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Tag: Guns

  • 4-Year-Old Fatally Shot By Woman Claiming To Teach ‘Firearm Safety,’ Authorities Say

    4-Year-Old Fatally Shot By Woman Claiming To Teach ‘Firearm Safety,’ Authorities Say

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    A 4-year-old in Tennessee died after being shot point-blank in the chest Sunday by a woman who said she was teaching the girl “firearm safety,” according to authorities.

    Breanna Gayle Devall Runions, 25, was charged with first-degree murder and aggravated child abuse in the death of Evangaline Gunter.

    The child’s parents, Adam and Josie Gunter, told ABC affiliate WATE that Evangaline had been in temporary custody at a home in Rockwood, which Runions shared with girlfriend Christina Daniels and another child, a 7-year-old girl.

    Evangaline Gunter, 4, was fatally shot in Tennessee on Sunday.

    According to a Tennessee Bureau of Investigation arrest warrant obtained by HuffPost, Runions told police that she had taken a 9 mm handgun out of its case, removed the magazine and called Evangaline over to “show her firearm safety.”

    Runions pressed the barrel of the gun against the child’s chest and pulled the trigger, police said she told them.

    Daniels told police that she saw Runions take out the gun, remove its magazine and put it to Evangaline’s chest, but she turned away and didn’t see her pull the trigger, according to the warrant.

    The 7-year-old girl told authorities that she saw Runions shoot Evangaline and said the bullet struck a glass bottle, sending shards her way, according to the warrant.

    Before the shooting, Evangaline and the older girl were being punished that morning by Runions for not waking up the women and for eating Daniels’ food without permission, according to the warrant and a statement from Russell Johnson, district attorney general for Tennessee’s 9th Judicial District. Runions struck both girls with a sandal before forcing them to stand in different corners of the women’s bedroom, authorities said the older girl told them.

    After the shooting, the women drove Evangaline to a nearby Walmart location to meet an ambulance, Roane County Medical Examiner Dr. Thomas Boduch told the Roane County News, and the vehicle transported the girl to a hospital where she was pronounced dead. Boduch could not immediately be reached by HuffPost.

    Evangaline’s mother told WATE that she was experiencing a mixture of “anger, rage, guilt” following her daughter’s death and was blaming herself for Evangaline being in someone else’s care. She said that this was the result of a “court decision” but that she’d expected to regain custody soon.

    “I feel like it’s my fault that I let her be there,” Josie Gunter said. “I should have been more attentive.”

    The Gunters said Evangaline was joyful and always smiling.

    “You look at her and she’d brighten your day,” Adam Gunter told WATE.

    “Her hugs were so full of life, and love,” Josie Gunter said. “That’s the one thing I’m going to miss the most, is her hugs and her smile.”

    “She wanted to be a cheerleader so bad,” she added. “That little girl was cheerleading before she could even walk.”

    The Tennessee Department of Children’s Services confirmed to HuffPost that it had launched an investigation in the case, and officials are also working with law enforcement in the criminal probe.

    The Gunters said on Facebook that a funeral for Evangaline is planned for Tuesday, Sept. 5. Following the services, the family will host a birthday party — Evangaline was just about to turn 5 when she was killed — at Riverfront Park in Harriman.

    “All that has known her, that loved her, knew her in some small way you are all more than welcome to come show your condolences,” Josie Gunter wrote. “Please let her love spread.”

    Runions on Tuesday waived her right to a bond hearing, and a status hearing is scheduled for Sept. 19. Her appointed public defender did not respond to a request for comment from HuffPost.

    She is being held at Roane County Jail on a bond of $1.5 million.

    Experts say guns are the leading cause of death for children and teens in the U.S. The American Public Health Association says gun violence is a public health crisis in the country. Nearly 29,000 people have died from gun violence so far in 2023, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive.

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  • Manhunt Underway For ‘Armed And Dangerous Person’ Near University Of North Carolina

    Manhunt Underway For ‘Armed And Dangerous Person’ Near University Of North Carolina

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    The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill warned the local community Monday afternoon of an “armed and dangerous person on or near campus.”

    “Remain sheltered in place. This is an ongoing situation. Suspect at large,” the university said in an alert at 2:24 p.m. That notice came about an hour an a half after the school’s first warning of an armed and dangerous person.

    Police for the school, which has about 32,000 students, released an image of an unnamed person of interest in the situation.

    “If you see this person, keep your distance, put your safety first and call 911,” UNC Police said in a tweet.

    The incident occurred just a week after the start of classes following the summer break.

    “This is a tragic way to start a new semester and the state will provide any assistance necessary to support the UNC community,” North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper (D) said.

    This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

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  • Texas Dad Arrested After Gun Found Inside 3-Year-Old’s School Bag: Police

    Texas Dad Arrested After Gun Found Inside 3-Year-Old’s School Bag: Police

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    A Texas man was arrested Tuesday after his 3-year-old was found carrying a gun inside a backpack at school, police said.

    Pete Robles, 35, was taken into custody on charges of child endangerment, a felony offense, when the weapon was discovered by a teacher at a Pre-K 4 SA center, the San Antonio Police Department said.

    The child was unaware that a firearm was in their bag, according to a statement from the school.

    “Staff immediately confiscated the weapon and turned the matter over to SAPD,” said Pre-K 4 SA, which also announced that no backpacks would be permitted on campus as school officials consider improved safety protocols.

    The child has been placed under protective custody with child protective services amid an ongoing investigation, the police department said.

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  • Man Tracks Down His Stolen Truck, Kills Alleged Thief In Gunfight Outside Mall

    Man Tracks Down His Stolen Truck, Kills Alleged Thief In Gunfight Outside Mall

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    A Texas man whose truck was stolen tracked it down and confronted the suspected thief, killing him in a public shootout on Thursday, police said.

    The owner of the Ford truck found it at the South Park Mall in San Antonio and confronted the man who had been driving it and a woman passenger, demanding at gunpoint they get out of the vehicle, Police Chief William McManus said at a press briefing.

