Search This Blog

Tuesday, February 14, 2023

3 dead, multiple injured in Michigan State campus shooting, suspect kills himself

 Three people were killed and at least five others were injured after a gunman opened fire at Michigan State University on Monday night before turning the gun on himself, officials said. 

The lone suspect, a 43-year-old not affiliated with the university, shot up two separate buildings on campus and terrified students for roughly four hours while he remained at large, police said.

The five wounded victims suffered “life-threatening” injuries and were rushed to a local hospital in critical condition, MSU Police and Public Safety Interim Deputy Chief Chris Rozman said during a 11 p.m. press conference. 

Armed police officers with weapons drawn rush into Phillips Hall on the campus of Michigan State University, in East Lansing, Mich.
Armed police officers with weapons drawn rush into Phillips Hall on the campus of Michigan State University, in East Lansing, Mich.
AP

The gunman later shot and killed himself at a location off campus in the city of Lansing as he was confronted by law enforcement, the deputy chief said after midnight. 

He said the shooting began inside Berkey Hall, an academic building on the East Lansing campus, around 8:18 p.m. 

Officers received multiple 911 calls of an active shooter inside the building and responded within minutes and arrived on the scene to find several victims — including two dead. 

A photo released of Michigan State University shooting suspect.
A photo released of Michigan State University shooting suspect.
MSU-East Lansing PD

The gunman then moved to the MSU Union building — which houses a student dining hall — five doors down and continued to fire rounds at students, Rozman said.

Emergency responders found victims — including the third fatal person who died — in that building as well. 

Videos posted online showed troves of terrified students running across the campus as officers tried to take command of the chaotic scene. 

1of6
law enforcement at the scene
Multiple people have been reported injured.
Click On Detroit
law enforcement at the scene
Students were told to shelter in place.
Click On Detroit
Advertisement
law enforcement at the scene
Police and FBI responded to the scene.
Click On Detroit
Michigan State shooting
Reports indicate multiple were injured during a mass shooting at Michigan State University Monday.
WILX
Advertisement

Police released an image of the suspect, who they described as “a black male, shorter in statue, wearing red shoes, a jean jacket and ball cap,” following the 11 p.m. press conference. Officials could not immediately confirm what type of weapon he used. 

Following the first report of shots fired, students and staff at the school were ordered to “secure-in-place,” authorities said.

There have been shots fired near Berkey Hall on the East Lansing campus,” MSU police wrote on Twitter.

1of6
Lansing interim Police Deputy Chief Chris Rozman holds a news conference following an active shooter situation on the campus of Michigan State University on February 13, 2023 in Lansing, Michigan.
Lansing interim Police Deputy Chief Chris Rozman holds a news conference following an active shooter situation on the campus of Michigan State University on Feb. 13, 2023 in Lansing, Michigan.
Getty Images
Michigan State University students hug during an active shooter situation on campus on Feb. 13, 2023 in Lansing, Michigan.
Michigan State University students hug during an active shooter situation on campus on Feb. 13, 2023 in Lansing, Michigan.
Getty Images
Advertisement
Emergency personnel respond to a shooting at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan, U.S., February 13, 2023.
Emergency personnel respond to a shooting at Michigan State University in East Lansing, Michigan, on Feb. 13, 2023.
REUTERS
People are seen inside the Broad Art Museum near Berkey Hall on the campus of Michigan State University as they shelter in place, late Monday, Feb. 13, 2023, in East Lansing, Mich.
People are seen inside the Broad Art Museum near Berkey Hall on the campus of Michigan State University as they shelter in place, on Feb. 13, 2023, in East Lansing, Michigan.
AP
Advertisement

“Please secure-in-place immediately. Police are active on scene,” the post continued.

University police on Monday night sent out an alert warning the campus community to “Run, Hide, Fight.”

“Run means evacuate away from danger if you can do so safely, Hide means to secure-in-place, and Fight means protect yourself if no other option,” the message said.

