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Tag: Catholic school

  • Did a 2022 gun law lead to fewer mass shootings?

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    Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., a leading supporter of stricter gun laws, said hours after an Aug. 27 deadly Minneapolis school shooting that legislation enacted during the Biden administration led to a decline in mass shootings.

    “There is something deeply wrong with a country that chooses to make running for their lives part of kids’ back to school ritual,” Murphy wrote on X. “When we finally passed a gun safety bill in 2022, mass shooting began to drop. But it was an unacceptably small start. We must do more.”

    Murphy referred to the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act that then-President Joe Biden signed into law in June 2022 after mass shootings in Buffalo, New York, and a Uvalde, Texas, elementary school. The legislation combined gun safety provisions with mental health and school security resources and marked the first congressional gun control measure in nearly three decades.

    In Minneapolis, Robin Westman fired through the windows of the Church of the Annunciation during a morning Mass to mark the beginning of the school year, killing two children and injuring  18 other people. Westman, 23, died from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

    Murphy’s spokesperson said the senator referred to the number of mass shootings as measured  by the Gun Violence Archive, an online database that showed a decrease in mass shootings in 2024 compared with 2023. However, assessing whether the 2022 law caused the decrease is difficult to determine. Experts said the law might have played a role, but they are unaware of academic research addressing that question.

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    “This is not to say that it may not have any impact — it’s virtually impossible to demonstrate any direct causality, but it’s important to keep in mind many other potential correlates of that drop, including, for example, an overall drop in crime, return to prevention and intervention strategies and so forth,” said Alex R. Piquero, a University of Miami professor of criminology and former director of the Bureau of Justice Statistics.

    RELATED: The US homicide rate has dropped, but Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy overstates effect of gun law

    No official definition of mass shootings

    There is no widely agreed upon definition for mass shootings. Different groups measure mass shootings in varying ways based on the number of people injured or killed. Some exclude gang violence or domestic violence from their counts and include only indiscriminate violence, when a shooter fires a gun at random in public. This means that mass shooting numbers can vary significantly depending on the metrics — showing anywhere from dozens or fewer incidents to hundreds in a given year.

    The Gun Violence Archive defines mass shootings as events in which at least four people are injured or killed, excluding the shooter. As of Aug. 27, the archive found 642 mass shootings in 2022, 660 mass shootings in 2023, 503 in 2024, and 286 year-to-date in 2025.

    Some other mass shooting trackers also show a decline from 2023 to 2024, although they have more narrow methodologies which result in smaller raw numbers.

    Mass shootings have decreased but law’s impact unclear

    Gun violence experts expressed caution about attributing the decline in mass shootings to 2022 law for several reasons: 

    The 2022 law had many components. It’s difficult to attribute the decrease to the law because the law “had so many different parts,” including money to support state-level “red flag” laws, said Jaclyn Schildkraut, executive director of the Regional Gun Violence Research Consortium at the Rockefeller Institute of Government. Red flag laws allow courts to temporarily remove a person’s firearms if the person poses a danger to other people.

    Proving a connection would involve analyzing changes collectively and over different initiatives over a much longer period of time, Schildkraut said.

    Mass shootings are rare. Because mass shootings are statistically very rare, “It is hard to distinguish change due to something like the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act from random variation over time,” said Veronica Pear, assistant professor at the Centers for Violence Prevention at University of California, Davis.

    Terry Schell, a senior behavioral scientist who studies firearms and violence at Rand Corp., a nonpartisan think tank, said, “It is exceptionally difficult to determine, empirically, if any national law caused a particular shift in a rare outcome. Even if the mass shooting rate dropped to zero in the years following passage, all that would tell us is that SOMETHING happened in 2023 to reduce mass shootings. It could be this law; it could be something totally different.”

    Schell said to make claims about causation requires data that allows researchers to rule out alternative causes. 

    Our ruling

    Murphy said, “When we finally passed a gun safety bill in 2022, mass shooting began to drop.” 

    He pointed to Gun Violence Archive data showing 503 mass shootings in 2024, a decline from 660 in 2023. Midway through 2022, Biden signed the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act into law. 

