the more specific threat of robbery, or from the "threat of deadly physical force," which Justice Crane told the jurors were the two grounds that would justify Mr. Goetz's use of his weapon. — Kirk Johnson, New York Times[50]". Its just an opinion by a newspaper writer that matches your opinion. The key question for the jury, according to the jury, was how Cabey was shot. You decide if it should be deleted.

Thats about it. 209.150.58.4 (talk) 20:29, 22 February 2023 (UTC)

Section Break

  1. No worries!
  2. As you said above, the court opinion from People v. Goetz was pretrial and thus only a preliminary statement of facts—it's not the court actually deciding a factual issue. That said, again—I'm happy to have other sources on the issue!
  3. I think I agree with you on the Time Magazine section—I don't think it's quite notable enough on its own to warrant its own section.
  4. As to the juror question—I'm not sure I agree that the Johnson quote is an opinion: It's saying what Judge Crane told the jury—that there were two bases on which deadly force could be justified, and the question for the jury was whether either of those two bases existed. If the only question was whether the shooting of Cabey was justified, then only the assault of Cabey would have been charged. Cabey being shot had nothing to do with Allen being shot, and yet the jury had to determine whether Goetz's shooting of Allen was justified, so I'm not sure how you can say the key question was only how Cabey was shot. (Perhaps we could, with the right source, say the jury subsequently reported that the hardest issue for them was Cabey?)

Glad we could clear a lot of this up. --Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 13:20, 23 February 2023 (UTC)

Cabey v Goetz section: I talked to a Bronx civil court reporter today and in a few weeks probably can get Goetz's Bronx testimony about how he shot Canty, Allen, Cabey, and Ramseur, along with the racial stuff.
Assuming its available, should I forward it to you? You could then easily expand the Cabey v Goetz section to your satisfaction. 209.150.58.4 (talk) 01:48, 25 February 2023 (UTC)
If you'd like! I obviously don't own the article, so you should of course feel free to edit it. I also think the civil court case can just be expanded a bit based on the amount of media attention the civil trial and its result got—of course, I'm basing that on cursory looks at Google, so I could be wrong.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:36, 25 February 2023 (UTC)
Got an email from the Bronx court reporter today (Mar 6): "I had to order my notes from that day. They are stored in Rochester. I will keep you updated." So it should be available and I'll forward it to you. It's fortunate this is being looked into now. There were 4 court reporters who covered the civil trial 26 years ago and 3 of them are no longer available. In a few years the trial transcript probably would be unavailable. 50.122.123.163 (talk) 16:32, 6 March 2023 (UTC)

Update: I think the article has come a long way, and, for now, I'm taking a break from making major changes. I've added some more info, many more sources, and standardized the citation templates since we last spoke. I also rearranged a few aspects of the article, which I think have made the section much more balanced. I've nominated the article as a Good Article. I have a few lingering concerns (one: at some point we should probably include more on the teenagers), and it's also certainly possible there's issues I've either introduced or failed to spot—I'm not the most experienced Wikipedia editor, obviously. Frankly, feedback from a third party should be helpful regardless of the result of the nomination.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:42, 7 March 2023 (UTC)

The information in the article is essentially correct but a number of references are still mixed up from when the article name was changed several years ago. 2603:7000:4EF0:9B0:4485:2D41:C3CD:F4AA (talk) 02:56, 10 March 2023 (UTC)
I'm not sure what you mean—changing an article name shouldn't alter references. By the way, as to the "signals" quotation, I have two concerns: [1] it's not supported by the reference it's next to—if you want it in there at all, it needs a reference supporting it, full stop. [2] I have a few NPOV concerns with including it in the "incident" section—if we include that, then should we also include the teens denying that they signaled each other? Probably better to include that in the trial section as a contested point. But, either way, it needs to be properly sourced--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:41, 10 March 2023 (UTC)

Incident section

As to the incident section, I decided that the section functions best if it—to the greatest degree possible—only includes undisputed information. As such, I deleted the "here's another" sentence (which is discussed elsewhere in the article) and added that Canty said he asked for, rather than demanded, $5. If you'd like the "signals" line to be included, that should go in the appropriate section—either Goetz's statement to law enforcement or the trial section, since that's disputed. However, again, in the article, that sentence has to be backed up with a source supporting it.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 15:56, 13 March 2023 (UTC)

GA Review

The following discussion is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.