Rozman said there was no longer a threat to campus during a 12:30 a.m. update after confirming the lone gunman had died.  

“We are relieved to no longer have an active threat on campus, while we realize that there is so much healing that will need to take place after this,” Rozman said. 

A MSU sophomore told the Detroit News she was inside her dorm on campus when she heard people barricading doors and shouting “Go” so she fled the residence hall with other students. 

A police officer instructed them to go to a nearby bus stop, according to the outlet. 

“We don’t feel safe anywhere,” the student, Alexis Dinkins, told the paper. 

MSU cancelled all campus activities for the next 48 hours. 

The FBI is on scene assisting local law enforcement with the investigation.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/13/shots-fired-at-michigan-state-campus-prompts-student-staff-lockdown/

Monday, February 13, 2023

'Suicides increased after two years of declines': CDC data

 After two consecutive years of declines, suicide rates in the United States increased in 2021, nearly matching the record high from 2018.

There were 48,183 deaths by suicide in 2021, after 45,979 in 2020 and 47,511 in 2019, according to data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).

Age-adjusted suicide rates among American Indian or Alaska Native people were the highest across the groups, with 28.1 suicide deaths per 100,000, and experienced the largest relative percentage change between 2018 and 2021 at a 26 percent increase. Suicide rates also increased by about 19 percent among Black people between 2018 and 2021, and by 6.8 percent among Hispanic people between 2018 and 2021.

The only group to see a decrease was non-Hispanic white people, where rates dropped by nearly 4 percent.

Increased suicide rates among younger Black Americans ages 10 to 24, which went up by approximately 36 percent, raised “particular concern,” the CDC said.

Suicide rates among those ages 45 to 64 “decreased significantly overall” by about 12.4 percent, according to the CDC.

The CDC cited various reasons for the increased suicide rates, including personal, professional and financial issues, as well as the coronavirus pandemic.

“Suicide is a complex problem related to multiple risk factors such as relationship, job or school, and financial problems, as well as mental illness, substance use, social isolation, historical trauma, barriers to health care, and easy access to lethal means of suicide among persons at risk,” the CDC said.

“As the nation continues to respond to the short- and long-term impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic, remaining vigilant in prevention efforts is critical, especially among disproportionately affected populations where longer-term impacts might compound preexisting inequities in suicide risk,” it added.

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/3856059-suicides-increased-after-two-years-of-declines-cdc-data/

House GOP demands info from Fauci, other officials on COVID-19 origins

 House Republicans are officially relaunching their investigation into the origins of the COVID-19 pandemic by calling for testimony and information from Anthony Fauci and other current and former Biden administration officials.

Reps. Brad Wenstrup (R-Ohio), the chairman of the Select Subcommittee on the Coronavirus Crisis, and James Comer (R-Ky.), chairman of the House Oversight and Accountability Committee, are pressing for information from senior Biden administration officials and the president of EcoHealth Alliance.

The 12-member coronavirus response subcommittee is charged with examining the origins of the pandemic, including federal funding of what’s known as gain-of-function research, or research that enhances a virus’s ability to cause an infection in order to predict pandemics and develop cures. 

The examination of gain-of-function research is central to the claim the virus originated from a lab in Wuhan, China, that was potentially backed by funding from the U.S. government. Last year, Republicans on the House Foreign Affairs Committee released a report concluding the pandemic began with a virus that escaped from the Wuhan lab.

“This investigation must begin with where and how this virus came about so that we can attempt to predict, prepare or prevent it from happening again,” Wenstrup said in a statement. 

“Government scientists and government funded researchers have so far been less than forthcoming in their knowledge and actions, including work with the Wuhan Institute of Virology and potential pandemic pathogens,” he added.

Aside from Fauci’s testimony, the lawmakers are seeking phone records, official calendars and other communications from the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) regarding the Wuhan Institute of Virology and any federal grants to EcoHealth Alliance.

