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Tag: Michigan

  • Michigan mother found guilty of murder in starvation death of her disabled 15-year-old son

    Michigan mother found guilty of murder in starvation death of her disabled 15-year-old son

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    A jury on Friday found a western Michigan woman guilty of murder and child abuse in the starvation death of her disabled 15-year-old son who weighed just 69 pounds.

    The Muskegon County Circuit Court jury deliberated just over an hour before convicting Shanda Vander Ark, 44, of Norton Shores in the July 6, 2022, death of Timothy Ferguson.

    An autopsy determined the teenager died from malnourishment and hypothermia. The medical examiner ruled his death a homicide.

    Video shown by Court TV appeared to show Vander Ark become violently ill after being shown photos of her son’s emaciated body.

    Vander Ark was sick and not in the courtroom when the jury reached its verdict. The judge said Vander Ark was not required by law to be present for her verdict, WZZM-TV reported

    She faces mandatory life in prison when she is sentenced Jan. 29.

    Vander Ark’s attorney, Fred Johnson, argued his client did not grasp the harm she caused her son and did not know he was starving to death.

    However, a Muskegon County deputy prosecutor, Matt Roberts, disputed that notion and said she tortured her son by feeding him hot sauce, putting him in ice baths, depriving him of sleep and locking the refrigerator and food cabinets.

    “She killed him. She starved him to death,” Roberts said.

    Timothy Ferguson had some mental disabilities and was being home-schooled, prosecutors have said.

    Vander Ark’s other son, 20-year-old Paul Ferguson, allegedly participated in the abuse, WZZM reported. Paul Ferguson faces one count of first-degree child abuse. 

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  • Biden losing support in Michigan, a state he won in 2020, over Israel-Hamas war response

    Biden losing support in Michigan, a state he won in 2020, over Israel-Hamas war response

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    Biden losing support in Michigan, a state he won in 2020, over Israel-Hamas war response – CBS News


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    President Biden’s handling of the Israel-Hamas war continues to be met with majority disapproval, according to a new CBS News poll. The president is losing voter support in Michigan, a state he won in the 2020 election, over the war response. CBS News’ Ed O’Keefe reports.

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  • Teen Gets Life in Prison for Oxford High School Attack

    Teen Gets Life in Prison for Oxford High School Attack

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    PONTIAC, Mich. — A judge sentenced a Michigan teenager to life in prison Friday for killing four students and terrorizing others at Oxford High School, after listening to hours of gripping anguish from parents and wounded survivors.

    Judge Kwame Rowe rejected pleas from defense lawyers for a shorter sentence and ensured that Ethan Crumbley, 17, will not get an opportunity for parole.

    “My actions were what I chose to do. I could not stop myself. … I am a really bad person. I’ve done terrible things,” Crumbley, who was 15 when he attacked his school in 2021, said before the sentence was announced.

    He said he was sorry and pledged to change while behind bars.

    Life sentences for teenagers are rare in Michigan since the U.S. Supreme Court and the state’s highest court said the violent acts of minors must be viewed differently than the crimes of adults. But the Oakland County prosecutor said a no-parole term fits Crumbley’s case.

    Rowe’s decision followed deeply emotional remarks by families of the deceased and survivors who spoke about how the tragedy has affected them.

    “Your statements,” Rowe said, “do not fall on deaf ears.”

    Crumbley pleaded guilty to 24 charges, including first-degree murder and terrorism.

    “We are miserable. We miss Tate,” said Buck Myre, the father of Tate Myre. “Our family has a permanent hole in it that can never be fixed — ever.”

    Nicole Beausoleil recalled seeing the body of her daughter, Madisyn Baldwin, at the medical examiner’s office, her hand with blue-painted fingernails sticking out from a covering.

    “I looked though the glass. My scream should have shattered it,” Beausoleil said.

    Jill Soave, the mother of Justin Shilling, told the shooter that he executed a boy who could have helped him navigate awkward teenage years.

    “If you were that lonely, that miserable and lost, and you really needed a friend, Justin would have been your friend — if only you had asked,” Soave said.