This review is transcluded from Talk:1984 New York City Subway shooting/GA1. The edit link for this section can be used to add comments to the review.

Reviewer: Freedom4U (talk · contribs) 17:51, 23 March 2023 (UTC)

I will be doing this review over the next few days. :3 F4U (they/it) 17:53, 23 March 2023 (UTC)

GA review (see here for what the criteria are, and here for what they are not)

  1. It is reasonably well written.
    a. (prose, spelling, and grammar):
    b. (MoS for lead, layout, word choice, fiction, and lists):
  2. It is factually accurate and verifiable.
    a. (reference section):
    One instance needs a page number.
    b. (citations to reliable sources):
    New York Post and Malcolm Gladwell book needs to be swapped out.
    c. (OR):
    See commments below
    d. (copyvio and plagiarism):
    No signs of copyright infringement/plagiarism found during my spot check and earwig doesn't turn up anything of note, except that this article relies way too heavily on quotations. All of which need to be paraphrased/cut dramatically down.
  3. It is broad in its coverage.
    a. (major aspects):
    A few bits and bobs need to be incorporated, but generally it fits this requirement.
    b. (focused):
    A few minor details are included that don't really seem to have any importance to the topic at hand.
  4. It follows the neutral point of view policy.
    Fair representation without bias:
    So far appears to be the case.
  5. It is stable.
    No edit wars, etc.:
    Will take a look later.
  6. It is illustrated by images and other media, where possible and appropriate.
    a. (images are tagged and non-free content have non-free use rationales):
    No media, no media found with a readily acceptable license.
    b. (appropriate use with suitable captions):
    Not applicable
  7. Overall:
    Pass/fail:

(Criteria marked are unassessed)

General comments/First round

  • I haven't gotten through most of the article yet, but I do want to write down some of the things I noticed on first glance.
  • You've got some massive unnecessary quotes in the article that at the moment go against WP:OVERQUOTING (Overuse happens when: a quotation is used without pertinence: it is presented visually on the page but its relevance is not explained anywhere; quotations are used to explain a point that can be paraphrased; the quotations dominate the article or section., all three of which are present here) In particular, the long quote in Subsequent developments comes from a primary source (his campaign website) and its relevance isn't demonstrated. I think all of the information that is currently presented through the quotes can easily be paraphrased into the article without quotes.
  • If you decide to keep the quotes, but shorten them (I'd advise against it), do remove the ellipses with spaces in between the dots ( . . . ) for ....
  • The Part of mass shootings in the United States and the article being in the mass shooting categories doesn't make sense to me. Mass shootings are generally indiscriminate killings, which isn't what happened here.
  • "Civil rights" is linked twice.
  • There are two [citation needed] tags that need to be addressed. The New York Post is also a depreciated source per Wikipedia:RSPS so a different citation needs to be found for that sentence.
  • In popular culture also needs in-line citations, for the entries that currently lack any. And I feel like the entry on the Joker is going into a bit too much depth.
  • Maintain consistency on whether or not to capitalize Black/White. I would favor capitalization, as the article uses Hispanic once.

Background

  • By this time, the family had relocated to Orlando, Florida; Goetz joined them and worked at his father's residential development business. Awkwardly phrased. Let me know if you need me to elaborate.
  • Goetz struggled with one of the teens until police arrived, and the alleged attacker claimed that Goetz had, in fact, assaulted him. The first part of the sentence phrases it like fact, while the second half phrases it like an allegation
  • denied for insufficient need Awkwardly phrased. Let me know if you need me to elaborate.
  • There has to be a better way to incorporate this information without the Goetz had previously used racist language: Myra Friedman...

Subsequent developments

  • ...with Rudy Giuliani emphasizing reduction in crime as mayor Not stated in source, looks like WP:OR
  • Barry Allen being arrested is cited to what's essentially a police blotter entry. I don't think its relevant to the article.

