Mass shooting outside Indianapolis mall leaves 7 injured, all children and teens, police say


Seven minors were hospitalized with injuries late Saturday night after a mass shooting broke out in downtown Indianapolis, police said. 

The children and teenagers, who were between the ages of 12 and 17 years old, each sustained gunshot wounds in the shooting, which happened just after 11 p.m. local time outside of the city’s Circle Centre Mall. CBS affiliate WTTV shared images from the scene.

No suspects have been arrested, but investigators believe more than one weapon was used to carry out the shooting, according to the Indianapolis Metro Police Department. A police report filed after the incident identified four boys and three girls as victims, all of whom were stable when Indianapolis Deputy Police Chief Tanya Terry gave preliminary details about the incident at a briefing early Sunday morning. 

Police said they initially responded after patrol officers in the downtown area heard several shots being fired nearby. They found six minors, among a larger group of kids, suffering from injuries consistent with gunshot wounds. An emergency medical services crew transported all of them to a hospital for treatment. One of the victims’ conditions was critical at the time of transport, but the classification was updated and that person is now stable. The other five victims were stable when they were transported.

A seventh victim, who police determined had been shot during the same downtown incident, was treated as a walk-in at a different hospital. That person’s condition was listed as stable too, according to Indianapolis police.

The shooting came as Indianapolis continues to grapple with a steady rise in gun violence. A report by the Indianapolis Star last year found that homicides in the city, which were largely committed using firearms, had increased by 85% over the previous decade and a half.

Terry touched on that during Sunday’s briefing.

“Once again, we have a situation in which young people are resolving conflict with firearms, and it has to stop,” said the deputy police chief. Terry noted that the department has already put resources toward efforts “to address these juvenile crowds before they get started” and will continue to do that with the hopes of “preventing this kind of crime.”

The deputy chief also called on parents for help.

“We would ask for our parents to get involved in what their children are out doing, especially at these hours of the evening,” said Terry. “This was 11:30 at night, the evening right before Sunday, Easter. So if you don’t know where your 12-year-old is, I think that should be a priority for you.”

An investigation into the shooting is ongoing. Police requested that anyone with information contact Detective Albert Teaters at the department’s homicide office.



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Passengers injured when United Airlines flight experiences severe turbulence


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Seven passengers were injured when United Airlines Flight 85 from Tel Aviv to Newark, New Jersey experienced several minutes of severe turbulence due to a sudden change in wind direction. The flight was diverted to Stewart International Airport, 70 miles north of New York City. NBC News’ George Solis reports.



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Bear that injured 5 during rampage shot dead, Slovakia officials say — but critics say the wrong bear was killed


Slovakia’s government on Wednesday said the bear that attacked five people in the country earlier this month was shot dead, as Bratislava drafted plans to ease bear cull restrictions. But opposition politicians said that a much smaller bear that had nothing to do with the rampage was actually killed. 

The bear attack that left five people, including a 10-year-old girl, injured occurred in the center of Liptovsky Mikulas, a town nestled in the foothills of the Tatra mountains near popular ski resorts, the BBC reported.

“A bear that injured five in Liptovsky Mikulas was successfully shot dead yesterday… A biometrics drone was used to identify it,” the environment minister Tomas Taraba said on social media on Wednesday.

Bear attacks have been on the rise in the Central European country, with 20 such incidents last year, up from only eight in 2021, according to data from the environment ministry.

This month, a woman from Belarus died following a separate bear attack in the Demanovska Dolina valley area in Liptovsky Mikulas district, falling to her death from a cliff after being chased by the animal.

On Wednesday, the government in Bratislava approved a draft law to address the bear attacks in urban areas.

The proposal stipulates the creation of a 500-metre safety zone in the vicinity of towns and villages.

Any bear entering this zone could be shot, Taraba told journalists.

“Not only members of the special bear response team will be able to shoot, but also hunters, police officers, and, in national parks, also their administrators,” Taraba said.

The Slovak populist government earlier this month published guidelines on the protective shooting of brown bears, prompting backlash from environmental groups and the opposition.

Opposition politicians also claimed authorities had shot the wrong bear, accusing the government of using the issue ahead of the presidential election on 6 April, the BBC reported.

“According to documents written by the bear intervention team that we found, a 67-kilogram female bear was caught and killed,” Progressive Slovakia opposition party member Michal Wiezik said. “It is not necessary to use high-end biometrics to make it clear that such a shooting cannot be in any way related to the 100-kilogram male they were looking for.”

“I’m certain it’s not the same bear. It’s obvious,” Wiezik told the BBC.

On Monday, the Slovak environment minister, together with his Romanian and Finnish counterparts, appealed to Brussels for an EU-wide solution to the issue of bears threatening people, according to the local TASR news agency.



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4 dead, 5 injured in stabbing attack in Rockford, Illinois; suspect in custody


4 dead, 5 injured in Rockford attack


4 dead, 5 injured in Rockford attack

00:24

CHICAGO (CBS) — Four people were killed and five others were injured in an attack on Wednesday afternoon in Rockford, Illinois. Police said some of the victims were stabbed.

