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2025-05-24 13:08:13
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(KGTV) — The coroner's office has identified a teenager killed after a student pulled out a handgun and fired at classmates at a Southern California high school Thursday.Gracie Anne Muehlberger, 15, died from her injuries in the shooting at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita. One other student, a 14-year-old boy, also died at Henry Mayo Hospital in Valencia, but his identity has not been released.Three other students, 14-year-old boy, a 14-year-old girl, and a 15-year-old girl, were injured in the shooting, according to Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva. Hospital officials say they have already released the 14-year-old boy, and the two girls were doing well and may be released in one or two days.RELATED:Police officials continue investigation into deadly shooting at California high schoolTrauma Surgeons call for urgent intervention after school shootingPHOTOS: Deadly shooting at Santa Clarita schoolInvestigators say surveillance video shows the gunman take a 45-caliber handgun out of his backpack and shoot five other students in the campus quad just after 7:30 a.m. The shooting happened in just 16 seconds, sending the campus into a lockdown and prompting some students and staff to barricade doors or flee.Villanueva said the suspect was identified by matching the video footage to him while he was in the hospital. ABC News and CNN have identified the suspect as 16-year-old Nathaniel Tennosuke Berhow.Berhow, a junior at the high school, died Friday from injuries after a self-inflicted gunshot wound to the head, Sheriff's Homicide detectives told ABC News. Detectives said his mother was present at the time of his death.Investigators were still searching for a motive Friday. One detective said the shooting occurred on Berhow's 16th birthday."We have not yet established a motive or a nexus between the subject and his victims," Sheriff's Capt. Kent Wegener said Thursday. Officials added there's no history of Berhow being bullied or belief he "was acting on behalf of any group or ideology."Investigators said they believe the students injured were targeted at random, but added "it wasn't a spur of the moment act."It's unclear how Berhow reportedly acquired the firearm used in the attack. Several firearms were found in his home after investigators served a search warrant. Authorities added that Berhow's father, who's no longer alive, had six firearms registered to his name. None of those firearms matched the ones located by investigators."It's a sad day in Saugus, it's a sad day in Los Angeles County and the nation for another tragic shooting at a school," said Villanueva on Thursday.All schools in the William S. Hart Union High School District were closed Friday and counseling was made available to staff and students. A community vigil has been planned for 7 p.m. Sunday at Santa Clarita's Central Park.City News Service contributed to this report. 2907

  天津市龙济男人   

(KGTV) - Three San Diego residents were shot to death during a weekend of violence in Tijuana.Multiple Tijuana-based news services said a triple homicide was reported on the morning of Nov. 25 in front of a building in the Lomas Verdes housing complex. When the bodies were found, they each had gunshot wounds to the head.According to news outlet Punto Norte, investigators believe the three people killed were taken from an apartment at gunpoint, forced to kneel and then shot.10News spoke to 23-year-old Katheryn Garcia. She told us her cousin, 17-year-old Christopher Alexis Gomez was among the three people shot to death. Garcia said her cousin is a senior at O'Farrell Charter School (OCS) in Encanto. She said he was a proud starting Lineman for the school's new football team. Last week, Gomez told Garcia that he was going to a barbecue party in Ensenada on Friday with his friend, 18-year-old Juan Suarez Ojeda. Dr. Jonathan Dean, the Superintendent at OCS, told 10News Ojeda wasa recent O'Farrell Charter graduate, class of 2018. Garcia said she has never met the third victim, but knew the teen was Ojeda's friend who lived in Tijuana.Garcia said the three were tortured, likely in a different location, before being shot execution style.Garcia said her family are now left with more questions than answers. Why would Christopher, a boy who had never been in trouble, be killed? Was this a case of mistaken identity? Was he at the wrong place at the wrong time? Who would do this?“They’re monsters. Who does that to three young boys who had their whole life ahead of them," Garcia said in tears. The school set up a GoFundMe page to help Gomez’s and Suarez-Ojeda’s families with funeral costs and other expenses.Further details on the deaths on the San Diegans’ deaths were not released by authorities or news outlets.Four other deadly shootings occurred in the city during the weekend, according to Tijuana news reports. 1940