    Gun violence experts said they are unaware of research showing the impact of the law on mass shooting numbers. They cautioned that the law had many components and assessing its impact on mass shootings is difficult. 

    The statement is partially accurate but leaves out important details. We rate it Half True.

    PolitiFact Staff Researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this fact-check.

    RELATED: Congress passes historic bipartisan gun legislation: Bipartisan Safer Communities Act

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  • Police say ‘countless lives’ saved during Minneapolis school shooting due to locked doors

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    As Minneapolis grappled with the aftermath of the mass shooting at a Catholic school church in which two children were killed and 17 people injured, police said “countless lives” had been saved by the church doors being locked as the shooter had not been able to get inside.

    Two children, aged eight and 10, were killed in the church pews during morning mass at the Annunciation Catholic school church. Fourteen other children, aged six to 15, were also injured, two of them critically, though officials said they were expected to survive. Three adults, parishioners in their 80s, were also injured. Police said the suspected, Robin Westman, 23, killed themself and was found dead behind the church.

    The shooter had tried to get inside the church to carry out the attack, but failed as the doors had been locked when mass began, Minneapolis police chief Brian O’Hara told NBC’s Today show on Thursday morning. As a result, they had fired through the windows, and the fact that they couldn’t get into the church “likely saved countless lives”, O’Hara said.

    Online posts indicate that Westman’s mother worked at the church in the south of the city until 2021. O’Hara, told Minneapolis ABC affiliate KSTP that his office believes Westman had been a student at Annunciation.

    Related: Minneapolis Catholic school shooting: two children killed and 17 injured

    “This was a deliberate act of violence against innocent children and other people worshipping,”O’Hara said in a news conference on Wednesday. “The sheer cruelty and cowardice of firing into a church full of children is absolutely incomprehensible.

    Department of Homeland Security secretary Kristi Noem called Westman a “deranged monster” in a statement later on Wednesday.

    “This level of violence is unthinkable. Our deepest prayers are with the children, parents, families, educators, and Christians everywhere. We mourn with them, we pray for healing, and we will never forget them,” Noem said.

    He said the incident took place just before 8.30am during a service marking the first week of school. The pews had been packed with teachers, parents and children listening to a psalm. Just before the congregants were to proclaim “Alleluia”, bullets were fired through the windows.

    “Down! Everybody down!” someone shouted as children ducked for cover behind wooden pews. One student threw himself on top of a friend and was shot in the back. A youth minister called her husband to say goodbye. People used a wooden plank to barricade a door and fled to a gymnasium.

    The shooting went on for several minutes, according to a man who lives near the church and said he heard as many as 50 shots. Dozens of law enforcement officers soon arrived at the school.

    Many knew each other well in a community that is built around the century-old Catholic school and parish, a suburb better described as a small town.

    “I’m just asking [God]: ‘Why right now?’ It’s little kids,” said Aubrey Pannhoff, 16, a student at a nearby Catholic school who stood at the edge of the police cordon.

    Pope Leo XIV, who is American, said he was praying for the families of those killed and injured in the “terrible tragedy”.

    Westman grew up in Richfield, and applied in Dakota county to change their birth name from Robert to Robin Westman because they identified as a woman, according to court documents obtained by the Guardian. That request was granted in January 2020.

    A rifle, a shotgun and a pistol had been lawfully bought by the shooter recently, O’Hara said, adding it was believed they acted alone.

    He said Westman had scheduled a manifesto to be released on YouTube. The police said it “appeared to show him at the scene and included some disturbing writings”. The content had been taken down with the assistance of the FBI, he added. The videos were rambling, often showed writings in Russian, and contained a variety of references to things ranging from Donald Trump to antisemitic statements to gun rights.

    As police continue to search for a potential motive, O’Hara said on Thursday that investigators were trying to obtain electronic search warrants to go through the shooter’s devices. “Everything that we’ve seen so far is really a classic pathway to an active shooter,” he told NBC’s Today show, but nothing specific had emerged yet in terms of motive for targeting this particular church.