General comments/Second round

  • Do audiotaped and videotaped really need to be wikilinked? Also don't wikilink screwdriver.
  • It needs to be made clearer that He bought a 5-shot .38-caliber revolver during a trip to Florida. is the gun he used.
  • Unsure about why Goetz called New York City "lawless" and expressed contempt for its justice system, calling it a "joke", a "sham", and "a disgrace". is included. The source its cited to is dead, but I'm AGF that it does state that.
  • Drew wide support should be elaborated on. This article includes a few pieces of information that could be incorporated. A New York Times survey conducted shortly after the shootings found that 52% of New Yorkers overall — including 56% of whites and 45% of black respondents — believed Goetz’s response was justified.
  • Also there is a lot of good secondary sourcing on this topic. Sections like Goetz replied, "My intention was to murder them, to hurt them, to make them suffer as much as possible." should be cited to the Time magazine article, rather than the original New York Times interview when possible.
  • The lede of the article should explicitly state that the shooting victims survived.
  • I think this article is in desperate need of some sort of picture. Since the Goetz is still alive, at least a picture of the crime scene could be uploaded and added through WP:FAIRUSE.

Incident

  • Allen had previously pleaded guilty to breaking into a video-game machine, and each of the teenagers had been previously arrested or convicted of various charges. doesn't make sense in the incident section. The incident section should really give a play-by-play of what happened, not background information to the event.
  • Troy Canty approached Goetz and made some overture for money: According to Canty, he said, "Can I have $5?" The Britannica article on this event states that The incident began when Canty asked how Goetz was doing. Goetz interpreted the inquiry as a prelude to a mugging. Is there a reason this isn't in the article?

Cabey v. Goetz

  • United States Bankruptcy Court wikilinks to the general concept of the US bankruptcy court.

Goetz's defamation claims

  • The suit was dismissed. Passive/active doesn't mean much for Wikipedia, but in this scenario it would make much more sense to make it active. It wasn't something that just happened, the judge decided it.
  • Amongst other claims, Goetz objected to the book's description of him as a "paranoid" "murderous vigilante" who had "developed a hatred for blacks." Is cited to a primary source and doesn't appear WP:DUE

Subsequent developments

  • Troy Canty acquired a criminal record of petty offenses before entering drug-rehabilitation and vocational-training programs. Article states that criminal record (of fare evasion and "stealing $14 from a video game" (whatever that means)) were before the shooting.
  • In 2017, Greenfield blogged that he had lost touch with Canty. Primary source
  • In 2010, Goetz was interviewed and did a dry fire shooting demonstration on the inaugural episode of The Biography Channel's documentary show Aftermath with William Shatner. is cited to a primary source and the other is IMDB. Sourcing should be improved or the sentence removed.

Spot check

I'm not done reviewing yet, but I'm gonna do a spot-check on the references...of the few things I've picked up there's been several issues regarding sourcing.

13 randomly selected references of 124

6. New York Times article. All good.

9. New York Times article. All good.

23. Failed verification. The source states The judge kept this information from the jury presumably because he thought its risk of undue prejudice substantially outweighed its probative value.

26. Interview with Goetz. All good for uncontroversial material.

27. All good. Mentions Canty being the one to approach.

  • The article also states By Goetz’s own admission, he replied, "Sure, I have dollars for each of you." He then fired five shots in rapid succession.

30. New York Times article. It states assaulted four years ago, rather than mugged. Is there a better source for this? (One that's more recent?)

  • The article should include from the article that it was this call that led him to be wanted by the New York City police for questioning

68. New York Times article. Failed verification. The source calls him a bilious aggressor but no mention of race. This whole section is talking about a particularly important court case. There should be better sourcing out there than news reports that came out as it happened.

87. Opinion article, unclear what is being used for. It appears that its WP:OR trying to back up that support for Goetz wasn't universal, which it never was in the first place. See what I mentioned wrt opinion polling on this case. Support for Goetz, immediately after the shooting, was a pretty slim majority.

91. medical evidence introduced at trial showed that he had been shot only once, in the left side. While the correction issued by The Times does state that he had been shot only once, it makes nothing with regards to anything else in that statement.

93. Can't access as a result of EU GDPR. I'll take a look at 94 instead.

94. All good. Mentions the screwdrivers.

106. This was a 1996 interview. He also answers possibly yes which isn't the same as admitting something.

109. Neither citation 108 or 109 mentions the 194/210 figure. I would also advise against paraphrasing "least crime" into safest.

118. Ooooof Malcolm Gladwell....I'm not gonna check the source since this is a pretty uncontroversial claim, but I'd consider replacing that with a different source. Gladwell's been known for publishing books that oversimplify cases and feature less than accurate results.

Five of the thirteen sources here don't line up with what is said, which is not a very good rate. I'd recommend you go through the article line-by-line and verify any statements that haven't been directly added by you. No signs of copy-vio or too close paraphrasing, outside of the way too many quotes in the article.