  天津市龙济男人   

(KGTV) - Does a video really show a stone dissolving an iron nail in a matter of seconds?No.While the nail does indeed melt, it's made out of gallium not iron.Gallium melts at 85.6 degrees, A black stone sitting in the sun could easily reach this temperature. 277

  

(KGTV) -- Two recently filed civil lawsuits claim the government is not providing adequate medical care to some U.S. citizens in its custody.The lawsuits allege that dozens of individuals’ medical needs were deliberately ignored by Department of Homeland Security (DHS) agents, and Americans were forced to undergo life-threatening and torturous detox in temporary holding cells at the border.10News spoke with several people who blamed an overwhelmed system, saying Customs and Border Protection doesn’t have the resources to deal with the demand. They say rather than taking people they arrest who are addicted to drugs or alcohol to a hospital or nearby medical facility they were put in holding cells and ignored."If they keep this up there's a good chance that they are going to put someone in the basement [who] is not going to make it through,” said San Diego attorney Brody McBride.McBride represents a U.S. citizen named Marc Oliver Lewis.According to court documents, Lewis was arrested at the San Ysidro Land Port of Entry in February, accused of trying to bring a non-U.S. citizen into the United States illegally.Two months after his arrest, Lewis sued the government claiming he repeatedly told the defendants (unknown agents of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security) he had been using high doses of alcohol and heroin. The lawsuit states, “even though Mr. Lewis began experiencing objectively severe symptoms of detox and withdrawal from alcohol and heroin, Defendants never provided Mr. Lewis with the medical care required to treat his serious medical needs while Mr. Lewis was in Defendants custody.”McBride said within several hours of his arrest, Lewis started experiencing the beginning effects of alcohol and heroin withdrawal including restlessness, headache, and muscle pains, among other symptoms. He said DHS officials transported Lewis to the Metropolitan Correction Center (MCC), a Federal Bureau of Prisons facility, but officials there rejected Lewis and recommended he be taken to a hospital for immediate medical attention. DHS instead returned Lewis to a DHS holding facility at or near the San Ysidro Land Port of Entry.“They put him in a holding cell with up to 20 other individuals and just basically ignored him,” McBride said.According to his lawsuit, Lewis started to experience severe detox and withdrawal symptoms, including difficulty breathing, chest tightness, racing heart, nausea, vomiting and diarrhea."He was in so much pain he couldn't get up to use the bathroom unassisted, you know he ended up vomiting on himself, defecating on himself,” McBride said. “Meanwhile the officers provided no treatment.”McBride said Lewis was transferred to an isolation cell, but was left in his soiled clothes without a bed, shower or medical attention for four days at which time he was eventually transferred to MCC.Team 10 obtained transcripts for a federal court hearing related to Lewis’ criminal case. According to the transcripts, after listening to the alleged conditions of Lewis’ detention, Chief Judge Hon. Larry Alan Burns said, “It seems to me these are things that, you know, reasonable people, whether prosecutors, defense attorneys, or judges or officers for that matter would say, yeah, we don’t want somebody sitting around in clothing in which they’ve defecated. We’re not going to do that. That’s not a humane thing. This is not some third world country where we treat prisoners like that. So, we’ll get them a change of clothes, we’ll let them shower.”Burns also said, “I think some adjustments need to be made in the case of people that are coming down from narcotics withdrawal.” He added, “I think the government is in a position where they’re vulnerable probably to civil claims that they have – if they don’t do that to civil liability for being indifferent to somebody’s medical needs under the circumstances.”According to the transcript, Burns said he didn’t believe he was authorized to issue orders that would create change, but did suggest that he agrees there’s a problem that can be fixed.McBride said it isn’t just one person being treated badly. He also represents a woman by the name of Amanda Sams who is suing the government.According to federal documents, Sams was also accused of trying to bring a non-U.S. citizen into the United States illegally.After her arrest, Sams told agents she was an alcoholic and an addict, McBride said.Her complaint against the government alleges the night she was arrested, Sams began experiencing the initial effects of detox and withdrawal. It states officials tried to transport her