    Crumbley looked down as Soave and others spoke. He also will have an opportunity to address the judge and possibly explain why he believes he should be spared a life sentence.

    Kylie Ossege explained how she had urged Hana St. Juliana a “thousand times” to keep breathing while they waited for help on a blood-soaked carpet. Her classmate died.

    Ossege, now a college student, was shot and continues to struggle with daily pain from spinal injuries.

    “Being able to swing a leg over my horse is my therapy. It is pure joy,” she said of Blaze. “I have not been able to do it for two years.”

    Defense attorney Paulette Michel Loftin has argued Crumbley deserves an opportunity for parole after his “sick brain” is fixed through counseling and rehabilitation.

    But St. Juliana’s father scoffed at that possibility.

    “There can be no rehabilitation,” Steve St. Juliana told the judge. “There is absolutely nothing the defendant can do to earn my forgiveness. His age plays no part.”

    In a journal, the shooter wrote about his desire to watch students suffer and the likelihood that he would spend his life in prison. He made a video on the eve of the shooting, declaring what he would do the next day.

    More than 20 people gave victim-impact statements by early Friday afternoon. Some wore shirts honoring the fallen students. The judge briefly allowed a framed photo of Myre to be placed near him.

    Speakers recalled the day and its aftermath in details large and small. One woman said she’s still anxious simply pulling into Meijer, a big-box store where families reunited immediately after the shooting.

    Linda Watson said her son, Aiden, who was shot in the leg, still doesn’t go to school for a full day. She recalled the family staying in a hotel because a nail gun being used in her neighborhood sounded like a real gun to him.

    “Aiden will be dealing with this for the rest of his life. … This shooter — this monster — should have to feel everything hard and painful for the rest of his life,” Watson said.

    Like their son, Jennifer and James Crumbley are locked up in the county jail. They are awaiting trial on involuntary manslaughter charges, accused of making a gun accessible at home and neglecting the shooter’s mental health.

    Crumbley and his parents met with school staff on the day of the shooting after a teacher noticed violent drawings. But no one checked his backpack for a gun and he was allowed to stay.

    The shooting happened in Oxford Township, about 40 miles (60 kilometers) north of Detroit. Besides the four students who were killed, six more students and a teacher also were wounded.

    The Oxford school district hired an outside group to conduct an independent investigation. A report released in October said “missteps at each level” — school board, administrators, staff — contributed to the tragedy.

    Crumbley’s behavior in class, including looking at a shooting video and gun ammunition on his phone, should have identified him as a “potential threat of violence,” the report said.

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    ED WHITE and COREY WILLIAMS / AP

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  • Live updates: Ethan Crumbley to be sentenced for Oxford, Michigan, school shooting

    Live updates: Ethan Crumbley to be sentenced for Oxford, Michigan, school shooting

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    Linda Watson gives a victim impact statement on Friday. WDIV

    Linda Watson, whose son Aiden was shot during the Oxford High School shooting, described the horrifying moment she learned what had happened.

    “That was a moment I will never forget,” she said during her victim impact statement ahead of shooter Ethan Crumbley’s sentencing.

    “He was screaming ‘mom, I’ve been shot, help me,’” Watson recalled. “I didn’t know exactly where he was in school at the time, if the danger was over, or if he was even safe.”

    She added that “it was snowing that day, so I told him to bury himself in the snow.”

    Watson described racing to find her son, who had been driven to a nearby business. “Even though it was only minutes, it felt like a lifetime before I found Aiden,” she said.

    Aiden had been shot in the leg. “There was a lot of blood,” his mother said. “It covered his shoe in his pants.”

    Watson stayed overnight at the hospital with her son. “I was so grateful when he woke up,” she said. “I put my head on his chest just to hear his heartbeat, grateful he was alive because some parents didn’t have that the next morning.”

    Aiden has faced a long and painful journey to recover from his injuries, Watson said. In the immediate aftermath of the shooting, he couldn’t walk and needed around-the-clock care, including help getting to the toilet or to the shower. He’s also experienced emotional aftershocks of the shooting, like debilitating panic attacks.

    Watson also described the financial hardships imposed by her son’s medical needs.