Responses

Thanks for all the feedback! And sorry for the delay—I somehow didn't catch that the talk page had been edited. I'm making a few of the changes you suggested now! I'm also happy to report that a few of the points you make seem to resolve some disagreements on the page, so I appreciate you being a tie-breaking vote (including on the overquoting and incident section details).

General comments

I didn't add the mass shootings category, although I'm not sure if mass shooting are inherently indiscriminate (I'd actually lean towards saying that they're not? I'm not sure if this event qualifies as a mass shooting, but I can, off the top of my head, think of a few mass shootings in which the victims were targeted—either on an individual or group level).

As to the quotes, I tend to think that at least two of the three Goetz quotes shouldn't be in the article or should be dramatically reduced—the quotation he gave to Friedman and the quotation from his campaign website. Editors on this page previously disagreed as to the campaign website quotation, with the editor supporting that quotation saying, "[I]t[']s a significant source with the most detailed description of the shooting." As a compromise, that quotation was moved from the incident section to the aftermath section, but I'm certainly okay further reducing or even eliminating it (unless of course you agree that the level of detail inherently makes its detail relevant). I do think the FBI quotation and the Kirk Johnson quotation should remain—the FBI quotation because lines from it became famous after the fact, and the Johnson quotation just because I think it very accurately sums up the key issue at the trial.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:55, 31 March 2023 (UTC)

  • I'm gonna be honest, the whole campaign website quote feels completely unnecessary and the editor's reasoning is unpersuasive. It needs to be cut down or paraphrased in some way. Right now earwig's giving me three alarm bells simply because of the number of quotes on this article. Sure, I support your reasoning for the FBI quote, but it's not the entire quote that's notable. Most of it should be paraphrased down except for a few key portions really. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)

Agree on the picture—I have no familiarity with uploading pictures but I will look into that.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:55, 31 March 2023 (UTC)

  • No need for the GA status itself, but I'll probably upload one tonight. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
Background
  • The "insufficient need" quotation is basically verbatim from the article (free version) Here's the relevant quotation: "Later that year, Goetz applied for a pistol permit. Although he cited the fact that he routinely carried large sums of cash and valuable equipment, his application was rejected on grounds of insufficient need. Goetz was bitter. On a subsequent trip to his family's Florida home, he bought a nickel-plated, lightweight Smith & Wesson .38-cal. revolver." I wasn't the one who added this article or claim to the article, so I'm not too familiar with it, but I'll look for a more detailed source.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:54, 31 March 2023 (UTC)
General comments
  • Hardest issue has been the poll you mentioned. The state of the article before I started working on it, and almost every reliable source I've found since, talked about how Goetz received nearly unanimous early support until the transcript was released—even sources critical of that support. (In fact, before I worked on it, the article strongly seemed to suggest that the second indictment was attributable to the switch in public opinion, but I deleted that since I couldn't find sources confirming it.) But the polls conducted don't really bear that out; even Morgenthau's comment—that he, post transcript release, his office was "still" getting letters "3 to 1" in Goetz's favor—is a little confusing if only 52% of the city supported Goetz prior to that transcript. I'll do more research.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:54, 31 March 2023 (UTC)
    • My idea, which is completely hypothesizing, is that potentially it could be like 52% justified; 20% don't know; 28% unjustified? Obviously we need secondary sourcing on public opinion here, but I don't necessarily think 52% support is necessarily incompatible with the statement of wide support. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
      • So, plenty of sources describe Goetz as having received "wide support" from the public in the early going. But that support was never universal, although certainly a logical connection, I couldn't find any sources directly attributing a split in support to the FBI investigation excerpts being released (that connection was in the article before I began working on it—I'm not totally sure where it came from). Additionally, based on the polls I did find—Goetz's support largely held up, except for among African Americans (to be clear: that's not my synth of the sources—that's directly stated by the UPI source I added). As such, I've removed mention of that connection and toned down the language on the early support Goetz received.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:54, 31 March 2023 (UTC)