    The owner then called the police and made the two sit on the ground beside the truck’s tire to wait, but the man pulled his gun and fired at the truck’s owner, injuring him, police said.

    Parking lot of South Park Mall where a man was killed after a confrontation over a stolen vehicle.

    The truck’s owner then returned fire, killing the man in the parking lot and injuring the woman, police said.

    “The bad guy is the one dead, yes,” McManus told reporters. “The driver of the stolen vehicle is deceased, shot by the owner of the stolen vehicle.”

    Police said the truck owner and the woman passenger were taken to the hospital with gunshot wounds. The woman is in critical condition, and the truck owner is in stable condition.

    San Antonio Police Chief William McManus speaks outside South Park Mall.
    San Antonio Police Chief William McManus speaks outside South Park Mall.

    San Antonio Police Department

    “Look, he was trying to recover his property. I guess it would depend on who you asked if he did the right thing or not,” McManus said.

    The identities of the people involved was not immediately released. A woman who was with the truck owner at the time of the confrontation was not injured.

    A spokesperson for the San Antonio Police Department told HuffPost there are no new updates as of Friday.

    The South Park Mall did not immediately responded to HuffPost’s request for comment.

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  • What are red flag laws — and do they work in preventing gun violence?

    What are red flag laws — and do they work in preventing gun violence?

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    Extreme risk protection orders, more commonly referred to as “red flag” laws, have been passed across the country as a means to prevent gun violence — but there are many questions about what these laws involve and how well they work. 

    Until 2018, just five states had adopted red flag laws. The number of states implementing such laws surged after the 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. 

    The nonprofit group Everytown for Gun Safety has been a big advocate for these laws. They’re vital to preventing gun violence, said Chelsea Parsons, Everytown’s director of implementation.

    “They provide a proactive opportunity to prevent tragedies,” she said. “You don’t have to wait for somebody to commit a crime when there are clear warning signs that this person having access to firearms poses a clear risk.”

    Here’s what to know about red flag laws and their impact on gun violence.

    What are red flag laws?

    These laws allow people to petition for the temporary confiscation of an individual’s firearms if that person is deemed to be a risk to themself or to others. 

    Petitioners first ask a judge to issue a confiscation order. They present evidence about the risk they believe the individual poses. The judge decides when to issue an order. 

    “The basic idea behind these laws is that they allow a court to order a firearm to be temporarily taken away from a person who presents an immediate risk to themselves or others,” said Joseph Blocher, co-director of Duke University’s Center for Firearms Law. 

    Who can petition for a firearm to be removed?

    Laws about who can petition vary from state to state. In some states, coworkers, employers, teachers, doctors and family and household members can file petitions for gun removal. But Parsons said in most states it’s still largely law enforcement officers who can petition for the orders, sometimes referred to as ERPOs, for extreme risk protection orders. 

    “It can be an extremely intimidating process to go to court on your own, file a petition like this during a moment of intense crisis,” Parsons said. 

    The organization recommends policymakers focus on the needs of petitioners outside of law enforcement to make sure the process is accessible. 

    Everytown maintains a list of state laws and who is permitted to petition for a firearm to be removed in each state.

    Are red flag laws constitutional?

    Critics argue red flag laws go against the Second Amendment. While there have been Second Amendment challenges to these laws, they’ve each failed, Blocher said.

    In Hope v. State, the Connecticut Appellate Court in 2016 concluded that the state’s firearm removal law does not violate the Second Amendment because “it does not restrict the right of law-abiding, responsible citizens to use arms in defense of their homes.”

    There have also been challenges based on due process. 

    “Normally when you’re deprived of some constitutional interest, like possession of a gun, you are entitled to notice and a hearing and those kinds of things,” said Blocher. “Red flag laws permit these emergency orders to be entered without, necessarily, a full hearing. So I think people want to know, is there enough process here to protect people from being wrongfully deprived of their guns?”

    Which states have them?

    More than 20 states, along with Washington, D.C., have passed red flag laws as of June 2023. They are:

    • California
    • Colorado
    • Connecticut
    • Delaware
    • District of Columbia
    • Florida
    • Hawaii
    • Illinois
    • Indiana
    • Maryland
    • Massachusetts
    • Michigan (going into effect early in 2024)
    • Minnesota (going into effect early in 2024)
    • Nevada 
    • New Jersey
    • New Mexico
    • New York
    • Oregon
    • Rhode Island
    • Vermont
    • Virginia
    • Washington

    How quickly can an order be issued and what happens next?

    There are two types of orders: emergency, or ex parte, orders and final orders, according to the Giffords Law Center, a research organization that advocates for more restrictive gun control measures. 

    The emergency order can be issued without the gun owner present during the court hearing, Blocher said. The order is usually short term and lasts a week or two. Another hearing then happens with the gun owner present to make their case. 

    Based on the judge’s ruling at the second hearing, someone’s gun can be removed for a longer duration. The final order lasts for a year in most states. At that point, it can either expire or be renewed. Gun owners can also request hearings to have their firearms returned. How often they can petition the court depends on the state the individual lives in. 

    What problems have states experienced with implementation and enforcement?

    In Colorado, where a red flag law was signed in 2019, nearly half of the state’s counties declared themselves Second Amendment sanctuaries

    The shooter who opened fire with an AR-15-style rifle inside Colorado Springs’ Club Q last year, killing five people and wounding 17 others, had previously been arrested for making threats. The state has a red flag law, but no ERPO was filed. In Colorado, law enforcement, family and household members, certain medical professionals and certain educators can file petitions, according to Everytown.

    “The sheriff in El Paso County has previously said he would not use the state’s ERPO law except in ‘exigent’ circumstances,” Allison Anderman, senior counsel and director of local policy at Giffords Law Center, said. 

    Victims’ families and survivors of the shooting there have said they plan to sue the sheriff’s office for failing to block the shooter from buying guns before the attack. The El Paso County Sheriff’s has not responded to repeated CBS requests for comment on the issue, but the official policy on the issue is still that deputies will not petition for an ERPO “unless exigent circumstances exist, and probable cause can be established pursuant to 16-3-301 C.R.S that a crime is being or has been committed.”