Fauci was director of NIAID for nearly 40 years before retiring from government at the end of last year. He has said on numerous occasions he would gladly testify for a GOP-led panel. The letter asks for a transcribed interview, where he would be under oath. 

The lawmakers also want a classified briefing from intelligence and law enforcement agencies.

The origins of the coronavirus have become intensely politicized, and Biden officials and outside scientists have been bracing for a new wave of investigations. 

While in the minority, Comer and Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) sent letters demanding the same information but said they were rebuffed. Now in the majority, the GOP has the authority to lob subpoenas at the administration if necessary.

https://thehill.com/policy/healthcare/3856317-house-gop-demands-info-from-fauci-other-officials-on-covid-19-origins/

Banks calls on Buttigieg ‘to correct’ covering of Jesus artwork at Merchant Marine Academy

 Rep. Jim Banks (R-Ind.) is urging Secretary of Transportation Pete Buttigieg to take action regarding the reported covering of a piece of artwork depicting Jesus that is displayed at the Merchant Marine Academy.

Banks, who is running for Indiana’s open Senate seat in 2024, sent a letter to Buttigieg, saying that reports indicated that the painting entitled “Christ on the Water” was covered “to create a ‘welcoming environment.'”

“The piece, titled ‘Christ on the Water,’ was designated a heritage asset by the Maritime Administration and has significant historical value,” Banks said in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by The Hill on Monday. “The painting depicts an image of Jesus and merchant seamen adrift in a lifeboat during World War II.”

“Between 1939 and 1945, 9,521 merchant mariners lost their lives — a higher proportion than those killed in any military branch, according to the National World War II Museum,” he continued. “This painting has conveyed hope and inspiration to nearly every class of midshipmen to come through the Academy.”

He asked that Buttigieg “act immediately to correct this,” since the Merchant Marine Academy falls under his jurisdiction.

Buttigieg’s office did not immediately respond to The Hill’s request for comment.

Banks cited a Supreme Court ruling in 2019, saying that religious symbolism in historic displays does not violate the Constitution. He also added that more than 4,000 community members of the academy, including midshipmen and alumni, signed a petition demanding that the covering be removed and a plaque be added to demonstrate the historical significance, according to the letter.

“I support their request and believe there is ample evidence that previously established legal  precedent negates the ‘constitutional concerns’ of an anti-Christian activist who is so extreme that he has described the Wreaths Across America program as ‘the Annual Government-Sanctioned Desecration of Non-Christian Veterans,'” he said in the letter, which was first reported by Fox News.

https://thehill.com/homenews/house/3856169-jim-banks-calls-on-buttigieg-to-correct-covering-of-jesus-artwork-at-merchant-marine-academy/

Former Trump adviser Bolton 'to receive briefing on previous spy balloons'

 Former Trump White House national security adviser John Bolton will be briefed Wednesday by Biden administration officials about Chinese surveillance balloon incursions that happened during the Trump administration, his spokesperson confirmed to The Hill on Monday.

Bolton is expected to issue a statement after the briefing. He is the first Trump official to publicly confirm they are receiving a briefing on the matter of Chinese spy balloons since it was revealed earlier this month that there were at least three such objects that entered U.S. airspace during the last administration.

Appearing on NBC earlier Monday, Bolton said he has “even more questions now than when they first got in touch with me.”

A senior Pentagon official told reporters last week that Chinese government surveillance balloons hovered over the continental U.S. “at least three times” during the Trump administration and one additional time at the beginning of the Biden administration. 

Those three incursions were for shorter periods of time than the balloon that caused a major international incident earlier this month after it was spotted over Montana before floating across parts of the country and ultimately being shot down near the South Carolina coast. 

Bolton and other top Trump officials all were adamant that they were never informed of any spy balloons that entered U.S. airspace during their time in office.

Biden administration officials, who offered to brief the Trump ones on those incursions, have since explained that the country’s defense radar systems have been improved to be able to better detect when objects like the spy balloon enter U.S. airspace.