Incident section

  • Issues resolved except for the "how you doing?" point. As I'm sure you can tell, each side has a very different version of what happened on the subway train. If I recall, Goetz might have provided the "how are you doing" quotation, but Canty did not (I could have that backwards—I'll check the famous trials website transcripts). In order to keep the incident section as straight as possible, I thought it would be best to only include undisputed facts—with a slight exception for the precise wording Canty used when making some overture for money.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:55, 31 March 2023 (UTC)
    • If only one party claims that, given that its still given attention by secondary sourcing, I think its significant enough to include -- with substantiation. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
      • Happy to add a Britanica cite! Although I'm not seeing it in this article [1]—is there a more specific article I'm missing?--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 15:04, 27 March 2023 (UTC)

Cabey v. Goetz

  • I think that's the correct wiki link? The bankruptcy courts are a separate set of courts in the U.S. system—they're Article I courts rather than Article III courts—and I don't think any particular bankruptcy court is notable enough to have its own article (I could be wrong!)
    • Ohhhhh, I get what you were trying to do there. In that case, bankrupty court should be lowercase. I was reading it as a proper noun because it was capitalized. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)

Goetz's defamation claims

  • Admittedly, legal issues are my expertise, so this is somewhat embarrassing, but I could not find much on this first defamation claim; the reason that the sentence is in passive tense is because I couldn't find the name of the judge who oversaw the case (even the source only says "a judge"). (Also, "the suit was dismissed" is fairly common in legal writing, though I'm not sure if that translates to encyclopedic language.)--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:55, 31 March 2023 (UTC)
    • Alright, that was a minor gripe, and definitely outside GA criteria. Looks good then. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
  • As to the second sentence, given that those claims were the claims that were highlighted in the judicial opinion, I figured it was fair game to highlight them. I'm also not sure if that reference is serving as a primary source—it's a judicial opinion, true, but it's commenting on the Complaint that Goetz filed.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:55, 31 March 2023 (UTC)
    • See comment below for this. And court cases are generally considered primary sources, you would need some sort of secondary source, newspaper or journal article, discussing the case to show significance. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
      • I'd definitely agree that the judicial opinion would be a concern if the sentence it was being cited for was, itself, commenting on the content of the judicial opinion. (I.e. "a court dismissed the suit"[citation to judicial opinion]). But here, the court is commenting on Goetz's complaint. And, unfortunately, there are only a few true secondary sources on the defamation complaint—though each of those quotations mentioned is in the UPI article, which I'll add as a reference at the end of the sentence in question. Therefore, the only portion of the sentence that's being directly supported by the court opinion is the fact that Goetz objected to those statements, which I think meets the requirements for WP:PRIMARY--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:44, 26 March 2023 (UTC)

Subsequent developments

  • Fixed except for the Greenfield source. Does Wikipedia policy indicate primary sources should never be relied on, or simply that secondary sources should be preferred where possible. I can't find any second source reporting on Greenfield's blog.
    • Primary sources can be relied upon for uncontroversial and factual information (date of birth, for example), but the thing with primary sources is that things attributed to them are generally outside of the scope of the article. If secondary sources aren't covering the fact that they lost contact, 99 of 100 times, that means that information is unimportant to the article. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)

Reply

  • I've gone through and replied to some of your notes-- I'll go through the article again sometime tonight or tomorrow. It's looking good though! 👍👍 :3 F4U (they/it) 16:33, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
    • Awesome—I'm taking a break till tomorrow as well. Also—apologies if you meant for me to reply directly under your comments above; taking that approach from here on.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:51, 26 March 2023 (UTC)

Source issues

  • Footnote 23
    • I have to take full credit for the failed verification on 23—I think I added "hearsay" long after I added the sentence and source without double checking—and, looking back, I got Friedman's testimony confused with Amanda Gilbert's.
  • Footnote 68 (now 66)
    • This footnote was only meant to support the sentence it was attached to—I've added a fact tag to the prior sentence.
  • Footnote 106 (now 104)
    • Fixed!
  • Footnotes 108/109 (now 106/107)
    • I suspect the same is true here as per FN 68. While I didn't add those footnotes, I know my practice is to add reference tags at the end of every sentence, such that each reference supports only that sentence. As such, I think the problem here is really missing fact tags, which, fortunately, is fairly easy to handle—I'll go through the article and add fact tags to any sentence that isn't sourced. In this case, I just deleted the sentence, since I don't think it added much to the article.
  • Footnote 87 (now 85)
    • I think footnote 87 (now 85) was meant to show how the release of the FBI transcript (including the "You don't look so bad" quotation) impacted the view of Goetz.

