WAUKESHA – A treasured rite of the holiday season turned into a scene of bloody, deadly mayhem late Sunday afternoon as a vehicle plowed into the Waukesha Christmas Parade, killing some and leaving more than 20 people injured, authorities said.
There were some fatalities but a figure was not released as authorities sought to notify families.
Eleven adults and 12 children were ferried to local hospitals. Others were taken by friends and family. Children’s Wisconsin hospital said it had 15 patients and no fatalities.
Waukesha Mayor Shawn Reilly called the incident a “horrible and senseless act.”
Waukesha Police Chief Dan Thompson said that around 4:39 p.m. a red SUV broke through the parade barriers and headed west on Main Street.
“The vehicle struck more than 20 individuals. Some of the individuals were children and there were some fatalities as a result of this incident,” he said.
A suspect vehicle was recovered and a “person of interest” was in custody, the police chief said. People were transported to hospitals via ambulances and police vehicles, he added.
“Very tragic incident, very chaotic,” Thompson said.
Thompson said during the incident “an officer discharged his weapon at the suspect vehicle to try to stop the vehicle. No bystanders were injured as a result of the weapon discharge.”
The incident occurred during one of the city’s biggest and most cherished annual events. A joyous crowd lined both sides of the road, people bundled against the cold.
One video showed the red SUV on the parade route, veering down the street and pulling left behind the Waukesha South High School Black Shirt Band.
Corey Montiho, a School District of Waukesha board member, was by Mainstream Bar & Grill when he heard that his daughter’s youth dance team was hit.
“There were pom-poms and shoes and spilled hot chocolate everywhere,” he said. “I had to go from one crumpled body to the other to find my daughter. My wife and two daughters were almost hit. Please pray for everybody. Please pray. My family is safe but many are not. I held one little girl’s head in my hand, she was seizing and she was bleeding out of her ears. I held her mother as she collapsed. Please pray.”
In a Facebook post, the Waukesha Xtreme Dance team thanked those who checked on the safety of team members and their families.
“Please keep them in your thoughts and prayers,” the group said, adding it would provide “an update when we know more.”
Videos and eyewitnesses on social media appear to show the “Milwaukee Dancing Grannies” being struck by the vehicle. Members range in age from their early 50s to mid-70s. The only requirement is that members must be grandmothers themselves, the website said.
“Members of the group and volunteers were impacted and we are waiting for word on their conditions,” said a Facebook post from the Milwaukee Dancing Grannies. “Please keep the Grannies, all those injured, and all those who witnessed this horrible event in your thoughts and prayers.”
The Catholic Community of Waukesha confirmed on Facebook that several parishioners were injured and are hospitalized.
The Archdiocese of Milwaukee of Milwaukee said one of those injured was a Catholic priest “as well as multiple parishioners and Waukesha Catholic school children.”
Angelito Tenorio, a West Allis alderman who is running for Wisconsin state treasurer, said he had just finished marching in the parade with his family and friends and was walking back toward Main Street.
“As we were walking back in between the buildings we saw an SUV cross over, just put the pedal to the metal and just zooming full speed along the parade route. And then we heard a loud bang, and just deafening cries and screams from people who are struck by the vehicle,” Tenorio said. “And then, and then we saw people running away or stopping crying, and there, there are people on the ground who looked like they’d been hit by the vehicle.”
Videos posted to social media, including a live feed of the parade operated by the City of Waukesha, show a red SUV breaking through barriers and speeding into the roadway where the parade was taking place.
In the city’s footage, taken from a distance, the SUV speeds into the parade just behind a school marching band.
A reporter at the scene along West Main Street said that a red SUV came barreling down the street and the crowd could hear the thuds as it struck people, leaving many on the ground.
Some people got up and ran into nearby stores. Many were screaming and crying.
Then police officers ran down the street, telling people to go into the stores and get off the street.
Just prior to the incident, the reporter saw several dance groups in the parade route, with spectators around two rows deep on each side of the road.
Ashlee Coronado, a 12-year-old who attends Waukesha STEM Academy, was at the parade with her mother.
“We were excited to see the truck with the fire and the hot air with it,” she said. “We always get excited for it because it is cold that that warms us. Then right then, a red (vehicle) drove past me and my cousins. He was going very fast and hit a gentleman. At first, I thought he was a part of the parade. And then I thought this is real. We were all screaming. We were not even two feet away.”
Kimberlee Coronado said: “We grabbed our kids and got to our cars and got out of there. It was very scary.”
Police moved to shut down several streets in downtown Waukesha. Several different law enforcement agencies were at the scene and up until around 6 p.m., ambulances were seen leaving the area.
Paradegoers were still wandering around the city.
Ald. Don Paul Browne said he had been marching in the front of the parade and was almost home when his wife texted asking if he was OK.
“I am in shock,” he said. “This parade draws people from all over, even Jefferson County. I am numb. It is pretty upsetting.”