    The FBI said it was investigating the shooting as “an act of domestic terrorism and hate crime targeting Catholics”, but O’Hara declined to be drawn on the motive at news conference on Wednesday, restating only that investigations into a motive were ongoing.

    At a briefing, Minneapolis’s mayor, Jacob Frey, said: “Children are dead. There are families that have a deceased child … Don’t just say this is about thoughts and prayers right now. These kids were literally praying. It was the first week of school. They were in a church.”

    Later, Frey added: “Anybody who is using this as an opportunity to villainize our trans community has lost their sense of common humanity,” he said. “We should not be operating from a place of hate for anyone. We should be operating from a place of love for our kids. This is about them.”

    One of the documented victims in the shooting is 12-year-old Sophia Forchas, who “was shot during the attack and is currently in critical condition in the ICU”, per a GoFundMe that was set up for family to help with “ongoing ICU care, future surgeries, trauma counseling, lost income, travel, and the countless unknowns that lie ahead”.

    The GoFundMe notes that Forchas’s younger brother was also inside the school during the shooting and her mother, a pediatric critical care nurse, went to work to help during the tragedy, not knowing her daughter was critically injured.

    Associated Press contributed reporting

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  • ADL: Minneapolis school shooter’s gun featured antisemitic, anti-Israel writings

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    The alleged gunman who opened fire on a Catholic school in Minneapolis on Wednesday, killing two children and injuring at least 17 people, most of them students at the school, used a gun that had antisemitic and anti-Israel writings across it, according to the Anti-Defamation League.

    The assailant’s gun also included praise for mass killers “across the ideological spectrum,” including white supremacist, anti-Muslim and anti-government actors, the ADL stated.

    Two of the names that appeared on the gun were Natalie Rupnow, who killed a staff member and a student at Abundant Life Christian School in Madison, Wis., last December, and Brenton Tarrant, who killed 51 people at two mosques in New Zealand in 2019.

    Unverified images of the alleged shooter’s gun, taken from a video posted to a YouTube account believed to be associated with the shooter, show scrawlings on the gun and related paraphernalia that say “6 million wasn’t enough,” “Burn Israel,” “Israel must fall” and “Destroy HIAS,” a reference to the Jewish refugee organization.

    Minneapolis law enforcement identified the shooter as 23-year-old Robin Westman, NBC News reported.

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  • Multiple victims in Minneapolis Catholic school shooting and suspect reportedly dead

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    Police responded to an active shooter incident at a Catholic school in south Minneapolis on Wednesday, with sources confirming there are multiple victims and that the shooter is now dead.

    Crews at the scene reported seeing a large number of ambulances, according to CBS. Sources told ABC News that there are multiple victims from a shooting that took place during morning drop-off at Annunciation Catholic school in Minneapolis.

    The city of Minneapolis’s official X account said there is “no active threat to the community at this time” as of 10:29am EST.

    “The shooter is contained. Stay away from the area to allow emergency personnel to help victims – W. 54th Street between Lyndale and Nicollet Ave,” the city wrote.

    The suspect is reportedly dead, according to Fox 9. The outlet also reported that the first call to law enforcement went through at 8.27am local time, shortly after a mass for students was slated to kick off at 8.15am.

    The police department from Richfield, a suburb that borders Minneapolis, told Fox 9 there were 20 victims. It was unclear how many, if any, were dead.

    “A man dressed in all black and armed with a rifle was reported at the scene,” the Richfield police department said.

    Minnesota’s governor, Tim Walz, said he’d been “briefed on a shooting at Annunciation Catholic school” on Wednesday morning and would “continue to provide updates as we get more information”.

    “The [Bureau of Criminal Apprehension] and State Patrol are on scene. I’m praying for our kids and teachers whose first week of school was marred by this horrific act of violence,” he wrote on X.

    Minneapolis’s mayor, Jacob Frey, said he is “monitoring reports of horrific violence in south Minneapolis” and the “emergency response team has been activated”. Frey was also at the scene at around 10:15am EST.

    The US secretary of homeland security, Kristi Noem, said on X that the Department of Homeland Security is monitoring the shooting.

