
‘It's like a horror movie': 11 stabbed at unhoused shelter in Oregon
Salem police said they arrested a man in connection with the mass stabbing carried out at about 7.15pm local time at a facility run by an organization called the Union Gospel Mission. The suspect was not immediately identified.
First responders brought the victims to a local hospital with 'varying types' of wounds. Officials did not immediately provide exact details on the severity of the injuries, though the Salem Statesman Journal reported one victim was seen 'bleeding heavily from the neck'.
The attacker had spent Saturday night at the Union Gospel Mission building but was considered new to the facility, the site's executive director, Craig Smith, said in an interview with NBC News.
He apparently was about to check in for a second night – preparing to hand over his belongings to staff – when he got into a fight.
'Something … set him off, and he evidently had a knife in his bag,' Smith told NBC.
Smith said a mission employee working the check-in desk was among the wounded. He added that victims were found in the shelter's day room as well as outside the building – and that the facility's security video system captured 'the whole incident'.
A Union Gospel mission resident, Bobby Epperly, told the Statesman Journal that there was 'blood everywhere' in the facility.
'It's like a horror movie,' Epperly said to the newspaper.
Cellphone video circulating on social media reportedly showed the moment when the suspect in Sunday's mass stabbing was arrested. The video showed two police officers with pistols drawn successfully ordering a shirtless man to get on the ground before they handcuffed him.
A man with a crutch approached the officers and the detained man – who were out on a street – before the police ordered him to back away.
'That's right – you're going in!' someone who was not in the video's frame can be heard screaming in the direction of the arrested man.
Union Gospel Mission's website says it helps 'men, women and children break free from homelessness' through Christianity. A group of Christian businesspeople founded the non-profit ministry, which offers counseling and aims to house about 150 people nightly, according to its website.
The attack occurred at a 50,000-sq-ft facility that was opened in 2021 after Union Gospel Mission moved out of another complex it had long used previously. It sits across the street from the Salem police department.
In the US, shootings are the most common type of mass violence. But stabbings are also a relatively frequent way of carrying out mass violence in the country, data show.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
16 minutes ago
- BBC News
Brad Pitt burglary: Four teens arrested also targeted other LA stars, say police
Four teenagers have been arrested over a burglary that left actor Brad Pitt's home ransacked, police suspects are allegedly behind a number of "celebrity burglaries" that targeted the houses of actors and professional athletes, Los Angeles Police Chief Jim McDonnell said the male suspects, two 18-year-olds and two boys aged 17 and 16, are alleged street gang members, and property stolen in the burglaries was found when police searched their did not name those whose homes were targeted by the suspects, but celebrities including Nicole Kidman and Keith Urban, LA Dodgers pitcher Yoshinobu Yamamoto and LA Football Club's Olivier Giroud have reported break-ins this year. The investigation started in late June after Pitt's home was ransacked by a trio of masked thieves. McDonnell said the group hopped a perimeter fence surrounding the Los Feliz home and shattered a window, hopping inside and taking items before fleeing. Police did not confirm the home belonged to the Oscar-winning actor, but the address matched that of a home Pitt bought in large three-bedroom home sits just outside Griffith Park, which is home to the famous Hollywood Sign. It is surrounded by a large fence and greenery that shields the home from public was not home at the time of the burglary and was promoting his new film, F1. The BBC has contacted representatives for the actor. McDonnell said investigators found the suspects were part of a crew that "were burglarizing various high-profile residents throughout the city", which he said included homes of "actors and professional athletes". Last week, authorities followed the four suspects and were able to arrest them on burglary charges, he added. Police did not elaborate on what items were recovered after police searched their homes. McDonnell said burglars like this group had become increasingly smart in their crimes - planting surveillance cameras in nearby flowerbeds or across the street from homes they target to monitor a victim's routine. He said thieves had also been using wi-fi jammers to knock out home surveillance systems and cameras that could alert homeowners or police of a break-in. He noted that celebrities and athletes can be easier targets since their appearances and games are publicised online. He noted, though, that anyone posting on social media about their travels can unknowingly be alerting a potential thief to their location. "We don't really give enough thought to... [while] we want our friends to know where we are and what we're doing, you're telling everybody else then who may be looking to exploit your situation," McDonnell said.