“When President Biden came into office, he directed the U.S. Intelligence Community to do a broad assessment of Chinese intelligence capabilities and to ensure that we were working to detect and to protect against them,” John Kirby, a White House spokesperson on national security issues, said Monday.

In addition to the Chinese spy balloon that was shot down near South Carolina, the U.S. military shot down three separate unidentified objects over the weekend. One was in Alaskan airspace, one was in Canada and the other was over Lake Huron. Officials are still working to learn more about the origin and purpose of those objects.

https://thehill.com/policy/national-security/3856656-former-trump-adviser-bolton-to-receive-briefing-on-previous-spy-balloons/

Lawmakers demand Biden address nation on UFO incursions

 Frustration on Capitol Hill is mounting after a string of aerial objects were shot down over U.S. and Canadian airspace in the last few days, raising a long list of questions that lawmakers say President Biden should publicly address. 

Three unidentified flying objects (UFOs) have been shot down over North America since Friday, and the Pentagon has provided little information on what the objects were or where they came from. 

“The president owes the American people an explanation, direct and on camera, of what we know about these ‘objects’ and what steps he’s taking to protect America’s sovereign airspace,” Sen. Tom Cotton (R-Ark.) said in a Monday statement.

Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.), the vice chairman of the Intelligence Committee, also joined in the calls for President Biden to address the nation, noting the unprecedented nature of the military shooting down aircraft in U.S. airspace. 

“NORAD’s been around almost 65 years,” he said of the command in charge of patrolling U.S. and Canadian airspace. “We’ve never shot anything down, and in eight days we’ve shot down four things. That’s a pretty big deal. It doesn’t happen every day.”

Rubio added in a tweet: “Americans need to hear directly about this from their President today.”

The White House wouldn’t commit to a public address from Biden during a briefing on Monday afternoon. 

“We have been, I think, as transparent as we can be,” The White House’s national security spokesman John Kirby told reporters. “I won’t speak for the President’s personal speaking schedule. But, I mean, he has been deeply engaged in every one of these decisions.”

Kirby added that Biden is “directing his team to make sure we are properly consulting and briefing not just members of Congress, but state leaders as well.”

In a vacuum of information about the objects, the White House said Monday there is no evidence of “aliens or extraterrestrial activity” with the incidents. 

Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) said people were “scared” and “believing crazy things being said on the internet.”

“There is a lack of transparency from the Biden admin and simple explanations are owed to the people,” Greene wrote on Twitter.

The first UFO was shot down on Friday afternoon over Alaska, the second was taken out on Saturday over the Yukon in northwest Canada and the third over Lake Huron in Michigan on Sunday. 

All three incidents came about a week after a Chinese spy balloon capable of collecting communications intelligence was shot down off the coast of South Carolina after passing over much of the nation.

While the calls for answers are mostly from Republicans, Democrats from states that experienced a UFO incursion are joining in on the frustration.

Michigan lawmakers Sen. Gary Peters (D) and Rep. Debbie Dingell (D) echoed requests for more information, as did Sen. Jon Tester from Montana, where the Chinese balloon had lingered earlier this month.

Asked if Biden should speak out about the aerial objects, Tester said Monday, “That’s up to him.” He added that he still hoped to glean more information on “what they know, when they knew it, and what the plan is,” through hearings of the Defense Appropriations Subcommittee, which he chairs.

A number of Democratic senators said they remain unsatisfied by the answers coming from the administration so far, but were hopeful that a briefing of all senators on Monday might shed more light on the situation.

Sen. Mark Warner (D-Va.) said he’s “not satisfied yet” with information provided by administration, while Sen. Tim Kaine (D-Va) added: “They’ve been doing a good job so far, but I do have a lot of questions.”

The remarkable series of UFO shoot-downs has befuddled Americans, who are wondering why the U.S. is suddenly recognizing and shooting down a flurry of these objects. 