to MCC but, “given Ms. Sams’ obviously unstable medical condition, MCC officials rejected Sams and recommended that she be taken to a hospital for immediate medical attention.”McBride said officers instead “took her back to this facility at the border where they put her in a cell in the basement and left her there for four days.”Sams was not seen by a doctor, nurse, or other medical provider to treat her life-threatening detox and withdrawal symptoms, McBride said.According to her lawsuit, “At several points, defendants even closed the small window to her cell to silence Ms. Sams’ continued pleas for medical attention. Defendants told Ms. Sams, ‘You’re not our problem.’”"They are entitled to a base standard of medical care if the government is going to arrest them and hold them in custody,” McBride said.More people detoxing at the border?Documents obtained by Team 10 show more than just the two people suing the government have gone through detox at the San Ysidro Land Port of Entry.Team 10 obtained what’s known as the “No Body Active List” or “Federal Defender No Body Report.”According to court filings “By 9:00 a.m. each day, the Government shall provide a list to the duty Magistrate Judge and Federal Defender of all persons arrested before 6:00 a.m. that day, but who will not be arraigned that day. The Government shall also provide the reasons for the delay and the location of the defendants. The Government is therefore required to provide the No Body Active List by order of the Court.”A No Body Active List from March of this year shows two additional people involuntarily detoxing from heroin were kept at the San Ysidro Port. Team 10 investigator Adam Racusin has also seen other No Body Active Lists from different dates showing other people marked as detoxing at the San Ysidro Port of Entry.Team 10 tried to get all No Body Active Lists from the start of this year, but so far, the United States Attorney's Office has not turned them over, saying they aren't public documents. Government ResponseA spokesperson for Customs and Border Protection (CBP) tells Team 10 “CBP cannot comment on matters that are currently under litigation.”The spokesperson sent 10News an agency-wide policy that describes nationwide standards, which govern CBP’s interaction with detained individuals. While officials wouldn’t comment, transcripts from a hearing related to Lewis’ criminal case describe some of the conditions and protocols at the San Ysidro Land Port of Entry.According to the transcript, a supervisory enforcement officer over the criminal enforcement unit testified that detainees are observed every 15 to 20 minutes, but the welfare check does not involve checking vitals, such as blood pressure or heart rate.The supervisor testified that there are medical personnel at the port including physician assistants. When asked roughly how many hours of the day are covered by a physician assistant, the supervisor testified “it varies from day-to-day depending on their schedule, but I know they are there for a majority about 16 to probably 20 hours a day.” She also noted there is a physician they report to who is either on-site or they’re able to contact by email or call.When asked by the court if there is any different protocol followed by personnel at the port once someone is returned from the MCC, rejected for medical reasons, the supervisor answered: “Our normal protocol is that we then immediately ask for space at API (Alvarado Parkway Institute). We try not to hold them at the port. We hold them at the port for the minimum amount of time that we can.” The judge then asked “In this case, I was told there was no space” to which the supervisor responded. “Correct.”ChangeIn court for a different criminal case where a detainee has alleged a lack of medical treatment, an attorney for the government told a judge that procedures have been changed.She said now, people who are brought back to the port are seen by a physician assistant every shift, which is every six to eight hours.Team 10 spoke with an addiction specialist who said people suffering from withdrawal should be checked and monitored more than that. 8757

  

A 61-year-old man suffered puncture wounds in a shark attack Wednesday on Cape Cod in Massachusetts, according to officials and reports.The swimmer suffered bites to his leg and torso and was hospitalized, CNN affiliate WCVB reported. His condition was not immediately known.The incident occurred in Truro within the boundary of Cape Cod National Seashore, the National Park Service said.The man was standing about 30 yards offshore when he was bitten.WCVB reported there have been shark sightings in the area, with seals being attacked.Two children were attacked last month off Long Island, New York, and investigators were looking into whether sharks were responsible. 693

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