    At one point, “I couldn’t stop throwing up because I didn’t know if we were going to be okay financially,” she said.

    Even two years after the massacre, Aiden still hasn’t been able to return to school full term because of the emotional and physical impacts of his injuries, Watson said. He still experiences chronic pain and nerve damage.

    “My son will have to live with pain, trauma, and limitations because of this forever,” she said. “So too, should the shooter have to deal with the consequences of his actions by being incarcerated for the rest of his life.”

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  • Ethan Crumbley sentenced to life without parole for Oxford, Michigan, school shooting

    Ethan Crumbley sentenced to life without parole for Oxford, Michigan, school shooting

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    Justin Shilling Family of Justin Shilling

    Olivia McMillan described receiving an emotional last text from her friend Justin Shilling on the day a shooter opened fire at Oxford High School in 2021.

    McMillan said when her class heard gunshots coming from the hallway, she sent a text to her group chat, which Shilling was a part of.

    Shilling texted back that he was in the bathroom with shooter Ethan Crumbley, she said. The last text his friends received from him said, “I love you guys,” she told the court on Friday at Crumbley’s sentencing hearing. McMillan later found out her friend was dead.

    She said she was thankful to have Shilling as a friend. He always tried to make others laugh, helped with homework and wished his friends luck on their sporting events.

    On the day of the shooting, the class initially thought the loud bangs were just someone slamming lockers or pulling a prank in the hall, McMillan said.

    “I don’t know when my brain flipped and knew that I was in danger and began to move desks, tables, chairs, filing cabinets to barricade the door,” she said.

    For the days after the shooting, McMillan said she still believed Shilling was going to be OK and thought about all of the high school events they had ahead of them.

    “The night after the shooting, I sat in my room alone. There wasn’t a future that didn’t have Justin in it. He was going to get better, and he was going to continue to tease me, he was going to go to prom with us, he was going to graduate and walk across the stage — probably brag about all of the honors and awards he was going to get, we were going to celebrate it,” McMillan said.

    She said from the day she met Shilling she knew she wanted to be his friend. As the two got closer, McMillan said he became like family. 

    “I knew he was going to be in my life for years to come, I just didn’t know it was only going to be as a memory,” McMillan said.

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  • General Motors becomes 1st of Detroit automakers to seal deal with UAW members

    General Motors becomes 1st of Detroit automakers to seal deal with UAW members

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    Auto industry expert discusses latest GM-UAW tentative agreement


    Auto industry expert discusses latest GM-UAW tentative agreement

    04:19

    United Auto Workers union members have voted to approve a new contract with General Motors, making the company the first Detroit automaker to get a ratified deal that could end a contentious and lengthy labor dispute. 

    A vote-tracking spreadsheet on the union’s website shows that with all local union offices reporting, the contract passed by just over 3,400 votes, with 54.7% of the 46,000 UAW members at GM voting in favor.

    A union spokesman on Thursday confirmed that the spreadsheet had the official totals. The outcome was closer than expected after the UAW’s celebrations of victories last month on many key demands that led to six weeks of targeted walkouts against GM, Ford and Stellantis, the maker of Jeep, Dodge and Ram vehicles. On Thursday the contract had a big lead in voting at Ford and Stellantis, with 66.7% in favor at Ford and 66.5% voting for it at Stellantis.

    Voting continues at Ford through early Saturday with only two large factories in the Detroit area and some smaller facilities left to be counted. At Stellantis, three Detroit-area factories were the only large plants yet to vote, with tallies expected to be complete by Tuesday.

    What union members will get

    The three contracts, if approved by 146,000 union members, would dramatically raise pay for autoworkers, with increases and cost-of-living adjustments that would translate into a 33% wage gain. Top assembly plant workers would earn roughly $42 per hour when the contracts expire in April of 2028.

    Voting continues at Ford through early Saturday, where 66.1% of workers voted in favor so far with only a few large factories still counting. At Stellantis, workers had voted 66.5% in favor of the deal as early Thursday, with some large factories yet to finish casting ballots, according to a vote tracker on the UAW website.

    The closer-than-expected outcome comes as some GM workers said that longtime employees were unhappy that they didn’t get larger pay raises like newer workers, and they wanted a bigger pension increase.