He added, “My inclination was to try to help, but that may be the last thing the police would need. The best I can do is be a source for people. … It breaks my heart.”
State Rep. Sara Rodriguez, who represents parts of Waukesha, marched in the parade with the Waukesha County Democrats. Rodriguez said Sunday night her group had finished marching when the SUV plowed through the crowd.
“I didn’t directly witness the car coming through — we had finished the parade route and so it came after when we were done,” she said. “People were running and screaming and moving out of the way. … My thoughts and prayers are with the families of those who’ve been injured.”
Gov. Tony Evers issued a statement that said: “Kathy and I are praying for Waukesha tonight and all the kids, families, and community members affected by this senseless act. I’m grateful for the first responders and folks who acted quickly to help, and we are in contact with local partners as we await more information.”
The parade runs through the downtown area of Waukesha.
Waukesha is celebrating its 125th year with celebrations throughout the year. The parade is always one of the biggest events of the year in the city. The parade is the official kickoff to the holiday season in downtown Waukesha.
The School District of Waukesha announced classes will be closed Monday with “counselors available during the school day at all buildings for all students that may be in need of support services.”
This is a developing story. Check back later for updates.
Kaylee Staral, Evan Casey, Drake Bentley, Sam Hendrickson, Cathy Kozlowicz, Sophie Carson and Chris Kuhagen of the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel staff contributed to this report.
In the absence of a fully functioning government since the killing of Mr. Moïse, the gangs’ power has only grown.
A spate of natural disasters has made things only worse.
In August, a magnitude 7.2 earthquake deepened the devastation of a country that has yet to recover from a quake in 2010 that killed more than 200,000 people. Rescue efforts this summer were initially hampered by security concerns, and aid flowed freely only after gangs that controlled a highway connecting the southern peninsula to the rest of Haiti declared a truce.
A severe storm followed days later.
In recent weeks, Haitian security forces have stepped up their operations to counter the criminal organizations, but security experts say that the government lacks a coherent strategy. The Haitian police need a complete overhaul, with thousands more police officers needed, a renewed focus on vetting during recruitment and money to buy new equipment, increase salaries and restore morality, American officials say.
Unless a reformed police force can step in to reimpose control after neighborhoods are cleared of the gangs, observers say, the government will be unable to restore stability.
The surging gang violence has prompted peaceful protests of late, with groups in towns and cities demanding a government response. Some blockaded roads and set tires on fire, a common protest symbol in Haiti.
Harold Isaac contributed reporting from Port-au-Prince and Oscar Lopez from Mexico City.
PLACIDA – Kyle Rittenhouse was spotted eating at a Placida restaurant, according to a tweet from Republican Party of Florida Chair of Chairs Evan Power. Rittenhouse recently spoke with FOX News host Tucker Carlson, for an interview that will be reportedly be broadcast Monday night.
The tweet by Power shows Rittenhouse sitting at Smokin’ Jerry’s Tiki Hut Bar & Grill on Gasparilla Road in Charlotte County, south of the coastal community of Englewood in Southwest Florida, with at least six other patrons.
Florida GOP Chairman Joe Gruters confirmed that Rittenhouse was in the area this weekend, for a segment for Carlson.
“I don’t know who he’s staying with, other than he’s doing the Tucker Carlson Show,” Gruters said Sunday night.
“I always forget that Tucker Carlson has a place in Boca Grande so he’s probably getting ready for Thanksgiving and they probably have a little studio right there.”
Though Power tweeted the photo, it is not clear whether he captured the image.
Rittenhouse was found not guilty Nov. 19 on five charges, including intentional homicide, more than a year after he shot three men during a protest in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Rittenhouse shot three men – Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber, who died – and wounded Gaige Gosskreutz in the summer of 2020 during protests that followed the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a black man, in Kenosha.
Rittenhouse and his attorneys argued that he acted in self defense.
In a clip released online by FOX News, Rittenhouse told Carlson for his program: “This case had nothing to do with race, it never had anything to do with race. It had to do with the right to self-defense.
“I’m not a racist person,” he continued. “I support the BLM movement, I support peacefully demonstrating.”
Earle Kimel primarily covers south Sarasota County for the Herald-Tribune and can be reached at earle.kimel@heraldtribune.com. Support local journalism with a digital subscription to the Herald-Tribune.
Civil rights attorney Leo Terrell reacts to Democrats’ claim of ‘White supremacy’ following Rittenhouse verdict on ‘Justice with Judge Jeanine’
NBC anchor Maria Shriver sparked online outrage for tweeting her controversial thoughts on Friday’s verdict in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial.
Rittenhouse, who is now 18, was charged with first-degree reckless homicide, two counts of first-degree intentional homicide and two counts of first-degree reckless endangerment after shooting and killing two men and injuring another during a riot in Kenosha, Wisconsin, in August 2020 following the police shooting of Jacob Blake. Rittenhouse would have faced a mandatory life sentence if convicted of first-degree intentional homicide.