    “It is the policy of the Sheriff’s Office to respect and protect the constitutional rights of all those we serve,” according to the department’s policy posted online. “The El Paso County Sheriff’s Office will ensure that the rights of people to be free from unreasonable search and seizures, and to receive due process of law, are safeguarded and maintained.”

    Other states face problems because of a lack of coordination and investment, Anderman said.

    Why are some states not considering red flag laws?

    Some feel red flag laws infringe on the Second Amendment right to bear arms. Republican Sen. Mike Crapo, who represents Idaho, which does not have a red flag law, has said he’s working on ways to address gun violence “without abridging Second Amendment rights.”

    Texas Sen. Ted Cruz, also a Republican, has said he supports the ability of states to make their own ERPO laws, but does not support them federally. Texas does not have a red flag law. Cruz has said red flag laws “pushed by Democrats and gun control advocates” are designed to deprive Americans of fundamental rights. 

    Across the U.S., Blocher has found many are concerned about being wrongfully deprived of their guns without trial. 

    “I think there’s a misconception that these extreme risk protection orders are a criminal punishment. They’re not,” he said. They’re like a restraining order and those are civil.”

    What about a federal law?

    There’s no federal red flag law, but in February, the Justice Department announced it would be sending out more than $230 million to help states and the District of Columbia administer red flag laws and other crisis-intervention programs. Biden also signed legislation in June 2022 making it easier for states to put red flag laws into place. The bill includes incentives for states to pass red flag laws. 

    Neither Blocher nor Andrew Willinger, executive director of the Duke Center for Firearms Law, believe a federal red flag law is likely. 

    “The focus is really on not necessarily moving toward a federal law but improving these laws at the state level,” Willinger said.

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  • No Charges For Florida Man Who Fired 30 Rounds At Pool Cleaner Mistaken For Intruder

    No Charges For Florida Man Who Fired 30 Rounds At Pool Cleaner Mistaken For Intruder

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    A Florida man won’t face charges for firing 30 rounds at his pool cleaner after mistaking him for an intruder, according to police.

    Bradley Hocevar, a 57-year-old retired Army lieutenant colonel, will not be charged because of the state’s “stand your ground” law, which allows homeowners to fire on someone they believe to be a threat.

    “This is one of those situations we call lawful but awful,” Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri said at a press conference Monday.

    The incident began June 15 at 9 p.m. when Dunedin resident Hocevar and his wife, Jana, heard noises coming from their home’s backyard pool area. The couple told police they didn’t recognize a man standing in their screened-in yard.

    While his wife called the police, Hocevar allegedly grabbed his AR-15-style rifle and took a position behind his couch. Hocevar then fired two rounds through his closed blinds into the backyard at his pool cleaner, 33-year-old Karl Polek, police said.

    Polek later told police he had arrived at the residence late because he was behind schedule, but did not inform the couple that he was arriving.

    Pool cleaner Karl Polek, 33, is seen fleeing from a Florida home after the homeowner fired an AR-15 style rifle at him.

    Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office

    Surveillance video of the backyard, released by Pinellas County Sheriff’s Office, shows the moment Polek is fired at and him running away. He sustained minor shrapnel injuries from the shattered glass, according to police.

    Hocevar continued firing after Polek left.

    “[Polek] leaves now and then 47 seconds later is when the remaining 28 rounds were fired,” Gualtieri said of the video.

    The sheriff said it was a “classic example” of Florida’s “stand your ground” law.

    “He was in his home, he was defending what he thought was an intruder coming into his house, where he and his wife were,” Gualtieri said. “It’s an unfortunate set of circumstances.”

    At the press conference, Gualtieri also appeared to place some blame on Polek.

    “We talked to the pool guy,” Gualtieri said. “In hindsight, he probably should have let them know he was coming at nine o’clock, yet he made no effort to contact them at all.”

    Florida’s “stand your ground” law has led to other shootings going unprosecuted.

    In March, charges were dropped against a Miami man captured on his own car camera firing indiscriminately through his window and windshield while driving during a road rage incident in 2021. And in April, someone reportedly shot at a Florida couple’s car after they drove to the wrong address for an Instacart delivery. In that case, the couple said police told them no laws were broken because they were on the homeowner’s property.

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  • German man in bulletproof vest attempts to enter U.S. Embassy in Paraguay, officials say

    German man in bulletproof vest attempts to enter U.S. Embassy in Paraguay, officials say

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    A German man in a bulletproof vest was arrested Tuesday after he tried to enter the U.S. Embassy in Paraguay without proper documents and police later found two guns and ammunition in his vehicle.

    The man, identified as Philipp Kolberg, told authorities he wanted to request political asylum because he was receiving threats, said Paraguayan police commander Gilberto Fleitas.

    “According to Kolberg’s version, he called the embassy asking to speak to a diplomatic representative but the person who attended his call said he should contact the German embassy,” said Fleitas.

    Kolberg then drove his vehicle to the front of the U.S. Embassy in Asuncion and was arrested by police and private guards because he didn’t have an appointment or documents, he said.

    Authorities found a Glock pistol, a rifle with a telescopic sight, a drone and 30 to 50 bullets in his vehicle, Fleitas said.

    Kolberg has not made comments to the press.

    “We are in contact with the German consulate (in Asuncion) to ask for details of this individual,” said Fleitas.

    The U.S. Embassy in Paraguay has yet to issue a statement.

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  • Patriots cornerback Jack Jones arrested at Logan Airport after 2 loaded guns found in carry-on luggage

    Patriots cornerback Jack Jones arrested at Logan Airport after 2 loaded guns found in carry-on luggage

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    Jack Jones, a cornerback for the New England Patriots, was arrested at Boston Logan International Airport Friday evening after two loaded firearms were found in his carry-on luggage, federal authorities said.

    Jones, 25, was set to fly to Los Angeles when the two firearms were discovered by Transportation Security Administration agents during a “routine X-ray screening” of his luggage,” the TSA said in a statement provided to CBS News.