    Keith Crowell, the local union president in Arlington, said the plant has a diverse group of workers from full- and part-time temporary hires to longtime assembly line employees. Full-time temporary workers liked the large raises they received and the chance to get top union pay, he said. But many longtime workers didn’t think immediate 11% pay raises under the deal were enough to make up for concessions granted to GM in 2008, he said.

    That year, the union accepted lower pay for new hires and gave up cost of living adjustments and general annual pay raises to help the automakers out of dire financial problems during the Great Recession. Even so, GM and Stellantis, then known as Chrysler, went into government-funded bankruptcies.

    “There was something in there for everybody, but everybody couldn’t get everything they wanted,” Crowell said. “At least we’re making a step in the right direction to recover from 2008.”

    2008 concessions

    Citing the automakers’ strong profits, UAW President Shawn Fain has insisted it was well past time to make up for the 2008 concessions.

    President Joe Biden hailed the resolution of the strike as an early victory for what Biden calls a worker-centered economy. But the success of the tentative contracts will ultimately hinge on the ability of automakers to keep generating profits as they shift toward electric vehicles in a competitive market.

    Thousands of UAW members joined picket lines in targeted strikes starting Sept. 15 before the tentative deals were reached late last month. Rather than striking at one company, the union targeted individual plants at all three automakers. At its peak about 46,000 of the union’s 146,000 workers at the Detroit companies were walking picket lines.

    In the deals with all three companies, longtime workers would get 25% general raises over the life of the contracts with 11% up front. Including cost of living adjustments, they’d get about 33%, the union said.

    The contract took steps toward ending lower tiers of wages for newer hires, reducing the number of years it takes to reach top pay. Many newer hires wanted defined benefit pension plans instead of 401(k) retirement plans. But the companies agreed to contribute 10% per year into 401(k) plans instead.

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  • University of Michigan football head coach suspended

    University of Michigan football head coach suspended

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    University of Michigan football head coach suspended – CBS News


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    Jim Harbaugh, the head coach of the University of Michigan football team, has been suspended for the rest of the regular season. It’s a huge curveball right before one of college football’s biggest weekends and comes amid allegations of an extensive sign-stealing scheme. Michael George has more.

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  • Big Ten suspends Jim Harbaugh 3 games for Michigan’s alleged sign-stealing scheme

    Big Ten suspends Jim Harbaugh 3 games for Michigan’s alleged sign-stealing scheme

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    Big Ten commissioner Tony Petitti has suspended Michigan head coach Jim Harbaugh for three games — or the rest of the Wolverines’ regular season — citing the league’s “sportsmanship” provision. The suspension applies only to game days, so Harbaugh will be able to coach the team during the week.

    The punishment is in response to Michigan staff member Connor Stalions allegedly running an in-person scouting operation where he sent friends to games to video record the sideline play signals of future Michigan opponents.

    The decision comes just hours before No. 2 Michigan is set to play at No. 11 Penn State on Saturday. The Wolverines were in the process of traveling to State College, Pennsylvania, when the decision came down.

    Both the University of Michigan and Harbaugh’s personal attorney, Tom Mars, have vowed a legal challenge. It is expected they will seek a stay from a judge on Friday that would allow Harbaugh to coach Saturday. A more permanent injunction would be sought after that.

    While Friday is a federal holiday — Veterans Day — it is common for courts to have a judge present or on call for emergency stays or issues that arise in all kinds of business disputes.

    “We are dismayed at the Commissioner’s rush to judgment when there is an ongoing NCAA investigation — one in which we are fully cooperating,” Michigan said in a statement that included its intention to seek an injunction.

    “To ensure fairness in the process,” the statement continued, “we intend to seek a court order, together with Coach Harbaugh, preventing this disciplinary action from taking effect.”

    If the suspension holds, it would force Harbaugh to miss Michigan’s final three regular-season games — at Penn State, at Maryland and home in the end-of-the-season rivalry contest against Ohio State.

    Michigan offensive coordinator Sherrone Moore would be expected to serve as interim head coach if Harbaugh is not able to coach. ESPN was the first to report the suspension.