Judge Bruce Schroeder, right, listens as the verdicts are ready by Judicial Assistant Tami Mielcarek in Kyle Rittenhouse’s trial at the Kenosha County Courthouse in Kenosha, Wis., on Friday, Nov. 19, 2021. The jury came back with its verdict afer close to 3 1/2 days of deliberation. (Sean Krajacic/The Kenosha News via AP, Pool) (Sean Krajacic/The Kenosha News via AP, Pool)
Shriver, however, said she was confused by the jury’s decision. She appeared to join several other media figures who have expressed their outrage over the verdict and suggested the defendant was guilty as charged.
“I’m trying to take a beat to digest the Rittenhouse verdict,” Shriver tweeted Friday. “My son just asked me how it’s possible that he didn’t get charged for anything. How is that possible? I don’t have an answer for him.”
“The idea that someone could be out with a semi-automatic weapon, kill people, and walk is stunning. I look forward to hearing from the jury. This is a moment for them to explain how they came to their decision,” she said in a follow-up tweet.
Several people took issue with her summary of the situation, noting she left out how Rittenhouse claimed he was acting in self-defense the night of the shootings and first went to Kenosha to try and keep the peace as riots erupted in the city.
Fox Nation host Joey Jones listed for Shriver a few important items that led to Rittenhouse’s acquittal.
Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, said it was “pretty stunning” that Shriver is an NBC anchor, before he too laid out the facts of the case.
KENOSHA, WISCONSIN – NOVEMBER 17: Demonstrators gather outside of the Kenosha County Courthouse as the jury deliberates for a second day in the trial of Kyle Rittenhouse on November 17, 2021 in Kenosha, Wisconsin. Rittenhouse, a teenager, faces homicide charges and other offenses in the fatal shootings of Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber and for shooting and wounding of Gaige Grosskreutz during unrest in Kenosha that followed the police shooting of Jacob Blake in August 2020. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images) (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Others mocked her apparent misunderstanding of the case.
“What? Were you not following the case at all? It’s one thing to disagree with the verdict, but another thing entirely to say you don’t have even a basic grasp of the issues at play. Especially when you’re an anchor for a major news network,” firearms reporter Stephen Gutowski said.
Liberal lawmakers and pundits from networks like MSNBC labeled Rittenhouse a “White supremacist” both before and after the conclusion of the trial.
Kyle Rittenhouse hugs one of his attorneys, Corey Chirafisi, after he is found not guilt on all counts at the Kenosha County Courthouse in Kenosha, Wis., on Friday, Nov. 19, 2021. The jury came back with its verdict afer close to 3 1/2 days of deliberation. (Sean Krajacic/The Kenosha News via AP, Pool) (Sean Krajacic/The Kenosha News via AP, Pool)
Several of Rittenhouse’s supporters, including Covington Catholic High School graduate Nicholas Sandmann, who was demonized in 2019 following a viral video that was largely taken out context, encouraged Rittenhouse to sue the media outlets with defamation who essentially convicted him, some of whom deemed him guilty before the trial even got underway.
“Kyle was almost immediately labeled a ‘White supremacist’ and a ‘domestic terrorist,’” Sandmann recently wrote in The Daily Mail.
“To many, my red MAGA hat clearly meant that I was a racist,” Sandmann continued. “Kyle wasn’t given his day in court by his critics. And neither was I. The attacks on Kyle came from the national news media, just as they came for me. They came quickly, without hesitation, because Kyle was an easy target that they could paint in the way they wanted to.”
CNN ended up settling a multimillion-dollar defamation lawsuit with Sandmann in January 2020.
Violent protests have broken out against COVID-19 vaccine mandates and lockdowns across Europe amid new tough rules to curb winter waves of the virus.
Demonstrators angry about the new measures gathered in Austria, Croatia, Italy, Northern Ireland, the French territory of Guadeloupe and the Netherlands to protest the moves.
In the Netherlands, a second night of riots broke out Saturday over a partial lockdown, one day after police opened fire on people protesting the rules in Rotterdam.
Protesters hurled fireworks at police and set fire to bicycles in The Hague, as cops used horses, dogs and batons to chase the crowds away, the BBC reported.
Police said a rock was hurled through the window of an ambulance carrying a patient.
At least five officers were injured, with one taken away by ambulance with a knee injury, during the melees, officials said.
Despite more than 70 percent of the country being fully vaccinated, it imposed a three-week partial lockdown last weekend after recording a record spike in cases.
Bars and restaurants must close at 8 p.m., and crowds are banned at sports events.
In Northern Ireland, several hundred people opposed to vaccine passports gathered outside City Hall in Belfast, where the Christmas market opened Saturday — and proof of vaccination or a negative COVID-19 test was necessary to enter.