Rockford Police Chief Carla Redd said the first call came in around 1:15 p.m. for a medical call in the 2300 block of Holmes. Soon after, there were additional calls for police and paramedics at multiple scenes in Rockford and surrounding parts of Winnebago County.

Winnebago County Sheriff Gary Caruana said there was a home invasion near the intersection of Florence and Eggleston. A young woman trying to get away was stabbed in the face and hands and seriously wounded. A Good Samaritan who tried to help her also was stabbed.

Redd said a total of four people were killed, one person was critically injured, and four other people were taken to hospitals, where their conditions were stabilized. Redd said not all of the victims were stabbed, but there were no gunshot victims. Caruana said one of the people killed was a postal worker.

A suspect was taken into custody by around 1:30 p.m., according to Caruana.

Rockford Mayor Tom McNamara said he was “totally shaken by this act of violence.”

Redd said police were questioning the suspect who was taken into custody, but there was no clear motive for the attack.



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1 killed, 1 injured in California mountain lion attack


1 killed, 1 injured in California mountain lion attack – CBS News

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A man was killed and his brother was injured when a mountain lion attacked them about 50 miles east of Sacramento. It’s the first fatal mountain lion attack in California in more than 20 years. Elise Preston reports.

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Several injured as Russian missiles target Kyiv


A three-storey building in Kyiv has been badly damaged, Ukrainian officials say, as the city comes under renewed Russian attack.

They said two ballistic missiles were intercepted, but seven people were injured as debris fell.

Explosions were heard across the Ukrainian capital and a column of smoke was seen rising in the east.

The city’s mayor urged residents to immediately take cover as the attack came virtually without warning.

Moments before the explosions the Ukrainian air force warned in a message on Telegram that a missile was flying towards the city.

It is unusual to have such attacks without an air raid alert.

Kyiv Mayor Vitali Klitschko wrote on his Telegram channel: “Explosions in the capital. Urgently to the shelter!”

Ukraine’s foreign minister, Dmytro Kuleba, posted videos online purporting to show school children running to a shelter.

The country’s air force commander said Russia fired two ballistic missiles from Crimea, which was annexed by Moscow, but both were intercepted by air defences.

Following a string of explosions, missile debris came down in the Pechersky district, not far from the centre of Kyiv, and several other areas.

The attack is the third on Kyiv by Russia in five days.

Latest reports say ten people including a teenage girl were injured. Two people were taken to hospital.

A Kyiv resident, Oksana, said she was at work when she first heard the air raid sirens followed by the sound of explosions.

She told the AFP news agency: “Before I could do anything, the first explosion hit, There was a cloud of dust, smashed cars, windows, everything.”

Another resident, Roman, told the BBC: “The blasts – which were very loud, happened right after the capital’s air raid sirens had started sounding.”

The US ambassador in Kyiv, Bridget Brink, said on social media that Russia had used hypersonic missiles to attack the Ukrainian capital.

She added that there was “not a moment to lose” as Ukraine needed American assistance now, alluding to a $60bn military aid package which has been held up in the US Congress.

President Volodymyr Zelensky said the attack showed again that Ukraine needed better air defence systems from its allies.

In a social media post, Mr Zelensky said: “It means safety for our cities and saved human lives. All of us in the world who respect and protect life need to stop this terror.”

Overnight there were also drone attacks on Odesa and Mikolayiv in the south of Ukraine, hitting energy infrastructure and leaving some areas without electricity.

The latest assault on Kyiv comes after Ukraine said it had hit two landing ships, a communications centre and other infrastructure used by Russia’s Black Sea fleet off Crimea on Sunday.

The Ukrainian general staff said the Yamal and Azov ships had been destroyed.

The BBC, however, has not been able to verify the Ukrainian claim to have damaged the ships, which are designed to land troops and equipment straight to shore without the need for a pier or dock.

On the same day, one of Russia’s cruise missiles entered the airspace of neighbouring Poland, a Nato member.

Polish armed forces said in a statement that the object had stayed in Polish air space for 39 seconds. Defence Minister Wladyslaw Kosiniak-Kamysz said that if the missile had been seen to go in the direction of any targets located in Poland, then “of course, it would have been shot down and more adequate measures would have been taken”.

On Monday, Poland’s foreign ministry said that the Russian ambassador in Warsaw failed to show up for a diplomatic summons.

The ambassador, Sergey Andreyev, told Russia’s Ria Novosti news agency that he felt “it made no sense to discuss this topic without any provision of proof, and I refused to visit the Polish foreign ministry”.

Location of Russia's Black Sea fleet HQ in Sevastopol

Location of Russia’s Black Sea fleet HQ in Sevastopol

There has been an increase in aerial attacks by both sides in the past few days, while Russia makes slow progress in taking some territory in the east of the country.

On Friday, Russia fired dozens of missiles at Ukraine, hitting a dam and leaving a million Ukrainians without power, in the wake of fierce Ukrainian bombardments on Russian border regions. The Russian authorities said a Ukrainian drone attack had caused a fire at a large power plant in Rostov.