For what it's worth, while I am the one who added the Malcolm Gladwell source, I only did so begrudgingly, and I have the same thoughts as you on Malcolm Gladwell generally. (Also, just to note—it's a WaPo article being cited, not one of his books.)

--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 15:10, 26 March 2023 (UTC)

  • @Jerome Frank Disciple: Also, just to note—it's a WaPo article being cited, not one of his books. 116 cites The Tipping Point? There's two citations to Gladwell in the article FYI. The rest look good. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:36, 26 March 2023 (UTC)
Shoot, I missed that one! I don't have a copy of the Tipping Point or any Gladwell book, so I can't even verify that. That has been replaced.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:38, 26 March 2023 (UTC)

Section break

@Freedom4U: I added the table below so I could better keep track of all the to-do list items—with your comments / my responses I was afraid I might lose track. Two things I think we haven't discussed above:

  • The "struggled with" sentence. I'm not sure I see the issue: It was undisputed that Goetz struggled with a teenager before the police showed up. I was hesitant to claim that the very person Goetz struggled with was an attacker, since it didn't seem to me that the source went that far—according to the Times source (cited the sentence prior), a police spokesperson said Goetz was mugged, but that the case went to mediation and she didn't know the outcome. Not sure what to do with that.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:53, 31 March 2023 (UTC)
  • I've tried editing that section myself. Is there anything that discusses what is disputed and by whom? :3 F4U (they/it) 15:53, 7 April 2023 (UTC)
    Sadly not that I can find. It seems like ( understandably), the incident wasn't reported at the time, so all we have is the statement from the police spokesperson and Goetz's various statements.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 19:32, 10 April 2023 (UTC)
  • The pop-culture section. I've never worked on a section like this, and I'm a bit apprehensive about it. Specifically, I have some notability concerns. Usually, when I see pop-culture sections on Wikipedia, they're just lists of mere references to the subject supported by, if anything, primary sources—a television episode that's supported by a citation to that television episode—or, at best, weak tertiary sources—a song that's supported by a citation to a Genius lyrics page. Here, the Joker connection (which, per your request, I shortened) stands out as being supported by strong reliable sources, but that's about it. Can you help me understand what should be in this type of section? For example, if I find a review of a tv episode that mentions Goetz, is that sufficient? Do you think lyric pages are sufficient? Or, assuming I can't find true reliable sources discussing the significance of a connection between the works provided and the subject, should the Joker connection be the only thing mentioned?

Thanks!--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 14:53, 31 March 2023 (UTC)

Passing mentions and brief references generally shouldn't be included (unless notable for some other reason, such as Goetz expressing displeasure at the reference). As well, unless the references can be verified in secondary sources, they are likely to not be notable. :3 F4U (they/it) 15:38, 7 April 2023 (UTC)
Sounds great! Unrelated: I have uploaded an image of Goetz, but, given my complete unfamiliarity with free use and Wikipedia's image policies in general, I'm hesitant to confidently say that it will be accepted by whatever patroller/administrator ultimately checks it. Nonetheless, I've added the image the article. Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 15:44, 7 April 2023 (UTC)
Oof the reason I suggested a picture of the crime scene is that pictures of living persons are pretty much never acceptable for non-free use on Wikipedia (under the rationale that if the person is still alive, its still possible to obtain a free image). That image will probably have to go through deletion. Again the image isn't necessary for GA, I just thought it would be a nice improvement! :3 F4U (they/it) 15:51, 7 April 2023 (UTC)
Shoot I completely blanked on that—I'll add an image of the scene now!--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 15:58, 7 April 2023 (UTC)

Table for Keeping Track

Issue / Efforts at Resolving Complete Incomplete Further Guidance Requested Resolution confirmed by F4U
General
Category x x
Overquoting x
Picture x
Civil rights double linked x
Race capitalization consistency x
Lede
Mention survival. x
Shooter
Relocation sentence awkward. x
Struggle sentence fact / allegation. x
"denied for insufficient need" x x
Gun clarity x
Incident
"Lawless" quote should be removed x
Remove Allen's prior conviction. x
Add "how are you doing?" quotation. x
Public reaction / Intersection with race
Elaborate on "wide support" x
Screwdrivers link x
Legal aftermath
Fix bankruptcy court capitalization x
Source for Goetz's defamation claims x
Subsequent developments
Troy Canty convictions predated shooting. x
Remove Greenfield "lost touch" sentence. x
Remove/improve Shatner appearance. x
Giuliani claim unsupported. x
Barry Allen sourcing x
Replace NY Post. x
Replace Tipping Point. x
In pop culture
Citations x

