Minneapolis school shooting being probed as an act of ‘domestic terrorism' and ‘hate crime’ against Catholics: FBI Chief
- A shooter identified as 23-year-old Robert aka Robin Westman killed two children and injured 18 others at Annunciation Church during a Mass, according to Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara.
- FBI Director Kash Patel stated that the evidence indicates that this shooting was an act of domestic terrorism motivated by a hate-filled ideology.
- The shooter left behind manifestos expressing hate towards many groups, including anti-Catholic sentiments, according to Acting U.S. Attorney Joe Thompson.
- Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara confirmed that the shooter fired through church windows targeting vulnerable children.
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12 Articles
The FBI attributes messages against Catholics, Israel and Trump
FBI director on Annunciation shooting: 'An act of domestic terrorism' AlphaNews.org
Share This StoryOfficials provided several updates throughout the day Thursday after a transgender mass shooter killed two Catholic school children and injured dozens of others at a Minneapolis church. City officials say they have identified an additional victim from Wednesday’s shooting at Annunciation Church, bringing the total number of victims to 20. The shooter, identified as 23-year-old Robert aka Robin Westman, took his own life after he …
After the deadly attack in Minneapolis, the motive of the perpetrator is still falling. FBI chief Patel, however, sees clear indications of domestic terrorism in the evidence he has seen.
FBI director calls Minneapolis school shooting 'barbaric' domestic terrorism with anti-religious motives
FBI Director Kash Patel says Robert aka Robin Westman's attack on a Catholic school Mass in Minneapolis was domestic terrorism motivated by anti-religious hatred.
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