The police in Wisconsin shot and killed a student outside a middle school because they got a report that someone had a weapon. The state’s attorney general gave the first law enforcement briefing on the gunshots, which made children run away and caused local schools to be locked down for hours.
Officials in Mount Horeb had said earlier that a person with a gun was stopped outside the school and did not get inside. The State Attorney General, Josh Kaul, said in a meeting on Wednesday night that no one else was hurt and that they are still looking into the situation.
“This happened outside. ” He never got inside, he said.
Officials at the meeting said the student is a young boy, but they didn’t say how old he is or which school in Mount Horeb he goes to.
Kaul didn’t answer some questions about what happened after the police came, like if the student had a gun, what kind of gun it was, and if he tried to get into the school.
The police in Mount Horeb said that several officers fired their guns, but they didn’t say how many officers did. The officers were wearing body cameras.
The police stayed at the place where the incident happened for a long time. Students were kept inside the buildings for a while and then slowly allowed to go home to their families.
The scared children and their parents were very scared during the first event and while waiting to be together again. Parents said their kids were hiding in closets, scared to use their phones, and a middle schooler said his class ran out of the gym on roller skates.
The district used Facebook posts all day to give updates. The first update was at 11:30 am and said that all district schools were on lockdown. Officials in Mount Horeb said that someone who is accused of attacking someone else was hurt, and people saw and heard a lot of kids running away. They did not say how it happened.
School buses were still waiting outside the middle school for more than four hours. The middle school, the nearby high school, and the playing fields between them were surrounded by police tape.
“A search of the middle school didn’t find any more people who might be involved,” a message posted around noon stated. “Most importantly, no one was hurt except for the person who is accused of attacking others. ”
Before, the district said “the danger has been stopped outside the building” but didn’t explain what had happened at the school in Mount Horeb, which is 25 miles (40 kilometers) west of the state capital of Madison.
Jeanne Keller said she heard five gunshots while in her shop The Quilting Jeanne, which is close to the middle school campus.
“It sounded like pow-pow-pow-pow,” Keller said on the phone with The Associated Press. “I thought I heard fireworks. ” I went outside and saw the kids running around. I think I saw about 200 kids.
A student in middle school said that his class was in the gym practicing in-line skating when they heard gunshots.
Max Kelly, who is 12 years old, said that his teacher told the whole class to leave the school. He said they skated to a street, left their skates and ran to a nearby store and gas station and hid in a bathroom.
Kelly met his parents and sat on a hill with them on Wednesday afternoon. They were waiting for Kelly’s younger siblings to come out of their schools. He had socks on, but no shoes.
“I don’t think there’s anywhere that is safe anymore,” said his mother, 32-year-old Alison Kelly.
Mount Horeb police said they couldn’t give information right away after the incident. The Dane County Sheriff’s office told journalists to go to a specific area, but didn’t give any new information.
Worried parents waited at the bus station for their children for a long time. Kaul said police were worried about the possibility of a ongoing danger, but he didn’t give more information. He said that the investigators wanted to talk to the students as soon as they were with their parents. They didn’t want to wait for several days to have these conversations.
Shannon Hurd, 44, and her ex-husband, Nathian Hurd, 39, were in a car waiting for their 13-year-old son, Noah, who was still at the middle school which was on lockdown.
Shannon Hurd said she found out what happened when Noah texted her that he loved her. She said she almost tripped on the stairs at her job while rushing to get to the school.
“I only want my child,” she said. “They should be protected at school. ”
Stacy Smith, who is 42 years old, was at the bank on Wednesday when she saw police cars drive by. Then she got a text from the school district warning about a shooter.
At first, she couldn’t find her two kids – Abbi in junior high and Cole in seventh grade. At last, she got through to Abbi on the phone. Abbi said in a quiet voice that she was hiding in a closet and couldn’t talk. In the end, she found the children and learned that they were fine.
“She said she can’t believe it, but it’s not here. ” “You hear it all over, but not here. ”
Schools across the country are trying to find ways to stop mass shootings from happening inside their buildings. They are doing this by using things like better security, practicing what to do if there is a shooter, and using technology like digital maps to help keep students safe. Many people also depend on teachers and school leaders to find problems with students’ mental health early.
The school district’s leader, Steve Salerno, said that if the security upgrades hadn’t been made, the situation could have been much worse. He also mentioned that students told staff about seeing someone outside the building, but didn’t give any more details.