In Italy, 3,000 protesters showed up to Circus Maximus, an ancient chariot-racing ground in Rome, to protest against “Green Pass” vaccine certificates required at local workplaces, restaurants, cinemas, theaters, sports venues and gyms.
“People like us never give up,” read one banner in the red, white and green colors of the Italian flag.
Tens of thousands of people, including far-right groups, also joined protests in Austria on Saturday after the government announced a new national lockdown and plans to make the vaccine a requirement in February 2022.
Protesters chanted, “Resistance!” and blew whistles in the massive Heldenplatz square ahead of the lockdown, which will start Monday and last 10 days but could go up to 20.
People will be able to leave their homes only for reasons such as buying groceries, going to the doctor or exercising.
On Saturday night, the demonstrators threw bottles and beer cans and fired pyrotechnics at police, who then used pepper spray to disperse the crowds.
Police said several protesters were detained, though didn’t provide specific numbers.
Meanwhile, in Croatia, thousands of people gathered to carry flags and nationalist and religious symbols to protest mandatory vaccinations for public-sector workers.
In Switzerland, 2,000 people gathered to oppose an upcoming referendum on whether to approve the government’s COVID-19 restrictions law, claiming it was discriminatory, public broadcaster SRF reported.
Violent protests also broke out on the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, one of France’s overseas territories.
Protesters staged road blockades and set cars on fire in response to France’s COVID-19 health pass that is required to enter restaurants and cafes, cultural venues and sport arenas.
At least 29 people were detained by authorities overnight, French Interior Minister Gerald Darmanin said.
French authorities said they were sending around 200 more officers to the island and on Tuesday will impose a nightly curfew from 6 p.m. to 5 a.m.
WAUKESHA – A car plowed into the Waukesha Christmas Parade Sunday evening, leaving multiple people injured, according to witnesses on scene.
Multiple people were on the ground injured after the crash, which occurred shortly before 5 p.m., witnesses said.
There were unconfirmed reports that shots were fired during the incident, which occurred during one of the city’s biggest and most cherished annual events.
Angelito Tenorio, a West Allis alderman who is running for Wisconsin state treasurer, said he had just finished marching in the parade with his family and friends and was walking back toward Main Street.
“As we were walking back in between the buildings that we saw an SUV crossover, just put the pedal to the metal and just zooming full speed along the parade route. And then we heard a loud bang, and just deafening cries and screams from people who are who are struck by the vehicle,” Tenorio said. “And then, and then we saw people running away or stopping crying, and there, there are people on the ground who looked like they’d been hit by the vehicle.”
He added, “It just all happened so fast.”
Videos posted to social media, including a live feed of the parade operated by the City of Waukesha, show a red SUV breaking through barriers and speeding into the roadway where the parade was taking place.
In the city’s footage, taken from a distance, the SUV speeds into the parade just behind a school marching band.
A reporter at the scene said that a red SUV came barreling down the street, and the crowd could hear the thuds as it struck people, leaving many on the ground.
Some people got up and ran into nearby stores. Many were screaming and crying.
Then police officers ran down the street, telling people to go into the stores and get off the street. They also said shots had been fired and warned at least 30 people were down, the reporter said.
Police moved to shut down several streets in downtown Waukesha. Several different law enforcement agencies were at the scene and up until around 6 p.m. ambulances were seen leaving the area.
Parade-goers were still wandering around the city.
Alderman Don Paul Browne said he had been marching in the front of the parade and was almost home when his wife texted asking if he was okay.
“I am in shock,” he said. “This parade draws people from all over, even Jefferson County. I am numb. It is pretty upsetting.”
He added, “My inclination was to try to help, but that may be the last thing the police would need. The best I can do is be a source for people. We have to worry about shootings now. It breaks my heart.”
Rep. Sara Rodriguez, who represents parts of Waukesha, marched in the parade with the Waukesha County Democrats. Rodriguez said Sunday night her group had finished marching when the SUV plowed through the crowd.
“I didn’t directly witness the car coming through — we had finished the parade route and so it came after when we were done,” she said. “People were running and screaming and moving out of the way … My thoughts and prayers are with the families of those who’ve been injured.”
The parade runs through the downtown area of Waukesha.
Waukesha is celebrating its 125th year with celebrations throughout the year. The parade is always one of the biggest events of the year in the city. The parade is the official kickoff to the holiday season in downtown Waukesha
Cathy Kozlowicz and Kaylee Staral of the Journal Sentinel contributed to this report.
This is a developing story. Check back later for updates.
WALNUT CREEK (CBS SF) — Dozens of looters swarmed into the Nordstrom store in downtown Walnut Creek Saturday night, terrorizing shoppers, assaulting employees, ripping off bag loads of merchandise and ransacking shelves before fleeing in a several vehicles waiting for them on the street.
Walnut Creek Lt. Ryan Hibbs told KPIX that three people were in custody and others were being sought.