    He was questioned and arrested by Massachusetts State Police at the airport, said TSA, which also provided CBS News with a photo of the weapons that were found. 

    Two loaded weapons which TSA agents found in the carry-on luggage of New England Patriots player Jack Jones on June 16, 2023, at Boston Logan International Airport, the TSA said. 

    TSA


    State police confirmed to CBS News that Jones was charged with two state counts each of possession of a concealed weapon in a secure area of an airport, possession of ammunition without a firearm identification card, unlawful possession of a firearm, carrying a loaded firearm and possession of a large-capacity feeding device.

    The Patriots told CBS Boston in a statement that they were notified of the arrest and were “in the process of gathering more information and will not be commenting further at this time.”

    Jones was booked on $50,000 bail and is slated to be arraigned next week, state police said.

    Jones had just completed his rookie year for the Patriots, who selected him in the fourth round of the 2022 NFL Draft. He appeared in 13 games last season, recording two interceptions and 30 tackles. 

    Jack Jones
    New England Patriots defensive back Jack Jones is interviewed during training camp on July 30, 2022, at the Patriots Training Facility at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts.

    Fred Kfoury III/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images


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  • 5/15: CBS Evening News

    5/15: CBS Evening News

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    5/15: CBS Evening News – CBS News


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    At least 3 killed in New Mexico shooting; Recalled Gerber baby food was still distributed

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  • At least 3 killed in New Mexico shooting

    At least 3 killed in New Mexico shooting

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    At least 3 killed in New Mexico shooting – CBS News


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    At least three people were killed and two officers were wounded in a mass shooting in Farmington, New Mexico. The shooter is also dead. Janet Shamlian reports.

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  • Obama Breaks Down How Gun Ownership Has Become A Partisan Issue

    Obama Breaks Down How Gun Ownership Has Become A Partisan Issue

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    Former President Barack Obama asserted that gun ownership has become “an ideological … and a partisan issue” as he declared that Americans argue about matters that don’t “have to do with keeping our children safe.”

    “I think somehow — and there are a lot of historical reasons for this — gun ownership in this country became an ideological issue and a partisan issue in ways that it shouldn’t be,” Obama said.

    “It has become sort of a proxy for arguments about our culture wars, you know? Urban versus rural. Race is always an element in these issues. Issues of class and education, and so forth,” he added.

    Obama’s comments were shared as the U.S. had recorded 216 mass shootings in the country in 2023 as of Sunday morning, according to the Gun Violence Archive. There have been 15,544 deaths due to gun violence in the U.S. so far this year and 12,447 injuries.

    In the “CBS Mornings” interview, Obama proceeded to distinguish the matter of gun violence in America from other “very practical” approaches to matters that the country takes.

    “Like we do, let’s say, for example, with car safety, where we say, ‘All right, we got a bunch of accidents.’ Let’s have seat belts and let’s make cars safer and let’s engineer our roads so that we prevent them,’” Obama observed.

    “Instead of thinking about it in a very pragmatic way, we end up really arguing about identity and emotion and all kinds of stuff that does not have to do with keeping our children safe.”

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  • GOP Senator Proposes Armed Grandparents Guarding Schools To Kayleigh McEnany

    GOP Senator Proposes Armed Grandparents Guarding Schools To Kayleigh McEnany

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    Granny, get your gun. Sen. Marsha Blackburn (R-Tenn.) told a rapt Kayleigh McEnany Tuesday on Fox News that grandparents could join a force of armed military vets and retired police officers to protect schools from shootings. (Watch the video below.)

    McEnany, Donald Trump’s former White House press secretary, was rapt as Blackburn promoted her SAFE Schools Act, which would supply $900 million to “harden schools” with more security. The proposal, which she introduced after a Nashville school shooting in March, does nothing to address the root of the problem: easy access to powerful guns.

    “To have this grant pool and to allow local school systems and local law enforcement to work together to bring in veterans and retired law enforcement to serve as a security officer at a school — they know how to use weapons,” Blackburn said. “They know to de-escalate situations. I’ve talked to a lot of them. They like this idea. They are grandparents like we are — my husband and I are grandparents — and they want to be there to help protect children.”

    Blackburn said she proposed something similar after the 2022 school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, that killed 19 students and two teachers. In that case, hundreds of law enforcement personnel were slow to act while the shooter carried out the massacre.

    Blackburn said Tuesday it was “unseemly” that Democrats would reject her idea. She claimed on Fox News that her measure would provide fortress-like protection, including “bulletproof doors and the film on windows … so that parents can have the confidence that their children are going to be safe.”

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  • Serbia vows action on guns as arrest is made after Balkan country’s second mass shooting in as many days

    Serbia vows action on guns as arrest is made after Balkan country’s second mass shooting in as many days

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    BELGRADE, Serbia (AP) — A gunman apparently firing at random killed eight people and wounded 14 in a series of villages in Serbia, authorities said, shaking a nation still in the throes of grief over a mass shooting a day earlier. Police arrested a suspect Friday after an all-night manhunt.

    Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić called Thursday’s shootings an attack on the whole nation — and said the person arrested wore a T-shirt with a pro-Nazi slogan on it but did not specify a motive.

    The slayings came a day after a 13-year-old boy used his father’s guns to kill eight fellow students and a guard at a school in Belgrade, the capital.

    The bloodshed sent shockwaves through a Balkan nation scarred by wars, but unused to mass murders. Though Serbia is awash with weapons left over from the conflicts of the 1990s, Wednesday’s shooting was the first at a school in the country’s modern history.

    The last mass shooting before this week was in 2013, when a war veteran killed 13 people in a central Serbian village.

    Public figures, politicians and experts appeared successively on TV Friday, desperately seeking to explain the tragedies. The first made the country numb with grief, while the second heightened feelings of insecurity and anxiety over what might come next. As a nationwide period of mourning began, TV screens were filled with people wearing black and music was banned from the airwaves as well as in cafes and restaurants.