“It’s something you just have to go through. “
Tag: Wisconsin
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Student slain by police outside Wisconsin school
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Biden and Trump to face off in primaries in Wisconsin, New Jersey, and Rhode Island
On Tuesday, people in four states voted for who they want to be their party’s presidential nominee. This vote doesn’t have much of an effect now that Joe Biden and Donald Trump are the official candidate for the Democratic and Republican parties.
Biden and Trump won the primary elections in Rhode Island, Connecticut, New York and Wisconsin. This will help them get more delegates for their party conventions in the summer.
Their wins, though expected, give hints about how excited base voters are for the upcoming 2020 election. This has not excited most Americans. Some people are telling Democrats not to vote for Biden because they don’t like how he dealt with the war between Israel and Hamas. Also, some Republicans who don’t like Trump are voting for other candidates who are no longer in the race.
“Uncommitted” in Rhode Island and Connecticut was getting about the same number of Democratic votes as protest campaigns in Minnesota and Michigan, which got 19% and 13% of the votes.
Specifically, the results in Wisconsin, an important state for the November election, will show how many Republicans are not supporting Trump and how many Democrats are not happy with Biden. Trump went to Wisconsin and Michigan to talk to people before the election.
Scott Lindemann, a 62-year-old contractor in Kenosha, Wisconsin, who voted for Donald Trump in the GOP primary, said that Trump is the first person he can remember who actually tried to keep all of the promises that he made during the campaign. “I really liked that a lot. ”
In New York, a 70-year-old man named Steve Wheatley, who is a registered Republican, said he wants to have more options when choosing a candidate. He voted for Nikki Haley even though he didn’t think she could win because there weren’t many other choices.
Wheatley, who lives in a small town called Athens, in the Hudson Valley, said that we should have younger people with new ideas running for president. “I want a Democrat to win, but there aren’t many options. ” Check out what Biden has accomplished with the economy.
Theresa Laabs, a 55-year-old cashier in Kenosha, said her family is feeling the pressure from higher food and gasoline prices, but she voted for Biden in the Democratic primary because she thinks he is trying to help with the rising cost of living.
“I know the economy is tough right now, and I hope that Joe will continue to work even harder in the next four years to lower costs and make life easier for working families,” Laabs commented.
Trump and Biden started focusing on the main election a few weeks ago when Haley left the GOP competition. Biden went to all the important places where it’s hard to win in the election last month after his big speech.
Biden and the Democratic Party have raised more money than Trump and the Republican Party. Biden raised US$26 million at a big event in New York with famous people from entertainment and former Democratic presidents Barack Obama and Bill Clinton. It was the most money raised at one event.
Trump wants to have a big fundraiser in Palm Beach, Florida, this weekend to raise $33 million and show he is better than his rival.
With the presidential candidates chosen for their parties, not many people in Rhode Island have voted. Only four percent of eligible voters had voted by 5 pm, including in-person and mail-in votes.
Voting started early in Connecticut for the first time ever and it was slow at the border. Stephanie Thomas, the Secretary of the State, said that only a few people, about one to two percent, had voted in some areas by 11 am. In Stamford, which is one of the bigger cities in the state, four percent of people had voted by that time. “She said that people have been telling us that this primary election is not competitive. “ -
Three-year-old boy vanished after mother sent him to live with her boyfriend
A 3-year-old Wisconsin boy is missing and his mother and her boyfriend have been accused of child neglect, after the district attorney alleged that the boy was sent to live with the man as a punishment.
The boy, named Elijah Vue, was last seen on Tuesday at a residence in Two Rivers, Wisconsin, where he was staying with Jesse Vang, 39, who was dating his mother, Katrina Baur, 31.
The district attorney, Jacalyn LaBre, made the allegation in court on Friday, when she referred Baur and Vang for charges of child neglect. She said that Baur “deliberately sent that child for disciplinary reasons for more than a week to the residence. She knew the tactics used and the lack of care provided. This was intentional by her.”
Baur and Vang appeared briefly and separately in court on Monday. Baur is charged with being a party to the crime of neglecting a child and two counts of obstructing an officer. Vang is charged with child neglect, prosecutors said. Preliminary hearings were set for March 7.
LaBre’s remarks in court and information from police shed some light on the disappearance of the 3-foot, 50-pound boy with sandy blond hair and Hmong heritage.
Police said in a statement that someone who claimed to be Elijah’s “adult caretaker” called authorities shortly before 11 a.m. Tuesday to report that Elijah was missing from the residence in Two Rivers and was last seen there about 8 a.m.A huge search was started, and a statewide Amber Alert was issued, they said.