“Walnut Creek police investigators are in the process of reviewing surveillance footage to attempt to identify other suspects responsible for this brazen act,” authorities said in Sunday morning news release.
Police began receiving calls from Nordstrom employees about the looting at around 9 p.m. He said there were approximately 80 individuals who ran into the store and began looting and smashing shelves.
Two employees suffered injuries when they were assaulted and another was pepper sprayed by the suspects.
Video shot at the scene shows the masked looters streaming out of the store, carrying bags and boxes, jumping into the cars.
Dozens of police vehicles also responded to the scene.
An 18-year-old Oakland man and two people from San Francisco, ages 30 and 32, were taken into custody. Police also seized a gun from one of the suspects.
The male was charged with robbery, possession of stolen property, conspiracy to commit burglary and possession of burglary tools. The female was arrested for unlawful possession of a firearm.
Stolen property from the looting and a firearm was recovered from their vehicle.
A third suspect was caught on foot and arrested. He was also charged with robbery, possession of stolen property, conspiracy to commit burglary and possession of burglary tools.
Brett Barrette is one of the managers of P.F. Chang’s restaurant across from the Nordstrom store. He watched as the bedlam unfolded.
“I probably saw 50-80 people in like ski masks with crowbars, a bunch of weapons,” he said. “They were looting the Nordstrom.”
“There was a mob of people,” he continued. “The police were flying in. It was like a scene out of a movie. It was insane.”
Barrette also worried about the safety of the diners in his restaurant. Many crowded around the windows to watch the looters flee.
“I had to start locking the front door,” he said. “Locking the back door. You never know, they could come right in here. It was crazy … All the guests inside were getting concerned. It was a scary scene for a moment.”
The acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse, the teenager who fatally shot two protesters and injured another last year, sparked protests in cities across the United States this weekend.
In Chicago, civil rights advocate Rev. Jesse Jackson led a demonstration on Saturday through the city’s downtown area, including on its busy commercial State Street. Hundreds of people could be seen in one video holding signs and banners marching down the street.
In New York, people protested on Friday on the Brooklyn Bridge, and the New York Police Department warned residents to avoid the area and “expect temporary closures and delays in the surrounding vicinity.”
Due to a demonstration, avoid the Manhattan-bound Brooklyn Bridge. Expect temporary closures and delays in the surrounding vicinity. pic.twitter.com/zOEl5yi8Py
CNN reported that the bridge was temporarily closed due to the demonstrations.
In Portland, officials on Friday deemed a demonstration a “riot.”
Multnomah Co. Sheriff’s Office said in a news release that a group of protesters arrived on Friday evening at the Justice Center yelling the phrase “burn it down.” Close to a dozen people eventually entered the building when “deputies met the trespassers on the ramp to prevent entry and began instructing them to exit.”
“The crowd, which was described as hostile, launched urine, alcoholic beverages, water bottles and batteries at deputies during the event,” the sheriff’s office said. “Because a large group of people were engaging in tumultuous and violent conduct, and further entry into the building would have posed significant implications and grave risk of causing public alarm, the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office (MCSO) declared a riot.”
The Portland Police Bureau shared photos of a store and a police car sustaining damages. Another photo showed graffiti reading, “All cops are Kyles,” a spin on the political slogan “All cops are bastards.”
Meanwhile in downtown Oakland, over 100 people engaged in peaceful protests against the verdict on Friday evening, according to CBS San Francisco.
The protests demonstrated a raw wave of emotions felt across the nation after Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted on all five charges he faced, including intentional homicide, after he fatally shot Joseph Rosenbaum and Anthony Huber and injured Gaige Grosskreutz at a demonstration in Kenosha, Wis., following the police shooting of Jacob Blake, a Black man.
Reactions to the verdict were divided along partisan lines, with conservatives cheering the decision, even offering Rittenhouse congressional internships, while Democrats rebuked it.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg said Sunday that there’s “a lot to be upset about” following the not-guilty verdict in the Kyle Rittenhouse trial.
Buttigieg was asked by NBC News anchor Chuck Todd to weigh in on the case, which concluded Friday after a jury acquitted Rittenhouse in the fatal shooting of two men during a riot last year in Kenosha, Wisconsin.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg during a TV interview outside the White House in Washington, D.C., on Monday, Nov. 15, 2021. (Stefani Reynolds/Bloomberg via Getty Images)
“Look, there’s a lot of pain in this country, and that pain and that frustration was aroused by the entire case, including the verdict,” Buttigieg said. “And for a lot of us, there’s just a lot to be upset about, a lot to be concerned about, but we’ll move forward as a country.
“The president continues to believe and this administration continues to believe in America and we’ve got to continue working to bring Americans together,” he said.
Buttigieg’s comments on the trial were similar to those of President Biden, who said in a statement Friday that the verdict “will leave many Americans feeling angry and concerned, myself included.”