    Both the Wolverines and Buckeyes are currently 9-0 and that game will likely hold significant Big Ten championship and College Football Playoff implications. Harbaugh would be eligible to return for both the Big Ten title game on Dec. 2 and the CFP if Michigan qualifies.

    At the center of the case is Stalions, a former U.S. Naval Academy grad and Marine captain, on the staff and serving as both a recruiting analyst and a sign decipherer.

    He is accused of sending as many as 65 people, according to Yahoo Sports sources, to record games across the Big Ten and the country. Yahoo Sports first reported on Oct. 19 that the NCAA was investigating Michigan after a third-party investigative firm — still yet to be identified — presented evidence of Stalions’ actions.

    Harbaugh immediately denied having any knowledge of how Stalions was able to gain information to steal signs. Harbaugh almost assuredly knew Stalions was stealing signs, but virtually every team in the country has someone who handles those duties. Stalions, who resigned from the program on Nov. 3, said through his attorney that no one at Michigan was aware of what he was doing.

    It is legal under NCAA rules to steal an opponent’s signs. It is against the rules to “in-person scout.” Coaches routinely decipher signs via television broadcast, coaching film and even in-game. They also routinely “share” their findings with other coaches who are about to play a certain team.

    While college coaches view the sharing of stolen signs as part of the game, some believed Stalions’ actions to be dramatically different even though the result is essentially the same.

    Big Ten coaches outlined that position in a conference call with Petitti that ESPN cited as “angry” and “demanding.” Apparently Petitti agreed and decided to apply the league’s little-used “sportsmanship” policy to immediately apply a penalty to Harbaugh even though the NCAA investigation is still ongoing and the Association has not been able to present any findings to either Michigan or the Big Ten that Harbaugh was involved.

    Thus far, sources tell Yahoo Sports, the NCAA has found no ties to Harbaugh or knowledge that Harbaugh knew of Stalions’ in-person tactics. Under a “strict liability rule” that just took effect this year, the NCAA can hold Harbaugh responsible for the actions of any of his assistants or staff members regardless of knowledge. The Big Ten has a similar rule, but it applies to “institutions,” not individual coaches.

    In a letter sent to the Big Ten, Michigan has demanded the Big Ten wait until the full NCAA investigation plays out before issuing a punishment, warning that a lack of “due process” is not only unfair on its own right but sets up a dangerous precedent that the league will regret going forward.

    The 59-year-old Harbaugh is in his ninth season at his alma mater, posting an 80-25 record. He previously coached Stanford and the NFL’s San Francisco 49ers and is almost annually linked as a candidate to professional football coaching vacancies. He served a school-issued three-game suspension at the start of this season for an unrelated NCAA infractions case.

    Michigan has won the last two Big Ten championships, both with Stalions on staff.

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    Ross Dellenger, Yahoo Sports

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  • House votes to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib over controversial remarks about Israel and Palestine war

    House votes to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib over controversial remarks about Israel and Palestine war

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    House votes to censure Rep. Rashida Tlaib over controversial remarks about Israel and Palestine war – CBS News


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    The GOP-led House voted to censure Michigan Congresswoman Rashida Tlaib over her remarks regarding Israel and Hamas. Tlaib is the only Palestinian American in Congress and is one of two Muslim women in the U.S. House and has been accused of promoting false narratives and calling for the destruction of the state of Israel. Nikole Killion has more.

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  • MI Woman Tries Out Lucky for Life for the First Time, Wins $390,000

    MI Woman Tries Out Lucky for Life for the First Time, Wins $390,000

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    A lucky woman from Warren, Michigan, has won a $390,000 jackpot playing Lucky for Life. What makes this win so special is the fact that this was the first time she ever played the game.

    Shayla Kauflin, 39, explained that she bought the Lucky for Life ticket on a whim. She was browsing the Michigan Lottery website, seeking to purchase Powerball tickets online. While looking around, she saw the Lucky for Life game listed. Telling herself “Why not?” Kauflin bought $10 worth of tickets.