    “This is a moment when a nation decides whether it will go along a healing path,” Actor Srdjan Timarov said on N1 television. “The only other way is to declare capitulation.”

    Late Thursday, an attacker shot at people in three villages near Mladenovac, some 50 kilometers, or 30 miles, south of the capital. Vučić said the assailant targeted people “wherever they were.”

    “I heard some tak-tak-tak sounds,” recalled Milan Prokić, a resident of Dubona, near Mladenovac. Prokić said he first thought people were shooting to celebrate a birth, as is tradition in Serbia. “But it wasn’t that. Shame, great shame,” he added.

    Forensic police inspect a shooting scene in the village of Dubona, Serbia, some 50 kilometers south of Belgrade, on Friday.


    AP/Armin Durgut

    Police said a suspect, identified by the initials U.B., was arrested near the central Serbian town of Kragujevac, about 100 kilometers (60 miles) south of Belgrade.

    Authorities released a photo showing a young man in a police car in a blue T-shirt with the slogan “Generation 88” on it. The double eights are often used as shorthand for “Heil Hitler” since H is the eighth letter of the alphabet.

    Vučić said the suspect repeated the word “disparagement” but it wasn’t clear what that meant.

    The president vowed to the nation in an address that the suspect “will never again see the light of the day.” He referred to the attack as an act of terror and announced tougher gun-control measures, on top of ones put forward by the government a day earlier.

    He called for a moratorium on new licenses for all weapons in the next two years, a review of all current licenses, longer prison sentences for those who break the rules and “fierce” punishment for anyone with illegal weapons. But first police will offer an amnesty to encourage people to hand over illegal guns — an action that has had limited success in the past.

    “We will disarm Serbia,” Vučić promised, saying the government would outline the new rules on Friday.

    Before the second shooting, Serbia spent much of Thursday reeling. Students, many wearing black and carrying flowers, filled streets around the school in central Belgrade as they paid silent homage to slain peers. Serbian teachers’ unions announced protests and strikes to warn about a crisis in the school system and demand changes.

    Wednesday’s shooting at the Vladislav Ribnikar school also left seven people hospitalized, six children and a teacher. One girl who was shot in the head remains in life-threatening condition, and a boy is in serious condition with spinal injuries, doctors said Thursday.

    Authorities have identified the shooter as Kosta Kecmanović and said he is too young to be charged and tried. He has been placed in a mental hospital, and his father has been detained on suspicion of endangering public security.

    Gun ownership is common in Serbia and elsewhere in the Balkans: The country has one of the highest number of firearms per capita in the world. And guns are often fired into the air at celebrations in the region.

    Experts have repeatedly warned of the danger posed by the number of weapons in Serbia, a highly divided country where convicted war criminals are frequently glorified and violence against minority groups often goes unpunished. They also note that decades of instability stemming from the conflicts of the 1990s, as well as ongoing economic hardship, could trigger such outbursts.

    Dragan Popadić, a psychology professor at Belgrade University, told the Associated Press that the school shooting has exposed the level of violence present in society and caused a deep shock.

    “People suddenly have been shaken into reality and the ocean of violence that we live in, how it has grown over time and how much our society has been neglected for decades,” he warned. “It is as if flashlights have been lit over our lives and we can no longer just mind our own business.”

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  • Michigan School District Bans Backpacks Citing Nationwide Safety Concerns

    Michigan School District Bans Backpacks Citing Nationwide Safety Concerns

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    A Michigan public school district has banned backpacks inside all school buildings for the remainder of the school year, citing a nationwide rise in weapons being brought into schools.

    Flint Community Schools’ backpack ban went into effect on Monday. The decision followed two separate safety incidents that canceled classes for two days at a district school last month, MLive reported.

    In a letter to the community, Flint Community Schools Superintendent Kevelin Jones blamed a rise in “threatening behavior and contraband, including weapons,” at schools nationwide for the decision. In a statement to HuffPost, he also cited local threats against the district’s students, teachers and staff within the past few weeks.

    “In addition to the backpack policy, we have increased the number of safety advocates throughout the district and added to our existing safety protocols over the past few weeks,” Jones said in an email Thursday.

    The ban was approved by the Flint Board of Education, the district’s administration and principals, and received support from the Flint Police Department and other safety advocates, he said.

    “Backpacks make it easier for students to hide weapons, which can be disassembled and harder to identify or hidden in pockets, inside books or under other items. Clear backpacks do not completely fix this issue,” Jones said in his community letter.

    Small purses will be permitted. However, any student who brings a backpack to school will be sent to the front office so that a parent or guardian can be called to pick up their belongings. The office will not hold this property, the district’s website states.

    “Based on the issues we continue to see across the country regarding school safety, we believe that this is the best solution at this time for those we serve,” the district said in a document addressing the change.

    Backpack bans have gone into effect in schools nationwide in recent years amid shared safety concerns.

    Last year, students in another Michigan school district were required to use only clear backpacks on campus after a school shooting at a local high school left four people dead.

    Backpack bans have also been seen in Texas, New York, North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Florida and Idaho. Some of these bans were later canceled or changed to permit only clear plastic bags following an outcry.

    These policies have come amid a rise in school shootings, with last year seeing more school shootings nationwide than in any year since at least 1999, according to data collected by The Washington Post.

    As of last month, there have been at least 44 incidents of gunfire on school grounds this year, resulting in 19 deaths and 33 injuries, according to data collected by the nonprofit organization Every Town For Gun Safety.

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  • Texas Mass Shooting Suspect Could Be Anywhere, Sheriff Says

    Texas Mass Shooting Suspect Could Be Anywhere, Sheriff Says

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    CLEVELAND, Texas (AP) — The search for a Texas man who allegedly shot his neighbors after they asked him to stop firing off rounds in his yard stretched into a second day Sunday, with authorities saying the man could be anywhere by now.

    Francisco Oropeza, 38, fled after the shooting Friday night that left five people dead, including an 8-year-old boy. San Jacinto County Sheriff Greg Capers said Saturday evening that authorities had widened the search to as far as 20 miles (32 kilometers) from the scene of the shooting.