Daily Mail
18 minutes ago
- Daily Mail
Man, 60, poisoned himself after taking medical advice from ChatGPT
A man was left fighting for his sanity after replacing table salt with a chemical more commonly used to clean swimming pools after following AI advice. The 60-year-old American spent three weeks in hospital suffering from hallucinations, paranoia and severe anxiety after taking dietary tips from ChatGPT. Doctors revealed in a US medical journal that the man had developed bromism - a condition virtually wiped out since the 20th century - after he embarked on a 'personal experiment' to cut salt from his diet. Instead of using everyday sodium chloride, the man swapped it for sodium bromide, a toxic compound once sold in sedative pills but now mostly found in pool-cleaning products. Symptoms of bromism include psychosis, delusions, skin eruptions and nausea - and in the 19th century it was linked to up to eight per cent of psychiatric hospital admissions. The bizarre case took a disturbing turn when the man turned up at an emergency department insisting his neighbour was trying to poison him. He had no previous history of mental illness. Intrigued and alarmed, doctors tested ChatGPT themselves. The bot, they said, still recommended sodium bromide as a salt alternative, with no mention of any health risk. The case, published in the Annals of Internal Medicine, warns that the rise of AI tools could contribute to 'preventable adverse health outcomes' in a chilling reminder of how machine-generated 'advice' can go horrible wrong. AI chatbots have been caught out before. Last year, a Google bot told users they could stay healthy by 'eating rocks' – advice seemingly scraped from satirical websites. OpenAI, the Silicon Valley giant behind ChatGPT, last week announced that its new GPT-5 update is better at answering health questions. A spokesman told The Telegraph: 'You should not rely on output from our services as a sole source of truth or factual information, or as a substitute for professional advice.' Daily Mail have approached OpenAI for comment. It comes after clinical psychologist Paul Losoff told the that dependency on AI robots is becoming a huge risk, and warned against getting too close to ChatGPT. 'One might come to depend and rely on AI so [much] that they don't seek out human interactions,' he said. He explained that this could be especially detrimental for those who may already be struggling with anxiety or depression. Dr. Losoff explained that by using AI, these people may worsen their conditions and experience cognitive symptoms like chronic pessimism, distorted thinking, or cloudy thinking. And that in itself could create further issues. 'Because of these cognitive symptoms, there is a risk that an individual turning to AI may misinterpret AI feedback leading to harm,' he said. And when it comes to people who may be in crisis, this may only exacerbate issues. Dr. Losoff said that there is always a risk that AI will make mistakes and provide harmful feedback during crucial mental health moments. 'There also is a profound risk for those with acute thought disorders such as schizophrenia in which they would be prone to misinterpreting AI feedback,' he said.


Telegraph
18 minutes ago
- Telegraph
Pictured: Gunman who ‘killed three' in Texas Target rampage
The suspected gunman accused of shooting a child and two adults dead in a Target car park appeared bloodied in a mugshot released by a Texas police force. Ethan Nieneker, 32, is accused of killing a man, a four-year-old girl and her grandfather in a car park in Austin on Monday. Austin police shared a mugshot of Mr Nieneker, which shows gashes and bruises around his eyes. The alleged killer, whom police described as having a 'mental health history', was detained following a police chase that involved two cars he had stolen for his failed getaway. Officers said he was found naked holding a Bible and claiming to be Jesus. Mr Nieneker is being held in Travis County Jail on murder charges. He already has a lengthy criminal record, including arrests for assault, family violence, drunk driving and criminal mischief, Fox News reported. The shooting unfolded at around 2.15pm local time, when Mr Nieneker allegedly entered the shop car park and opened fire with a handgun at random, killing Hector Martinez Machuca, Adam Chow and his granddaughter. He first approached Machuca, a Target employee, shooting him as he collected carts outside the store, according to Austin Police Sgt Nathan Sexton. Mr Nieneker is then alleged to have approached a family getting into a Toyota, where police said he gunned down Mr Chow and his granddaughter, before assaulting the man's wife and stealing their car. Mr Machuca later died in hospital, while Mr Chow and his granddaughter both died at the scene. His wife suffered minor injuries as a result of her assault. As Mr Nieneker made his hour-long getaway, Sgt Sexton said he was responsible for causing at least one crash, attempting to steal a truck, assaulting another woman who he threw from a vehicle during a car-jacking, and attempting to break into a taxi. Mr Nieneker was eventually tasered by police around 20 miles from the scene and taken into custody, while the murder weapon was recovered from the Chow family's Toyota 4-Runner, police said. In addition to murder charges, Mr Nieneker is expected to face charges related to assault, vehicle theft and property damage. Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis said: 'This is a very sad day for Austin. It's a very sad day for us all and my condolences go out to the families.'