    “We are in communication with our interagency partners, and will share more information as soon as it becomes available. I am praying for the victims of this heinous attack and their families,” Noem said.

    Donald Trump also said on Truth Social on Wednesday morning that he’s been “fully briefed on the tragic shooting” and that the “White House will continue to monitor this terrible situation. Please join me in praying for everyone involved!”

    The Hennepin county sheriff’s office said in a statement that it was “actively assisting the Minneapolis Police Department and other law enforcement agencies” and urged “all residents to stay out of the affected area to allow emergency responders to operate effectively”.

    “This is an evolving situation and we will continue to provide updates as more information becomes available. Our hearts go out to all those impacted by this act of violence,” it said.

    Wednesday’s incident marks the fourth shooting in 24 hours in Minneapolis, Minnesota. Over the course of Tuesday into Wednesday, three people were shot and killed in three separate shootings. At least eight people also suffered gunshot wounds in those incidents.

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  • Indiana Catholic School Teacher Arrested For Allegedly Creating ‘Kill List’

    Indiana Catholic School Teacher Arrested For Allegedly Creating ‘Kill List’

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    An Indiana Catholic school teacher was arrested Thursday after she was accused of threatening her students and making a “kill list.”

    Students at St. Stanislaus School in East Chicago, Indiana, reported Angelica Carrasquillo-Torres to a counselor on Wednesday, alleging that the fifth grade teacher threatened to kill herself, her students and her colleagues at the school, according to NBC Chicago. Carrasquillo-Torres also allegedly told the students about a “kill list” she had.

    Carrasquillo-Torres was escorted to the principal’s office after the counselor and two students reported the threats. Police said the teacher admitted to making the comments and confirmed she had a “kill list.” Carrasquillo-Torres didn’t provide the list to the principal, but reportedly named a student who was on it.

    The principal told Carrasquillo-Torres to leave the school and not to return pending an investigation. Police were informed of the matter that evening.

    “The teacher was removed from the classroom and escorted to the principal’s office, where she remained under supervision and had no further contact with students,” read a Thursday statement on the school’s Facebook page. “The teacher was interviewed to further identify the details of the incident.”

    Some parents are upset with how the school went about informing them of the incident. An email was sent out to parents, but didn’t mention threats or a kill list.

    “She said that these kids get on her nerves so much that she wanted to kill them,” Quiannis Jones, a parent at the school, told CBS News. “Like, what type of person says that?”

    The police obtained an emergency detention order from prosecutors Thursday and arrested the teacher at her home that morning. As of Friday, charges against Carrasquillo-Torres were reportedly still pending.

    “The school is working closely with local authorities and the Diocese of Gary’s Schools Office to ensure that St. Stanislaus students continue to have a safe and supportive environment in which they can learn, grow and prosper,” the school wrote in its statement on Facebook.

    Police did not clarify if Carrasquillo-Torres was still in custody as of Friday. Parents want to know who was on the “kill list” and why, CBS News reported. The teacher was not listed on the school’s staff directory as of Friday, but it was not clear whether she had been fired from the school.

    If you or someone you know needs help, dial 988 or call 1-800-273-8255 for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline. You can also get support via text by visiting suicidepreventionlifeline.org/chat. Outside of the U.S., please visit the International Association for Suicide Prevention for a database of resources.

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  • The Atonement Academy is Ranked No. 3 Best K-12 Private School in 2019 Report

    The Atonement Academy is Ranked No. 3 Best K-12 Private School in 2019 Report

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    Press Release



    updated: Nov 2, 2018

     The Atonement Academy has been named the Third Best K-12 Private School and the Sixth Best Private High School in the San Antonio area for 2019, according to Niche. Each school is ranked comprehensively based on six categories including Academics, Teachers, Clubs & Activities, Diversity, College Prep and Sports. 

    “We at The Atonement Academy are honored to be recognized as the No. 3 Best K-12 Private School and No. 6 Best Private High School in the San Antonio area,” said James F. Growden, headmaster for The Atonement Academy. “We are the only Catholic classical school in all of San Antonio. Classical education focuses on inspiring students to read more and logically think about what they read and training them how to effectively communicate that new knowledge. We are not outcome-based, but rather focused on forming critical thinkers and problem solvers which prepares students for the real world they will face as adults.” 

