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Two men sent to hospital after overnight CT shooting

Two men sent to hospital after overnight CT shooting

Yahoo05-07-2025
The New Haven Police Department said they are investigating a double shooting that occurred early Saturday morning.
At around 2:55 a.m. officers were deployed to the area of Crown Street and Temple Street for a reported double shooting, police said.
A 22-year-old man from Meriden and a 20-year-old man from Bristol suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
This shooting remains under investigation, according to police. No further details have been released.
Stephen Underwood can be reached at sunderwood@courant.com
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‘Unimaginable tragedy': 5-year-old dead after shooting themselves in the head in latest unsecured gun death in Georgia
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‘Unimaginable tragedy': 5-year-old dead after shooting themselves in the head in latest unsecured gun death in Georgia

A five-year-old boy died after finding an unsecured handgun in a vehicle and shooting himself in the head, police say. Officers from the City of Griffin Police Department responded to reports of a shooting on Sunday at a storage facility in Atlanta, Georgia. Upon arriving at the scene, police said they found the child suffering from a gunshot wound to the head in a vehicle. The shooting prompted a response from at least four agencies as life-saving measures were administered. Sadly, the child was pronounced dead at the scene. Investigators determined that the child was left alone in the vehicle with an unsecured firearm before he picked up the weapon and shot himself, which police say 'tragically resulted in his death.' Chase Desselle, 27, of Hampton, was arrested and charged with involuntary manslaughter and reckless conduct, authorities said. It marks the latest in a string of recent accidental shootings by children, highlighted by 11Alive, after they got hold of unsecured firearms in the state. Deselle was booked into the Spalding County jail and was denied bond, online jail records show. The suspect's relation to the child was not immediately clear. 'This is an unimaginable tragedy for the family and our community,' Griffin Police Chief Connie Sampson said in a statement. 'Our sincere condolences are with them during this time of loss. The incident remains under investigation.' Sampson said that no further details are being released at this time out of respect for the victim's family. The incident remains under investigation. On July 24, police said that 5-year-old Jeremiah Emmanuel George Jr. was fatally shot by his twin brother in their DeKalb County home with a handgun belonging to their mother. In Eastpoint on July 2, police said 3-year-old Jianni Jones found his father's gun and fatally shot himself while his parents slept. On June 23, another 3-year-old shot and killed a 19-year-old with his gun while he was asleep inside a home near Hiram, authorities said. A 2-year-old shot their twin brother on March 12 in Hampton, with the toddler surviving. In February, a 7-year-old boy accidentally shot himself in the leg in northwest Atlanta. The child also survived.

What Trump Is Really Up to in Washington
What Trump Is Really Up to in Washington

New York Times

time31 minutes ago

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What Trump Is Really Up to in Washington

You do not need the strongest powers of observation to see that crime is a pretext — and not the main reason — for the military occupation of Washington, D.C., by federal agents and soldiers from the National Guard. If the president cared about crime, he would push House Republicans to restore the $1 billion Congress cut from the city's budget, so that Washington could fully staff its Metropolitan Police Department and pay for the services and personnel necessary to keep the city safe. He might fill vacancies at the U.S. attorney's office in Washington and on the local Superior Court, to help federal and municipal officials bring cases to fruition. Looking beyond Washington, he might also have kept federal agents assigned to actual criminal cases, rather than move them to immigration enforcement or saddle them with investigations of his political enemies. If the president cared about crime, he would not have pardoned the Jan. 6 rioters, many of whom have gone on to commit violent crimes in their communities. Still, President Trump's obvious indifference to the actual work of preventing criminal victimization has not stopped some professional political observers from defending the occupation of Washington on the grounds that there is crime in the city. 'I have no doubt that Trump enjoys targeting Democratic-controlled cities for embarrassment,' Michael Powell wrote in The Atlantic, conceding that this deployment is pretextual. But, he added, 'I also have little doubt that a mother in Ward 8 might draw comfort from a National Guard soldier standing watch near her child's school.' Ward 8 is a disproportionately low-income area of Washington that covers the southernmost quadrant of the city, where the violent crime rate is significantly higher than it is in other parts of the city. One assumes that there are actual residents of the area you could speak with to understand their view of the situation. There's no reason to ventriloquize an imagined person when there are real ones with thoughts to share. To this point, my newsroom colleague Clyde McGrady spoke to people in Congress Heights, a neighborhood in Ward 8. 'If Trump is genuinely concerned about the safety of D.C. residents,' one resident said, 'I would see National Guard in my neighborhood. I'm not seeing it, and I don't expect to see it. I don't think Trump is bringing in the National Guard to protect Black babies in Southeast.' You won't find the National Guard in any of the city's high crime areas. The vast majority of soldiers and agents deployed to Washington are stationed in the vicinity of the White House and other high-profile sections of the city. There are soldiers patrolling the National Mall; armored vehicles parked at Union Station; and ICE agents manning checkpoints on U Street, an area known for its bars, restaurants and nightlife. They're not there for safety, but for show. Want all of The Times? Subscribe.

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