Meanwhile Kharkiv – close to the Russian border – is still in partial blackout after all its power substations were destroyed by Russian attacks on Friday.



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Man killed, brother injured in mountain lion attack in Northern California foothills


Man killed, brother injured after mountain lion attack in Sierra foothills


Man killed, brother injured after mountain lion attack in Sierra foothills

01:26

GEORGETOWN – A 21-year-old man was killed and his brother was injured in a mountain lion attack in a remote area of Northern California’s El Dorado County Saturday, authorities said.

El Dorado County sheriff’s deputies were dispatched to a report of a mountain lion attack in a remote area near Georgetown at around 1:15 p.m. local time. They said it was in the area of Darling Ridge Road and Skid Road.

The report came from an 18-year-old man who said a mountain lion attacked him and his 21-year-old brother while they were antler shed hunting. The teen said he had injuries to his face and was separated from his brother during the attack.

Shortly after 1:30 p.m., the 18-year-old was contacted while deputies searched for his brother. About 15 minutes later, deputies found a crouched mountain lion next to the victim on the ground.

Deputies fired their guns to scare the mountain lion off but once the mountain lion ran off, the 21-year-old was pronounced dead. He has not been identified.

The teen was taken to the hospital for treatment.

The California Department of Fish and Wildlife responded to the area and located the mountain lion. It was euthanized near the scene and the body was collected for further examination. 

If you encounter a mountain lion, officials said to give them an escape route, don’t run and stay calm, make loud noises and try to look bigger, put small children on your shoulders, and never crouch down.

The last known deadly mountain lion attack in El Dorado County was in 1994. 

Georgetown is located about 50 miles northeast of Sacramento.



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1 killed, 1 injured in mountain lion attack in Northern California



A mountain lion attack left one person dead and another injured in a remote area of Northern California on Saturday, officials said.

The 18-year-old and 21-year-old brothers were antler shed hunting in Georgetown, California, when the mountain lion attacked the pair, according to the El Dorado County Sheriff’s Office.

The younger brother called 911 at 1:13 pm to report being separated from his older brother during the attack, officials said.

Deputies began searching the area, and at around 1:46 pm., they found the mountain lion crouched next to the older brother. Shots were fired to scare off the animal.

The 21-year-old was dead by the time deputies reached him. The 18-year-old suffered “traumatic injuries” to his face and was taken to a local hospital for treatment, the sheriff’s office said.

Authorities have not released the names of the victims.

Wardens from the California Department of Fish and Wildlife are working to locate the mountain lion.

Georgetown is about 40 miles northeast of Sacramento.

Mountain lion attacks on humans are rare. The California Department of Fish and Wildlife have reported 13 attacks in the state since 2004, with only one being fatal.



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Russia strikes Ukraine blood transfusion center; multiple dead and injured reported


Ukraine downs Russian drones over Kyiv again


Ukraine shoots down Russian drones launched on Kyiv for a second night in row

01:33

Russian forces struck a blood transfusion center in the Kharkiv region of northeast Ukraine, the country’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy said Saturday, adding that “dead and wounded are reported”.

A “guided air bomb” hit the center in Kupiansk, a city a few dozen kilometers from the Russian border, Zelenskyy said on social media, adding that “rescuers are extinguishing the fire”.

A statement put out on social media by the Ministry of Defense of Ukraine said the missiles, “destroyed the city’s blood transfusion center.”

Last week there were four consecutive days of drone strikes between Russia and Ukraine. Russia hit a crucial port in Southern Ukraine that used to export grain, and a hospital in Kherson, in the southeast of the country.

Ukraine’s drones hit a skyscraper in Moscow twice in two days.

The intensifying attacks are seen as retaliation to Ukraine’s attempt to bring the war to Russia’s soil.

Reporting contributed by Ramy Inocencio, Barny Smith, Tucker Reals





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Tel Aviv shooting leaves one man critically injured and alleged shooter dead



JERUSALEM — At least one man is in a serious condition after a shooting on a street in central Tel Aviv on Saturday, Israeli police said.

The suspected shooter was then shot dead by a municipal patrol officer, Tel Aviv’s mayor Ron Huldai told Israel’s public broadcaster.

The Inspector General of the Israel Police said the attacker was “apparently” a resident of the Palestinian town of Jenin, in the occupied West Bank.

A police spokesman told the Israeli public broadcaster the shooter had been “neutralized”, but did not provide further details on the suspected attacker.

The shooting comes a day after a Palestinian teen was killed in an attack by Israeli civilians on a Palestinian village in the West Bank.

Washington has expressed concern over a growing number of attacks by Jewish settlers on Palestinian villages in the West Bank, where violence has worsened since last year with increased Israeli raids amid Palestinian street attacks on Israelis.

The man in critical condition is a municipal patrol worker, according to the city’s mayor, who said he had approached the attacker after noticing something suspicious and was then fired at by the shooter.

“We are standing at a very sad incident,” Huldai said. “We are praying for the well-being of the injured.”



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