During the detention and bail hearing, LaBre also alleged that Baur was not truthful with police investigating Elijah’s disappearance. She said he was last in the care of Vang. The nature of the relationship between Baur and Vang was unclear.
The hearing on Friday was covered by NBC affiliates WTMJ of Milwaukee and WGBA of Green Bay. LaBre confirmed by email to NBC News that she made the remarks alleging Baur sent Elijah to live with Vang as discipline.
She was held on $15,000 cash bail and Vang was held on $20,000 cash bail, prosecutors said.
A state public defender assigned to the case did not immediately respond to a request to comment on behalf of both defendants.
Investigators have not said what they think has happened to Elijah. They are searching on the ground and in the air using state, local and federal resources.
“From the moment Elijah was reported missing, our law enforcement from local, state and federal agencies, along with devoted volunteers and community members, have been working non-stop around the clock to search every inch of our city and beyond,” Two Rivers Police Chief Benjamin Meinnert said at a news conference on Wednesday.
He urged residents to check the grounds of their homes for the boy and report any sightings or clues to authorities.
Two Rivers police said in a statement on Sunday that the Green Bay police dive team helped with the search.
“Our search efforts continued throughout last night and will continue today on our city rivers,” the police department said.
Two Rivers is a city of about 11,000 on Lake Michigan, about 90 miles north of Milwaukee.
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Ex-convict back on the hunt for governor
A man with a weapon went into Wisconsin’s state Capitol and asked to see the governor. He was arrested but then released after paying money as a promise to come back to court later. However, he returned again.
The man without a shirt, who is unknown at the moment, was arrested on Wednesday afternoon for having a gun in the building without permission.
However, he was released from jail by paying bail and came back later that evening with a rifle that can be used for attacking.
This happens as there have been many violent threats towards public and elected officials in the US recently.
According to Tatyana Warrick, a spokesperson for the Department of Administration, Governor Tony Evers, who is a Democrat, was not in his office on the first floor of the state’s capitol building at that time.
A man with a holstered gun came to the office at around 3:00 PM EST (7:00 PM GMT) on Wednesday and asked to see Mr. Evers
If someone hides a weapon and has permission, they can bring it into the building. But this man didn’t have permission and a police officer from the state capitol arrested him.
But, after he was arrested and taken to the Dane County Jail, he paid money to be released and came back to the capitol grounds just before 10:00 PM EST with a gun that shoots automatically. The building shuts down at 7:00 PM EST.
Ms Warrick informed the BBC that the person who tried to attack someone was arrested again on Wednesday night for a mental health assessment. However, she is not sure if they are still in police custody.
The city police in Madison said in a report: “The person was placed under the care of the police and taken to a nearby hospital. ”
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Wisconsin high court overturns state’s stay-at-home orders
Wisconsin’s Supreme Court overturned the state’s stay-at-home orders on Wednesday, as regions across the US grapple with the increasingly partisan decision of whether or not to reopen amid the coronavirus pandemic.
Americans across the country have staged anti-lockdown demonstrations and President Donald Trump has pressed for rapid steps to rekindle the devastated US economy before his tough re-election battle in November.
But public health experts, including the president’s top medical advisor Anthony Fauci, have warned that loosening restrictions on public gatherings too early could trigger fresh COVID-19 outbreaks.
The Midwestern state’s high court sided with lawmakers from Trump’s Republican Party, who had challenged an extension of the quarantine imposed by Democratic Governor Tony Evers’s administration.
Evers warned on Twitter that the decision risked undoing “all the work we have done and all the sacrifices Wisconsinites have made over these past few months.”
“It’s a mess,” he later told CNN. “I mean, I can’t put it any other way.”
While the state is not one of the hardest hit, it has still recorded more than 10,900 cases and more than 400 deaths.
The legal challenge was filed against Wisconsin Department of Health Services chief Andrea Palm and other officials, who had extended stay-at-home orders to May 26 even as the state relaxed some restrictions on business.
The state’s Republican House Speaker Robin Vos and Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald said the ruling allowed “people to once again gather with their loved ones or visit their places of worship without the fear of violating a state order.”
Asked whether relaxing shutdown orders was a partisan issue, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin told FOX News Wednesday: “I hope it’s not political, that would be terrible. I hope that all these governors care about the American workers, care about American jobs.”
Source:Â france24.com