    She logged into her lottery account the next day and was surprised to see that she had won a $390,000 prize. In an interview with MLive, she said:

    I logged in to my Lottery account the next day to see if I’d won anything, and when I saw $390,000 pending, I started screaming, crying, and freaking out! I called my husband to tell him how much I’d won, and he was concerned at first because he thought something was wrong.

    Shayla Kauflin, lottery winner

    Kauflin opted to receive $390,000 as a one-time lump-sum, instead of $25,000 a year for 20 years.

    Kauflin told reporters that she plans to celebrate by booking a Disney vacation for her whole family. The woman plans to invest the rest of the sum.

    The woman admitted that the feeling of having won such a sum is indescribable and that she feels like “the weight of the world has been taken off her shoulders.” She admitted that this sum is not enough to change the world but it’s definitely enough to change her world.

    Other Recent Lottery Winners

    Elsewhere, а lucky NJ woman won $290,000 while playing online during a conference call. After placing a $2 bet, the woman hit the jackpot and almost screamed.

    In Chicago, a Lotto player who has yet to claim their prize has won $1.2 million. The ticket was sold at a Jewel Osco store in the Lake View community area on October 27. The store which sold the winning ticket is now set to receive a $12,000 bonus.

    On October 24, meanwhile, an Excalibur visitor hit a $12 million jackpot from a Megabucks slot.

    In the meantime, players in the United States are bracing for the next Powerball draw where $152 million is on the line.

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    Angel Hristov

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  • Detroit Is Paying Up to End the UAW Strike. Now Carmakers Will Live With the Costs.

    Detroit Is Paying Up to End the UAW Strike. Now Carmakers Will Live With the Costs.

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    Updated Oct. 30, 2023 12:50 pm ET

    The United Auto Workers campaign against Detroit’s three automakers can be described as one thing for the union: a win.

    The strike, now in its seventh week, is nearing its conclusion with General Motors on Monday reaching a tentative labor deal with the UAW following similar pacts with Ford Motor and Chrysler-parent Stellantis.

    Copyright ©2023 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

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  • Michigan State employee suspended after Hitler’s image shown on videoboards before football game

    Michigan State employee suspended after Hitler’s image shown on videoboards before football game

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    Michigan State athletic director Alan Haller said he has suspended an employee involved in allowing Adolf Hitler’s image to be shown on videoboards before playing No. 2 Michigan.

    The employee, who was not named, will be paid pending an investigation that will help to determine potential action in the future. Haller said no one in the department viewed the entire video, exposing a failure in its process.

    “Antisemitism must be denounced,” Haller said in a statement Sunday Night. “The image displayed prior to Saturday night’s game is not representative of who we are and the culture we embody. Nevertheless, we must own our failures and accept responsibility.

    The creator and producer of The Quiz Channel on YouTube, which includes Hitler’s image as part of a quiz, said the school didn’t ask for permission to use his content or pay him for it and defended his decision to include the question on his platform.

    “It’s an absolutely normal trivia question, shown in an inappropriate setting,” Floris van Pallandt wrote on his YouTube page. “Ignoring the dark facets of history is by no means the answer, on the contrary.”

    The channel is publicly available and free for users.

    While the Wolverines were finishing off a 49-0 win over the Spartans on Saturday night, Michigan State spokesman Matt Larson apologized that the inappropriate content was displayed more than an hour before kickoff.

    “MSU will not be using the third-party source going forward and will implement stronger screening and approval procedures for all videoboard content in the future,” Larson said.

    Michigan State streamed The Quiz Channel, which had 40 questions in its latest video, including asking where was Hitler born with his image before showing Austria as the answer. The previous question asked, “In Star Trek, what color was Spock’s blood?” before green was shown as the answer.

    “I am deeply sorry for the image displayed at Spartan Stadium, which made many of our community feel alienated and unsafe,” interim university President Teresa Woodruff said Sunday. “It was unacceptable. I asked last evening for a full review of this university event and will take all necessary steps to align our messages and actions to our values.

    “I will work with our Jewish community and every member of minoritized populations to ensure Spartans feel that this is a place where everyone can live, work, go to class and attend events that are welcoming.”

    Later Sunday, Haller apologized and said his department is responsible for all content on its videoboards.