Kyle Rittenhouse reacts as he is found not guilty on all counts at the Kenosha County Courthouse on Nov. 19, 2021, in Kenosha, Wisconsin. (Sean Krajacic – Pool/Getty Images)
The president said the jury’s decision must be respected despite his personal feelings on the matter.
“I ran on a promise to bring Americans together, because I believe that what unites us is far greater than what divides us,” Biden said. “I know that we’re not going to heal our country’s wounds overnight, but I remain steadfast in my commitment to do everything in my power to ensure that every American is treated equally, with fairness and dignity, under the law.”
President Joe Biden at the White House on Oct. 4, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)
Vice President Harris and other Democrats in Congress also weighed in. Harris said the verdict “speaks for itself” and that “it’s clear, there’s still a lot more work to do.”
“The judge. The jury. The defendant. It’s white supremacy in action. This system isn’t built to hold white supremacists accountable,” Rep. Cori Bush, D-Mo., tweeted. “It’s why Black and brown folks are brutalized and put in cages while white supremacist murderers walk free. I’m hurt. I’m angry. I’m heartbroken.”
Rep. Jerry Nadler, D-N.Y., took to Twitter and said a “heartbreaking verdict is a miscarriage of justice” and “sets a dangerous precedent which justifies federal review by DOJ.”
In Croatia, thousands marched in the capital, Zagreb, to show their anger at mandatory vaccinations for public sector workers, while in Italy, a few thousand protesters gathered at the ancient Circus Maximus chariot-racing ground in Rome to oppose “Green Pass” certificates required at workplaces, venues and on public transport.
Brunswick, Georgia (CNN)Carrying signs that read “Justice for Ahmaud,” the demonstrators marched past majestic live oaks draped with Spanish moss. They chanted Ahmaud Arbery’s name as they wound through the streets, past a hardware store, several homes, a convenience store. They rounded the corner by the floral shop, calling for those watching from the sidewalk to join them.
ATLANTA — Despite claims on social media, there was not an active shooter at Atlanta’s airport, said Hartsfield-Jackson officials in a statement posted to Twitter.
A gun was discharged at the airport around 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the security screening area. And it sent social media into a frenzy as visitors posted videos to Twitter of chaos unraveling.
The Transportation Security Administration said in a statement that after an X-ray detected a prohibited item, a TSA officer began searching a bag and advised the passenger not to touch it. The passenger lunged into the bag and grabbed a firearm, “at which point it discharged,” according to TSA.
“The passenger then fled the area, running out of the airport exit,” the statement indicated.
On Saturday evening at a news conference at the airport, Atlanta police announced they have issued warrants for the arrest of the passenger, Kenny Wells, 42. Charges include carrying a concealed weapon at a commercial airport and possession of a firearm by a convicted felon.
Early reports indicated three people sustained non-life-threatening injuries, TSA said.
Atlanta police reported Saturday evening that one person requested EMS from a fall that occurred in the atrium of the airport, which is not in the same area of the security checkpoint, and two others complained of a shortness of breath.
Airport officials said an investigation is under way, and the Atlanta Police Department was on the scene. Atlanta Fire Rescue assisted with the evacuation at the airport.
The airport has since resumed normal operations, officials said in another statement around 3:30 p.m. Twitter users report that the airport is still in a state of confusion, some noting long lines and missed flights.
Delta issued a travel waiver to assist customers who were affected by the incident, the company announced in a statement. Customers’ fare difference will be waived if their rebooked flight occurs on or before Nov. 23 in the same cabin originally booked.
TSA said all passengers in the airport were being re-screened.
“This incident underscores the importance of checking personal belongings for dangerous items before leaving for the airport. Firearms, particularly loaded firearms, introduce an unnecessary risk at checkpoints, have no place in the passenger cabin of an airplane, and represent a very costly mistake for the passengers who attempt to board a flight with them,” TSA said in its statement.
Of the guns captured at airport security checkpoints across the nation last year, about 83% were loaded. As of Oct. 3, more firearms had been recovered at Hartsfield-Jackson’s security checkpoints this year than at any other U.S. airport.
Twitter users report that they heard more than one gunshot, though airport officials have not confirmed how many shots were fired.
MARTA service to the airport closed for much of Saturday afternoon but has since resumed, the agency posted on Twitter. A ground stop temporarily halted flights at other airports around the country that were bound for Atlanta.
“Democrats are concerned,” former state House Speaker Steve Shurtleff, a longtime Biden supporter who attended the ceremony, told The Associated Press when asked about Biden’s political standing. “I’m concerned about where we may be in another couple of years when people really start to gear up and start making trips to New Hampshire.”
Shurtleff was openly saying what a growing number of Democrats have been whispering for months: Biden’s political standing is so weak less than a year into his presidency that he may not be able to win reelection in 2024 if he were to run again. Such anxiety-fueled parlor games are common among Washington’s political class, but this one has spread to the states and constituencies that will play a central role in the next presidential election.