    Investigators found clothes and a phone while combing a rural area that includes dense layers of forest, but tracking dogs lost the scent, Capers said.

    Police recovered the AR-15-style rifle that Oropeza allegedly used in the shootings but authorities were not sure if he was carrying another weapon, the sheriff said.

    “He could be anywhere now,” Capers said.

    San Jacinto County Sheriff Greg Capers talks to investigators at the scene where five people were shot and killed the night before, Saturday, April 29, 2023, in unincorporated San Jacinto County, Texas. The suspect, Francisco Oropeza, who lives next door, is still at large. (Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP)

    Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP

    The attack happened near the town of Cleveland, north of Houston, on a street where some residents say neighbors often unwind by firing off guns.

    Capers said the victims were between the ages of 8 and 31 years old and that all were believed to be from Honduras. All were shot “from the neck up,” he said.

    The attack was the latest act of gun violence in what has been a record pace of mass shootings in the U.S. so far this year, some of which have also involved semiautomatic rifles.

    The mass killings have played out in a variety of places — a Nashville school, a Kentucky bank, a Southern California dance hall, and now a rural Texas neighborhood inside a single-story home.

    Capers said there were 10 people in the house — some of whom had just moved there earlier in the week — but that that no one else was injured. He said two of the victims were found in a bedroom laying over two children in an apparent attempt to shield them.

    A total of three children found covered in blood in the home were taken to a hospital but found to be uninjured, Capers said.

    FBI spokesperson Christina Garza said investigators do not believe everyone at the home were members of a single family. The victims were identified as Sonia Argentina Guzman, 25; Diana Velazquez Alvarado, 21; Julisa Molina Rivera, 31; Jose Jonathan Casarez, 18; and Daniel Enrique Laso, 8.

    The confrontation followed the neighbors walking up to the fence and asking the suspect to stop shooting rounds, Capers said. The suspect responded by telling them that it was his property, Capers said, and one person in the house got a video of the suspect walking up to the front door with the rifle.

    The shooting took place on a rural pothole-riddled street where single-story homes sit on wide 1-acre lots and are surrounded by a thick canopy of trees. A horse could be seen behind the victim’s home, while in the front yard of Oropeza’s house a dog and chickens wandered.

    Rene Arevalo Sr., who lives a few houses down, said he heard gunshots around midnight but didn’t think anything of it.

    “It’s a normal thing people do around here, especially on Fridays after work,” Arevalo said. “They get home and start drinking in their backyards and shooting out there.”

    Law enforcement authorities responded to a scene where five people were shot the night before Saturday, April 29, 2023, in Cleveland, TX. (Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP)
    Law enforcement authorities responded to a scene where five people were shot the night before Saturday, April 29, 2023, in Cleveland, TX. (Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP)

    Yi-Chin Lee/Houston Chronicle via AP

    Capers said his deputies had been to Oropeza’s home at least once before and spoken with him about “shooting his gun in the yard.” It was not clear whether any action was taken at the time. At a news conference Saturday evening, the sheriff said firing a gun on your own property can be illegal, but he did not say whether Oropeza had previously broken the law.

    Capers said the new arrivals in the home had moved from Houston earlier in the week, but he said he did not know whether they were planning to stay there.

    Across the U.S. since Jan. 1, there have been at least 18 shootings that left four or more people dead, according to a database maintained by The Associated Press and USA Today, in partnership with Northeastern University. The violence is sparked by a range of motives: murder-suicides and domestic violence; gang retaliation; school shootings; and workplace vendettas.

    Texas has confronted multiple mass shootings in recent years, including last year’s attack at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde; a racist attack at an El Paso Walmart in 2019; and a gunman opening fire at a church in the tiny town of Sutherland Springs in 2017.

    Republican leaders in Texas have continually rejected calls for new firearm restrictions, including this year over the protests of several families whose children were killed in Uvalde.

    A few months ago, Arevalo said Oropeza threatened to kill his dog after it got loose in the neighborhood and chased the pit bull in his truck.

    “I tell my wife all the time, ‘Stay away from the neighbors. Don’t argue with them. You never know how they’re going to react,’” Arevalo said. “I tell her that because Texas is a state where you don’t know who has a gun and who is going to react that way.”

    A previous version of this story, based on information from a San Jacinto County prosecutor, incorrectly identified one of the victims as 15 years old. This story also clarifies that police recovered an AR-15-style rifle in 4th paragraph.

    Weber reported from Austin, Texas. Associated Press writer Ken Miller contributed to this report.

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  • Proliferation of modified weapons cause for alarm, officials say

    Proliferation of modified weapons cause for alarm, officials say

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    Washington – On its own, a Glock 17 is legal. But, a simple device can suddenly make it exponentially more dangerous and illegal.

    “So these are actually referred to as machine gun conversion devices,” technician Nick Campbell with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Explosives explained to CBS News at an ATF lab in Washington, D.C. “You can see some of these are mass-produced, metallic made. And then some of these are additive materials, 3D printed. And this is what you’ll hear referred to as a switch.”

    The conversion devices are small and inexpensive. They cost as little as $20 but can change a handgun to fire 15 rounds in under two seconds. And these modified weapons are becoming more common, officials said.

    “We’re seeing them with a degree of regularity, about 50% more than we saw last year,” said Metropolitan Police Department Cmdr. LaShay Makal, who previously ran the department’s gun recovery unit, but now oversees the Seventh District.

    Makal said modified guns “increases the likelihood that we’re going to encounter multiple victims when these are used. And also, in those singular victim incidents, it increases the likelihood that those incidents will be fatal.”

    The ATF has seen a 570% increase nationwide of seized modified weapons over the past five years. Last month, Metropolitan police recovered a 3D printer making illegal weapon parts.

    “I think we understand, as a police department that, you know, this is a nationwide issue,” Makal said. “We understand that we can’t arrest our way out of this. We need assistance.”

    Metropolitan Police Chief Robert Contee, who announced Wednesday that he is leaving the department to join the FBI, believes the justice ecosystem needs an overhaul in order to keep illegal guns from causing more harm.