Comments

  • Barry Allen looks good.
  • Defamation claims looks good with the addition of the secondary source.
  • Re: Britannica - The article states The incident began when Canty asked how Goetz was doing.
  • Re: Categories - Per WP:CATV, Categorization of articles must be verifiable. It should be clear from verifiable information in the article why it was placed in each of its categories. Unless there are secondary sources discussing this shooting as a 'mass shooting' (and those sources are incorporated into the article), the article does not belong in the category.

First round, I'll respond to some of the other parts later. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:03, 7 April 2023 (UTC)

Whoops, I was looking for a direct quote in Britannica, not a paraphrase. Noted and added!--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:31, 7 April 2023 (UTC)

Category

As to the category ... I'm not sure if "[i]t should be clear from verifiable information in the article why it was placed in each of its categories" accurately translates to "[you must have] secondary sources discussing this shooting as a 'mass shooting'". The lede in mass shootings in the United States reads: "Mass shootings are incidents involving multiple victims of firearm-related violence. Definitions vary, with no single, broadly accepted definition." Certainly there is verifiable information that this incident involved "multiple victims of firearm-related violence". This all said, I have no dog in the dispute here—I didn't add the category, and, frankly, I don't pay much attention to categories.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:31, 7 April 2023 (UTC)

Inclusion on that basis would be original research/synthesis. :3 F4U (they/it) 16:36, 7 April 2023 (UTC)
I agree there might be a synth issue there. I've double checked at the the CATV talk page (discussion linked), just because something seems off about having a stiff SYNTH application to categories to me, but I could very well be wrong! (Saying that an article should have a "clear indication for inclusion" almost seems to invite synthesis, at least on my read.)--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 17:14, 7 April 2023 (UTC)
I've figured out why "denied for insufficient need" felt awkward to me, which was that it was a bad attempt at covering up too-close paraphrasing of the Time magazine article
Compare Goetz subsequently applied for a permit to carry a concealed handgun, on the basis of routinely carrying valuable equipment and large sums of cash, but his application was denied for insufficient need (The article) to Although he cited the fact that he routinely carried large sums of cash and valuable equipment, his application was rejected on grounds of insufficient need. (TIME)
I've gone ahead and updated the article per "gun clarity" and the bit over "struggle", feel free to alter/revert my edits. I still find that everything in the article between Goetz told police that he felt... to something that had been speculated on by the press. relies too heavily on quotes from Goetz. The amount of quotation there needs to be trimmed. :3 F4U (they/it) 05:04, 16 April 2023 (UTC)
@Freedom4U: Sorry—somehow missed this and only noticed your vote below. Just finished editing that section—I removed the cquote template and heavily trimmed the quotation within it (taking out Goetz's description of the first four shots). I kept the "You don't look so bad" sentence, given the amount of media attention that received.--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 13:05, 17 April 2023 (UTC)
Good job on all your work on the article and I'm willing to pass it now. The category stuff will sort itself out and the article fulfils all of the GA criteria. :3 F4U (they/it) 19:07, 23 April 2023 (UTC)
The discussion above is closed. Please do not modify it. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page. No further edits should be made to this discussion.

Transcript

(1) In about 10 days I should have Goetz's shooting description testimony from the civil trial, and will let you know here. The big delay was due to the records being stored in western NY state. (2) In the OTHER LITIGATION section shouldn't you include the lawsuits by Canty and Ramseur against Goetz? They are more notable than the defamation claims lawsuits. 2603:7000:4EF0:9B0:C139:8B96:31AB:5210 (talk) 00:46, 8 April 2023 (UTC)

Don't stress too much about the transcript! Obviously, that's a primary source, so while it might serve for a nice quotation, we shouldn't plan to rely on it too much. As to the other civil cases, I found reference to Canty's case in Scott Greenfield's blog (where he says Canty just decided to drop the lawsuit—not very notable, and a primary source at that), but other than that, I unfortunately haven't been able to discover reliable sources discussing that suit or Ramseur's suit. If you can find any, I'll happily include them!--Jerome Frank Disciple (talk) 16:17, 8 April 2023 (UTC)