Melissa Dalton, the assistant secretary of Defense for homeland defense and hemispheric affairs, told reporters on Sunday the military has “been more closely scrutinizing our air space at these altitudes” with enhanced radar.

That “may at least partly explain the increase in objects that we’ve detected over the past week,” Dalton said.

Rep. Mike Gallagher (R-Wis.) said in a Monday statement if it was true the U.S. has just now opened up its radar technologies to detect UFOs, that would amount to “staggering intelligence failures.”

“How long have these objects operated in our airspace with impunity?” Gallagher asked, demanding “answers” from Biden. 

“There are times to err on the side of secrecy in national security operations. But when our fighter pilots are shooting down presumably hostile aerial objects all across America, it’s long past time for transparency.”

Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) raised similar questions while speaking on the floor on Monday.

“What in the world is going on? Has the Biden administration just dialed the sensitivity of our radars all the way up? If so, what are the objects that we are just now noticing for the very first time?” McConnell asked. “Are they benign science projects and wayward weather balloons, or something more nefarious that we’ve somehow been missing all this time?”

Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin told reporters on a trip to Belgium that the objects did not pose a military threat. 

“They do, however, present a risk to civil aviation and potentially an intelligence collection threat, and we’ll get to the bottom of it,” he added. 

Canadian and U.S. crews are in the midst of recovering the downed UFOs for closer inspection. The Biden administration on Monday also announced an interagency task force to investigate the UFOs.

There are no known links of the UFOs to China or any other country or entity. 

There have been some indications that some of the objects shot down were balloons, however that has not been confirmed by the Pentagon or White House. 

CNN reported Monday on a Pentagon memo that the object shot down over Canada on Saturday appeared to be a “small, metallic balloon with a tethered payload below it.”

Senate Majority Leader Charles Schumer (D-N.Y.) suggested in a Sunday interview with ABC’s “This Week” the two UFOs shot down on Friday and Saturday were balloons.

But the Pentagon has said those objects were much smaller than the Chinese spy balloon, which weighed about 2,000 pounds. And the Lake Huron object was an octagonal shape.

Earlier this month, the Pentagon expressed high confidence in identifying the Chinese spy balloon, which Beijing admitted was theirs but has referred to as a weather balloon.

Also in contrast to the UFOs, the Chinese spy balloon was tracked for days before the U.S. decided to take it down. 

Unlike the Chinese spy balloon, which was hovering about 60,000 feet in the air, the UFOs were flying at about 40,000 feet or below and posed a threat to civilian airspace, according to the Pentagon, leading to a swift decision each time to take them out.

https://thehill.com/homenews/3856419-lawmakers-demand-biden-address-nation-on-ufo-incursions/

Multiple injured, campus on lockdown after shooting at Michigan State, suspect still on loose

 Multiple people were injured after a gunman opened fire at the Michigan State University on Monday night, officials said. 

University police believe a lone suspect, who was still at large, carried out at least two shootings on campus. Following the first report of shots fired, students and staff at the school were ordered to “secure-in-place,” authorities said.

“There have been shots fired near Berkey Hall on the East Lansing campus,” MSU police wrote on Twitter.

Michigan State shooting
Reports indicate multiple were injured during a mass shooting at Michigan State University Monday.
WILX

“Please secure-in-place immediately. Police are active on scene,” the post continued.

It wasn’t immediately clear if anybody was injured in the first shooting.to have been carried out by one suspect. 

people on campus
The shooter at Michigan State University is still on the loose.
WLNS

Shortly after 9:30 p.m. local time, campus authorities said IM east had been secured. 

University police on Monday night sent out an alert warning the campus community to “Run, Hide, Fight,” according to Freep.com.

“Run means evacuate away from danger if you can do so safely, Hide means to secure-in-place, and Fight means protect yourself if no other option,” the message said.

https://nypost.com/2023/02/13/shots-fired-at-michigan-state-campus-prompts-student-staff-lockdown/