    “It’s something that’s on my mind every day, while we’re sitting here,” Contee said of the nation’s mass shooting crisis. “You take one person with one firearm that’s capable of shooting 100 rounds of ammunition very rapidly in a short period of time. That can happen anywhere at any time. And we see these … converter switches that are able to convert semi-automatic firearms into fully automatic firearms, those are the things that keep me up at night.”

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  • Impact that latest string of deadly shootings has had on anxious nation

    Impact that latest string of deadly shootings has had on anxious nation

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    Impact that latest string of deadly shootings has had on anxious nation – CBS News


    Watch CBS News



    In the same week, a 16-year-old in Kansas City was shot when he rang the doorbell of the wrong house and a 20-year-old woman was shot and killed in upstate New York when she pulled into the wrong driveway. Mark Strassmann reports.

    Be the first to know

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  • Child Mortality Is On The Rise In The U.S. — And These Are The Kids Most At Risk

    Child Mortality Is On The Rise In The U.S. — And These Are The Kids Most At Risk

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    Thanks to decades of scientific advances, we have the ability to save the lives of infants born months prematurely, prevent infectious diseases and effectively treat previously fatal conditions such as diabetes, leukemia and HIV/AIDS.

    We lay infants to sleep safely on their backs, buckle children into crash-tested carseats and make them wear helmets when they ride their bikes. We have the knowledge, the technology and the resources in this country to protect kids better than ever before. A graph of child mortality in the U.S. should show a line steadily approaching zero.

    But it doesn’t. Instead, that line ticks up. A recent analysis published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) of all-cause child mortality data from 1999 to 2021 reveals that deaths in the 1-19 age group rose 10.7% from 2019 to 2020, and again by 8.3% from 2020 to 2021. These increases are the largest in decades, and they reverse what was previously a downward trend.

    “Our stance, based on archival data, is that the last time an increase occurred of this magnitude for two consecutive years might have been as long ago as the 1918 Spanish flu pandemic,” Dr. Steven H. Woolf of Virginia Commonwealth University, one of the authors of the JAMA paper, told HuffPost.

    There was also a surge in the death rate of older adults in 2020, caused by the coronavirus pandemic. But COVID-19 does not account for the rise in pediatric deaths.

    The number of children who died of COVID was very low, and though the pandemic was global, the rise in child mortality was not.

    “Rising death rates in children and teens is not happening in other countries. This is all an American phenomenon,” Woolf said.

    What are we doing differently here? And, more critically, what can we do to reverse course?

    What are the primary causes of death in children and adolescents?

    Of the “hundreds and hundreds of causes of death that we study in children and adolescents,” Woolf said, “we’ve made tremendous progress for most of those major conditions.”

    Injury, not disease, is behind the recent rise in deaths.

    “We identified four causes of death that seemed to be the main drivers of this trend: suicide, homicide, drug overdoses and car accidents,” Woolf said.

    None of these is a natural cause, meaning that each one of those deaths could have been prevented.

    Which children are most at risk?

    Not all children in this country face the same risk of death from the four causes named above. Boys and older children and teens (ages 10 to 19) are more likely to die overall.

    There are also significant differences in the death rates of different racial groups from each of the major causes.

    “Drug overdose deaths are highest in white children, generally speaking; car crash accidents [are] highest in Native American young people; and the homicide rates [are] markedly higher in African American youth,” Woolf said.

    These racial disparities predate the uptick in child mortality, but most have held strong in recent years. One exception is deaths from drug overdoses, which have historically been higher among white children. Woolf and his co-authors found that, in 2020, overdose deaths among non-Hispanic Black and Hispanic youth reached equivalency with those among their white peers.

    The difference in homicide deaths is stark. Non-Hispanic Black youth accounted for 62.9% of homicide victims ages 10 to 19 years, although they comprise 14% of the population of this age group.

    When compounded by gender, the difference in risk is even more astonishing. Woolf and his co-authors found that a 10- to 19-year-old Black male is 61 times as likely to be killed in a homicide than a non-Hispanic white female in the same age category.

    “The reasons why gun violence is more concentrated in low-income communities and communities of color is not an accident,” Woolf said. There is not always “recognition of the role that society has played in choking off economic resources and segregating these communities and creating very difficult conditions that foster hopelessness in young people, and that’s a fuel that feeds these kinds of problems.”

    Woolf said that some have criticized the paper for grouping 19-year-olds with young children in this analysis. He pointed out that these are the standard age categories that demographers use when analyzing deaths.

    What role do firearms play?

    In these rising homicide deaths, the weapon is almost always a gun. Guns are also the cause of almost half of suicide deaths in young people ages 10 to 19.

    Of youth gun deaths, about two-thirds are homicides and one-third are suicides, Sarah Burd Sharps, senior director of research at Everytown for Gun Safety, told HuffPost.

    In 2020, shootings overtook car accidents as the number one cause of death for U.S. children and teens.

    “Only in the U.S. are guns the leading killer of children because only in the U.S. do we allow such easy access for children and teens to guns,” Burd Sharps said.

    When it comes to suicide attempts, those involving guns are “uniquely lethal,” she added. According to Everytown, 90% of suicide attempts with guns are fatal. Of those not involving guns, only 4% are fatal. This means that if the rate of attempted suicides didn’t change but access to guns did, the number of suicide deaths would plummet.

    But gun ownership and gun suicides are both going up dramatically. Everytown reports that the firearm suicide rate for kids ages 10 to 14 in 2020 rose 31% from 2019. This rate has increased 146% from 2011 to 2020.

    Gun sales spiked during the early months of the pandemic, with 1 in 5 American households purchasing a firearm from March 2020 to March 2022. Five percent of U.S. adults became gun owners during this time.

    Though there is a dire need for greater access to culturally competent mental health care, Burd Sharps said, what makes most of these deaths immediately preventable is “ensuring that children can’t access firearms in the first place.”

    Where does mental health fit into the picture?