    Niche.com is a ranking and review website that allows people to discover the schools, companies and neighborhoods that are right for them. Niche rigorously analyzes data from the U.S. Department of Education as well as millions of reviews to produce comprehensive rankings, report cards and profiles for K-12 schools. The Atonement Academy has significantly improved in each category from previous years as a result of the new administration’s vision and mission for the school.

    “At The Atonement Academy, our faculty is eager to invest themselves fully to form our students into joyful disciples of Christ who think critically and can express their ideas articulately in oral presentation and written word,” said Growden. At TAA, Christ illuminates each and every discipline studied by our students, whether they encounter truth, goodness and beauty when learning, calculus, philosophy, history, Chemistry, English, Latin, Spanish, music or art.”

    The Atonement Academy provides an accredited classical education and unparalleled Catholic culture to boys and girls. With a “Fides et Ratio” (Faith & Reason) motto as a guide, The Atonement Academy’s environment inspires the development of both faith and reason.

    Source: The Atonement Academy

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  • Planet TV Develops New Education Series: New Frontiers Features the Garces Memorial High School

    Planet TV Develops New Education Series: New Frontiers Features the Garces Memorial High School

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    Garces Memorial High School was founded in 1947 by the Christian Brothers and Dominican Sisters of St. Thomas Aquinas. The school offers challenging academics to prepare its students for college in a co-educational Catholic setting. Following their 2016 school year graduation, an impressive 99% of Garces Memorial High School students were accepted into higher education programs.

    Press Release



    updated: Jun 29, 2017

    “New Frontiers” is developing a new educational series exploring a wide variety of topics from schooling, surgery, industry, business, modern medicine, and technology. This TV series will be released on cable TV and short segments will be released on on-demand TV such as Amazon, Roku, Vimeo, iTunes and other on-demand platforms.

    The Garces Memorial High School is fully accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges as well as the Western Catholic Education Association. Tucked in the southern area of the San Joaquin Valley in Kern County, Garces Memorial offers college-preparatory courses and the athletic program currently ranks 4th in the history of the CIF Central Section with an impressive 121 section team championship wins.

    Garces Memorial High School was founded in 1947 by the Christian Brothers and Dominican Sisters of St. Thomas Aquinas. The school offers challenging academics to prepare its students for college in a co-educational Catholic setting. Though the school is operated by the Diocese of Fresno, the faculty and administrative staff is embodied by passionate layman Catholics inspired to guide students to fulfill the mission of Jesus Christ.

    The Garces Memorial High School environment provides a unique support system to the student. The school partners closely with parents, teachers, mentors, and coaches in a student-centric setting. The high moral and spiritual standards of the school provide a fertile environment for students to cultivate intellectual, social, and spiritual confidence. The school mission is to provide a quality education to prepare students for the rigors of higher education while instilling Christian values in order to bring more compassionate, fair people into the world industries where they are most needed.

    Following their 2016 school year graduation, an impressive 99% of Garces Memorial High School students were accepted into higher education programs; 68% of those students went to four-year colleges while 32% attended community colleges. The remaining 1% enlisted in the United States Military. For more information about Garces Memorial High School, located at 2800 Loma Linda Drive, Bakersfield, CA, 93305, please, visit www.garces.org, (661) 327-2578.

    New Frontiers is a compelling TV series which explores cutting-edge educational institutions that are shaping our nation’s education. New Frontiers is an educational series in short documentary form to be featured on TV and on-Demand TV. For more information please visit PlanetTVStudios.com

    Planet TV Studios produces cutting edge, real life, television series that features insightful, meaningful updates on the most important business, medical and social responsible topics currently taking place in the areas most important to our lives. Planet TV Studios is a leading content creation company successful in films, television, documentaries, commercials, infomercials, music, and docudramas.

    For More information please visit PlanetTVStudios.com

    Source: Planet TV Studios

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