Vice President Kamala Harris is facing her own political conundrum with polls suggesting she may be less popular than her unpopular boss. A dynamic leader who made history by becoming the first Black woman and first person of South Asian descent to step into her office, Harris has been given few opportunities by the Biden White House to shine.
She delivered her first solo speech to promote the new infrastructure law on Friday in Ohio’s capital city, addressing a mostly empty union hall largely absent of political dignitaries at roughly the same time Biden was issuing the White House’s annual turkey pardon in Washington.
“In America, we have the courage to see beyond the crisis — to believe that the future and a future we imagine is possible — and then, to build it,” Harris said to a smattering of polite applause in Columbus.
At least for now, there’s little to suggest the legislation, which will strengthen infrastructure in every state and potentially create hundreds of thousands of jobs, will quickly improve Democrats’ political standing.
As Biden struggles, speculation has intensified about the short list of would-be successors should Biden not seek reelection, although the 79-year-old president has said publicly and privately that he will. The list is led by Harris, of course, but includes other 2020 presidential candidates such as Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg and New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker. Just last week, Booker announced plans to appear at a party fundraiser next month in New Hampshire, which traditionally hosts the nation’s first presidential primary election.
Booker’s team sought to tamp down chatter that he was positioning himself to run in 2024, and allies say he is very close to Harris and would not challenge her in the event Biden retires. Still, the mere existence of such conversations so soon into a new presidency is unusual.
The frustrations boiling over now may be long forgotten by the time Biden — or another Democrat — leads the party in the 2024 presidential election. The truth is, no one knows what the standing of Biden or Harris will be next year, never mind in three years. While Biden’s approval ratings are hovering in the low 40s, they are better than Donald Trump’s at the same time of his presidency.
Barack Obama also faced headwinds at the end of the first year of his presidency. His party would go on to suffer historic losses in the 2010 midterm elections. But Obama recovered in time to win a second term. Bill Clinton similarly overcame setbacks, including a devastating midterm cycle in 1994, to win reelection in 1996.
Democratic strategist Bill Burton, who worked in the Obama White House, noted that any number of factors could completely upend the political climate, such as Trump’s reemergence, a Supreme Court decision ending or dramatically limiting abortion rights, an improving economy and the end of the pandemic.
“There’s such a unanimity around the idea that Democrats are completely doomed. These are the same people who brought us President Hillary Clinton,” Burton said. “Maybe things aren’t as bad as the entire chattering class seems to think they are.”
The White House is working to quash speculation that Biden may not seek reelection in 2024 given his current struggles.
Noting that Biden has declared his intent to run publicly and privately, his aides say the Democratic National Committee and Biden’s political team inside the White House are actively moving forward with the assumption he will seek a second term.
They believe Biden’s position will improve as voters digest the new infrastructure law and the $2 trillion social spending and climate bill currently moving through Congress. Already, the DNC and its allies are focusing significant resources on selling the Democrats’ accomplishments in key states before the 2022 midterm elections — states such as Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, New Hampshire, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin that will also be top battlegrounds in the 2024 presidential election.
Despite their optimism, tensions inside the White House are real as the new leadership team learns to work together.
Harris’ allies are especially frustrated that Biden seems to have limited the vice president to a low-profile role with a difficult policy portfolio — led by voting rights and immigration.
She was traveling with reporters in Ohio on Friday when Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted of all charges in last year’s deadly shootings in Kenosha, Wisconsin, that became a flashpoint in the debate over guns, vigilantism and racial injustice. But she had to wait until Biden had addressed the case before she could weigh in, saying “the verdict really speaks for itself.”
And when she delivered her speech on the infrastructure law, there was little sign of Democratic enthusiasm.
The crowd of invited guests barely filled one-quarter of a local union hall. Almost none of Ohio’s top Democrats attended the event, including Sen. Sherrod Brown or the high-profile Democrats running for governor. Rep. Joyce Beatty, who represents the district where Harris spoke, was the only member of Congress in attendance.
“Because of our work together, America is moving forward,” Harris declared, explaining that the infrastructure law would “make the most significant investment to fix our road and bridges in 70 years.”
But just as in New Hampshire, the White House’s message was clouded by frustration over Biden’s presidency.
Ohio Democrat Nina Turner, who served as co-chair of Bernie Sanders’ 2020 presidential campaign, said “very little has changed” for the poor and middle-class since Biden replaced Trump. The infrastructure bill does not change that, she said, and she blasted Biden’s social spending package as “build back less better.”
“The question becomes, ‘Why am I helping you to hold to power, when the power you have right now you’re not using on my behalf?’” Turner said of Biden. “That’s called insanity — asking me to vote for you, asking the Black community to come out for you in 2022 or 2024 when you ain’t doing nothing in 2021.”