    COLLEGE FOOTBALL: OCT 30 Michigan at Michigan State
    Michigan State athletic director Alan Haller celebrates after a college football game between the Michigan State Spartans and the Michigan Wolverines on October 30, 2021 at Spartan Stadium in East Lansing, Michigan.

    Adam Ruff/Icon Sportswire via Getty Images


    “Ultimately, it is my responsibility to make sure all those who interact with Spartan Athletics feel safe, valued and respected,” Haller said. “The image was harmful to our communities, especially our Jewish community which is currently experiencing a rise in antisemitism, including acts of violence.”

    Haller said he will reach out to Jewish community groups in the East Lansing area and on campus to tell them personally how the department failed and provide a chance to give feedback.

    “I understand our response might be met with skepticism,” Haller said. “That skepticism is warranted, and we will do all that is necessary to earn back your trust.”

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  • Police are searching for motive in the death of the Detroit synagogue leader who was found with multiple stab wounds | CNN

    Police are searching for motive in the death of the Detroit synagogue leader who was found with multiple stab wounds | CNN

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    CNN
     — 

    Investigators are searching for a motive in the death of a Detroit synagogue leader found stabbed over the weekend, the city’s police chief said.

    The body of Samantha Woll, president of the board of the Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue, was discovered with multiple stab wounds at her home on Saturday morning, the Detroit Police Department said in a statement. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

    Responding officers had followed “a trail of blood leading officers to the victim’s residence,” where it is believed the crime happened, the Detroit Police Department said in a statement.

    Police have not identified a suspect in the case, and it’s still unclear what led up to the killing.

    “Understandably, this crime leaves many unanswered questions,” Detroit Police Chief James E. White said in a statement on social media site X. “This matter is under investigation, and I am asking that everyone remain patient while investigators carefully examine every aspect of the available evidence.”

    “It is important that no conclusions be drawn until all of the available facts are reviewed,” White added.

    The FBI is aware of the incident, and “will assist the Detroit Police Department as requested,” the agency said in a statement to CNN.

    Michigan State Police have also been assigned to support local police in the case, Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer announced. “Together, they will investigate this vicious crime and bring the perpetrator to justice,” she added.

    “My heart breaks for her family, her friends, her synagogue, and all those who were lucky enough to know her,” Whitmer said. “She was a source of light, a beacon in her community who worked hard to make Michigan a better place.

    Woll’s synagogue released a statement Saturday expressing shock over the her death.

    “We are shocked and saddened to learn of the unexpected death of Samantha Woll, our Board President,” the synagogue said. “May her memory be a blessing.”

    Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan said he and Woll were celebrating the newly renovated synagogue together just a few weeks ago.

    “It was a project she successfully led with great pride and enthusiasm,” Duggan said. “This entire city joins with her family and friends in mourning her tragic death.”

    MoReno Taylor II, who worked with Woll on Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel’s reelection campaign in 2022, said her death was “a devastating loss.”

    “Sam was a bright ball of light,” he told CNN. “She lit up every room that she walked into. She always had a huge smile. She always gave you a firm handshake and asked about you, wanted to get to know who you were.”

    He remembered Woll as a kind soul who was always involved in her community and was dedicated to giving back.

    “She didn’t deserve this, and I really hope that they find a resolution to this as soon as possible and find whoever is responsible,” he said.

    Taylor said he knew Woll for five years, and thought of her as a little sister.

    “It’s very difficult to imagine that someone who was so genuine and so kind could befall this kind of tragedy,” he added.

    Attorney General Nessel also shared her condolences in a statement on Facebook, saying, “Sam was as kind a person as I’ve ever known. She was driven by her sincere love of her community, state and country.”

    Woll had also previously worked with Congresswoman Elissa Slotkin, according to a post on Slotkin’s social media.

    The congresswoman said Woll “dedicated her short life to building understanding across faiths, bringing light in the face of darkness.”

    The Democrat said Woll worked for her by helping set up the office and leading it throughout her first term.

    “My heart aches that we have lost someone so dedicated to serving others in such a senseless act. I’ll miss her relentless desire to serve & her bright smile seemingly everywhere across the Detroit area,” the congresswoman said.