    Americans of all ages have been struggling more with mental health issues in recent years, and the stress of the coronavirus pandemic has exacerbated issues such as depression and opioid addiction.

    Suicides in youth ages 10 to 19 have been going up since 2007, Woolf pointed out, a “reflection of a much larger mental health crisis,” as suicide deaths represent a relatively small number of those suffering emotionally.

    The increase in youth deaths correlates with an overall increase in deaths in adults ages 25 to 64, which Woolf says has been happening since 2010.

    Again, he added, “that’s not happening in other countries. But it’s happening here.”

    Though we can’t isolate which of many potential factors are causing this mental health crisis, we can see the enormity of its effect.

    Woolf thinks the data offers another reminder, to parents, families, schools and communities, to “give more attention to the mental health of our children… to be more tuned in to how our children are coping with these challenges.”

    Our mental health care system, he says, was declining before the pandemic began and has taken a hit over the last several years. The situation is particularly dire in rural areas. A related problem, the opioid epidemic, is also causing huge numbers of American deaths, and ingestions of opioids such as fentanyl are responsible for many of the pediatric deaths categorized as poisonings.

    Woolf also noted that politicians who are quick to blame an individual shooter’s mental illness for an incidence of violence often aren’t the ones asking for more spending on mental health care. “It’s a talking point but not necessarily a policy,” he said.

    “Politicians often create this sort of false dichotomy,” he added. “It’s clearly both. I think the policy strategy has to be multifaceted.”

    What policies could reverse this trend?

    “There are some simple things that can be done to protect children from guns that I think most gun owners would find reasonable,” Woolf said.

    Burd Sharps mentioned child access prevention laws, which can vary in the level of protection they offer. Oregon, for example, has a safe storage law that requires gun owners to secure firearms so that they cannot be accessed by minors.

    Gun dealers in Oregon must prominently place the following warning where customers can see: “The purchaser of a firearm has an obligation to store firearms in a safe manner and to prevent unsupervised access to a firearm by a minor. If a minor or unauthorized person obtains access to a firearm and the owner failed to store the firearm in a safe manner, the owner may be in violation of the law.”

    Burd Sharps said that such laws have been shown to reduce youth suicides, school shootings and unintentional shootings by children. The unintentional shootings, she explained, “happen in this country nearly once every day. Nearly one time every day, a child somewhere in the United States, under 17 but often 2, 3, 4 and 5 years old, gets their hands on a gun and unintentionally shoots themselves or someone else.”

    Locking a gun securely and separately from ammunition prevents these tragedies, she added.

    Other policies that would reduce gun deaths among children include, among many others, bans on high-capacity magazines, tighter age restrictions on gun purchases and anything that would reduce the number of firearms in circulation.

    In addition, Burd Sharps suggested that parents ask about the presence of firearms and their proper storage in any home their children spend time in, before visits with relatives or playdates.

    Finally, she emphasized that it is on us as the adults to keep our children safe from firearms.

    “It’s not the child’s responsibility,” she said, noting that studies have shown that even when taught not to touch firearms, children will do so anyway.

    “Incidents of gun violence have reverberations far beyond the kid struck by a bullet. It’s shaping the lives of the kids who witnessed that shot, who live in fear of the next shooting,” Burd Sharps said.

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  • Florida lawmakers OK bill that allows people to carry concealed guns without a permit

    Florida lawmakers OK bill that allows people to carry concealed guns without a permit

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    Floridians will be able to carry concealed guns without a permit under a bill the Legislature sent to Republican Gov. Ron DeSantis. The governor, who is considering a presidential run, has said the issue is one of his priorities.

    The Senate passed the bill on a 27-13 vote. It will allow anyone who can legally own a gun in Florida to carry one without a permit. It means training and a background check will not be needed for people to carry concealed guns in public.

    The arguments over the legislation were divided on political lines, with Republicans saying law-abiding citizens have a right to carry guns and protect themselves and Democrats saying a state that has seen horrific mass shootings such as the Parkland high school and Pulse nightclub massacres will become even more dangerous.

    Nearly 3 million Floridians have a concealed weapons permit. While a background check and three-day waiting period will still be required to purchase a gun from a licensed dealer, they are not required for private transactions or exchanges of weapons. People can still obtain permits to avoid the purchase waiting period and to carry in states with reciprocal agreements.

    DeSantis has said he thinks Florida should go even further and allow people to openly carry guns. While some lawmakers have pushed for open carry, it doesn’t appear the Legislature will pass such legislation.


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  • Tennessee Lawmaker Has Defiant Response To Uproar Over Gun-Toting Family Photo

    Tennessee Lawmaker Has Defiant Response To Uproar Over Gun-Toting Family Photo

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    Rep. Andy Ogles (R-Tenn.) has responded to backlash over a 2021 photo showing the congressman, his wife and kids toting rifles in front of a Christmas tree.

    The photo circulated on social media Monday after the freshman congressman offered his “thoughts and prayers” to the families of three children and three adults shot dead at The Covenant School, a Nashville private school in the district he represents.

    “Why would I regret a photograph with my family exercising my rights to bear arms?” he reportedly replied.

    Amid uproar over Ogles’ statement and the photo on Monday, the 2021 post disappeared from Ogles’ social media. A spokesperson for the congressman didn’t return HuffPost’s request for comment on why it was removed.

    Thousands of social media users shared the image, including prominent gun control advocates Fred Guttenberg and Shannon Watts and lawmakers including Rep. Veronica Escobar (D-Texas) and Rep. Greg Landsman (D-Ohio).

    A 28-year-old was killed by police after fatally shooting three 9-year-old students and three adults at The Covenant School. Authorities said the shooter was wielding a rifle, an assault rifle-style pistol and a handgun, and had legally purchased seven firearms in the years prior to the attack.

    Ogles, the former mayor of Maury County, Tennessee, boasts on his House bio that he was recognized as “Tennessee’s most conservative mayor.” He was exposed in February for embellishing parts of his résumé during his congressional campaign, including his college degree and his alleged work fighting international sex trafficking.

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