Indeed, Rev. Al Sharpton, a civil rights activist who attended the White House signing ceremony for the infrastructure bill, warned that Biden was approaching “the red zone” with Black voters.
At the end of the infrastructure event, Sharpton said he urged Biden to use his bully pulpit to fight harder to enact a policing overhaul and protect voting rights that are under attack in Republican-led states.
“They’ve got to between now and the end of January crank it up or they’re going to have real problems,” Sharpton said.
___
Associated Press writer Julie Carr Smyth contributed to this report.
The gunman in the attack on Sunday opened fire on at least three civilians and two police officers shortly after 9 a.m. in an alley outside the site. One civilian was killed by a shot to the head, a second civilian was moderately wounded and two police officers and a third civilian were lightly hurt, according to Magen David Adom, the Israeli affiliate of the International Red Cross.
The man killed was later named by the police as Eliyahu Kay, a tour guide who was on his way to work at the Western Wall, the last remaining part of an ancient Jewish temple that was destroyed in antiquity.
The attacker was shot dead by security officers seconds after the assault, according to Omer Bar Lev, an Israeli minister who oversees the police.
The gunman was named in the Israeli and Palestinian news media as Fadi Abu Shkhaydem, 42, a teacher from a Palestinian district in East Jerusalem. In a statement published by a television channel owned by Hamas, he was identified as a senior leader of the movement in Shuafat, an area of East Jerusalem that mostly houses Palestinians whose families fled fighting during the Arab-Israeli war of 1948.
In the statement, Hamas — which runs the Gaza Strip and is considered a terrorist group by the United States, Israel and other countries — praised the attacker and acknowledged his role within the movement but did not directly claim responsibility for the attack.
Over 24 hours this weekend, City Commissioner Jo Ann Hardesty issued two statements. The first denounced the acquittal of Kyle Rittenhouse on murder charges for killing two people amid riots in Kenosha, Wis. The second condemned the attack on a KATU-TV crew in Portland that damaged a television camera.
In between, about 150 leftists pelted the Multnomah County Justice Center with eggs and clashed with riot police on Nov. 19.
It was a small-scale protest by Portland standards, but as large as any per capita in the nation following the Rittenhouse verdict, as people shattered windows and Multnomah County sheriff’s deputies forcefully dispersed the crowd.
And the two statements from Hardesty encapsulate what has become a familiar pattern in this city: National outrage is followed by a display of property destruction by a small cadre of police abolitionists that again elevates Portland into national headlines.
If the Rittenhouse verdict was more deeply felt in Portland than elsewhere, that might be because this city is one of only a handful where political violence in the streets has turned fatal. Weeks after the Kenosha shooting, an anti-fascist named Michael Reinoehl shot and killed a Trump supporter named Aaron Jay Danielson outside a Portland parking garage. (An anti-fugitive task force later killed Reinoehl.)
At around 7:30 pm Friday, members of a crowd dressed in black to obscure their identities spray-painted the Justice Center. People chanted “Rittenhouse is guilty!” and “Kyle is a terrorist!” to the accompaniment of drums.
At 8:30 pm, members of the crowd pursued and yelled at a group of people leaving the Justice Center side entrance, believing that they were Portland police officers leaving the building for a shift change. The black bloc group gave up its pursuit when the officers entered the SmartPark building.
Members of the crowd then smashed windows of the Shana Gibbs website design office on the bottom floor of the building.
Around 8:45 pm, members of the crowd disassembled segments of the fencing around Chapman Square, and used the gathered materials to block the northeast garage door entrance of the Justice Center. This prompted a squad of nine Multnomah County sheriff’s deputies armed with less-lethal crowd control weapons to line up in the tunnel facing the driveway.
A standoff ensued, as deputies attempted to clear protesters from the entrance and close the gate. Members of the crowd yelled at the deputies on scene and threw bottles and other objects at the riot line.
Deputies tried several times to close the gates, but were unsuccessful because protesters blocked the gates. Sheriff’s deputies rushed the crowd twice, shoving the black bloc crowd back. In one instance, deputies pushed over a protester in a wheelchair in the scuffle.
At 9:05 pm, a Portland police long-range acoustics device vehicle declared a riot and ordered crowds to disperse to the west. (The riot, police later clarified, was declared by the sheriff’s office.) The crowd had diminished in size, and about 40 to 50 protesters remained at the intersection of Southwest 2nd Avenue and Madison Street.
Hardesty, a longtime police critic, is so far the only member of the Portland City Council to denounce the attack on the journalists.
“People have a right to be upset, and the right to protest,” she wrote. “Just as protesters have a right to film the police or anything occurring in public, the press has the right to film what’s occurring in public. I’m still learning the full details of what occurred last night but want to make it clear that attacking or intimidating the press is never acceptable, such as what happened to a KATU crew last night.”
Her response to the Rittenhouse verdict was more succinct: “We have an injustice system in America.”
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