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  • Slain synagogue leader was an ally of Muslims “We refuse to be enemies”

    Slain synagogue leader was an ally of Muslims “We refuse to be enemies”

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    Samantha Woll, the Detroit synagogue leader who was killed on Saturday, was known as a “bridge builder” between Muslims and Jewish communities, according to her loved ones and local advocacy groups.

    Woll, 40, the board president of the Isaac Agree Downtown Synagogue (IADS) since 2022, was found stabbed to death Saturday morning outside her home in Detroit’s Lafayette Park neighborhood, according to the Detroit Police Department and Michigan State Police (MSP).

    “The Michigan State Police is on the ground and working with the Detroit Police Department as they continue to investigate the tragic death of Samantha Woll,” MSP Col. James F. Grady II said in a statement.

    A motive for Woll’s slaying had not been determined at the time of publication. DPD Chief James E. White cautioned against drawing conclusions while urging people to be patient as the investigation continues, according to a statement by the department Saturday night.

    The Detroit synagogue board president, 40-year-old Samantha Woll, was found stabbed to death on October 21 outside of her home, according to local authorities.
    Courtesy of Jewish Community Relations Council

    Newsweek reached out via email and Facebook on Saturday to the DPD and the IADS for comment.

    Woll was lauded for her professional accomplishments in the feature article “36 Under 36” by The Detroit Jewish News in 2017. The outlet noted that she had been “instrumental” in founding the Muslim-Jewish Forum of Detroit, which fosters positive relationships between those communities.

    The “36 Under 36” feature said that the forum Woll co-founded has helped to “build and deepen” relationships that did not previously exist between the young Jewish and Muslim people in the area.

    “By extending her hand and creating space for connection between Muslims and Jews, she has exemplified the values of healing the world,” The Detroit Jewish News wrote.

    Newsweek reached out via Facebook to the Muslim-Jewish Forum of Detroit for comment.

    Sam Dubin, a spokesperson for the Jewish Community Relations Council (JCRC), told Newsweek on Saturday night that the advocacy group is “absolutely heartbroken” over Woll’s death and harkened her as “an incredible leader.”

    Dubin said Woll, who was a JCRC member, was a “passionate Muslim-Jewish bridge builder.”

    “We are grieving for her family and our community,” Dubin said. “She will forever be remembered as a ray of sunlight to all who knew her.”

    Woll has led efforts to unite the two communities for years, including a 2015 event she hosted at Wayne State University to bring together “unconventional allies,” Woll told Detroit public radio station WDET. The public event was planned by the Greater Detroit Muslim Jewish Solidarity Counciland included artwork and essays from Muslim and Jewish high school students who participated in a program called “We Refuse to Be Enemies.”

    During her role as board president of the IADS, a century-old institution that is the only free-standing synagogue in downtown Detroit, Woll recently led the renovation of the renovation of the historic building on Griswold Street.

    Detroit Mayor Mike Duggan wrote in a post on X, formerly Twitter, praised Woll’s efforts on the renovation and said that he was “devastated” by the loss of “one of Detroit’s great young leaders.”

    “Just weeks ago, I shared a day of joy with Sam at the dedication of the newly renovated Downtown Synagogue,” he wrote. “It was a project she successfully led with great pride and enthusiasm.”

    In a subsequent post, the mayor added: “Sam’s loss has left a huge hole in the Detroit community. This entire city joins with her family and friends in mourning her tragic death.”

    Woll was also the co-chair of the American Jewish Committee’s ACCESS Detroit Young Leadership Program and a board member of the Jewish Historical Society of Michigan.

    In addition to being active in the Jewish community, Woll also had political connections. She previously worked for U.S. Representative Elissa Slotkin and on the campaigns of Michigan Attorney General Dana Nessel and State Representative Stephanie Chang, all Democrats.

    Chang said in a Facebook post that Woll was a “beautiful friend.”

    “Sam Woll was an endlessly positive, brilliant, creative, supportive, beautiful friend with a big heart and wonderful smile,” Chang said in the post, adding that Woll was “passionate about social justice, Detroit, her faith, and bringing people together.”