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Two children have been killed and 17 other people injured after a shooter opened fire at a school in Minneapolis.

The shooter – Robin Westman – opened fire with a rifle through the windows of a church at Annunciation Catholic School and struck a group of children as they sat in pews on Wednesday morning.

As it happened: FBI says attack investigated as ‘terrorism’

The victims killed were aged eight and 10, and the others injured included 14 children, two of whom were in a critical condition, according to the city’s police chief Brian O’Hara.

Here is what we know so far.

Law enforcement officers gather outside the school after the shooting. Pic: AP
Image:
Law enforcement officers gather outside the school after the shooting. Pic: AP

What happened?

Police were called to the school at just after 8.20am (2.20pm UK time) after witnesses reported hearing semi-automatic gunfire at the pre-kindergarten through eighth-grade school.

The shooting happened during a mass for all year groups, coming during the first week of term.

Police chief Mr O’Hara said the shooter – armed with a rifle, shotgun, and pistol – approached the side of the church and fired dozens of rounds.

He called the attack in Minnesota a “deliberate act of violence against innocent children and other people worshipping”.

Pic: AP
Image:
Pic: AP

He also said a wooden plank had been used to barricade some side doors.

Authorities found a smoke bomb but no explosives at the scene, Mr O’Hara said.

The FBI said it is investigating the shooting as an “act of domestic terrorism” and a “hate crime targeting Catholics”.

What we know about the suspect

Police said they believed the suspect died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound on the site’s car park.

Mr O’Hara said the suspect had been identified as 23-year-old Robin Westman, a male born as Robert Westman.

Robin Westman
Image:
Robin Westman

Westman is believed to have acted alone in the attack and had lawfully purchased the rifle, pistol, and shotgun used.

He added Westman had scheduled a manifesto to be released on YouTube and that it “appeared to show him at the scene and included some disturbing writings”.

He said the content was taken down with the assistance of the FBI.

Asked about a motive, Mr O’Hara said he had no information to share other than the manifesto that was scheduled to come out on YouTube.

“I cannot confirm a relationship between the suspect or his family and the church at this time, but that’s obviously something we’re looking very closely at,” he added.

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School killer ‘filmed YouTube manifesto’

What do we know about the victims?

The two children killed have not yet been named publicly.

The others injured included 14 children and three adults in their 80s, according to police.

After the incident the main trauma hospital in Minneapolis, Hennepin Healthcare, received 11 patients, including nine children – aged six to 14 – and two adults, emergency medicine chair Dr Thomas Wyatt said.

He said seven of the patients were critically injured and that four had been taken to operating rooms.

Children’s Minnesota, a paediatric trauma hospital, said in a statement that five children were admitted.

In a later update, Mr O’Hara said all of those injured in the shooting were expected to survive.

‘It seemed like it went on for eternity’

Bill Bienemann, a witness to the shooting, told Sky News it went on “for several minutes – a long time for live gunfire”.

“I know what gunfire sounds like, and I was shocked,” he added. “I said there’s no way that could be gunfire, there was so much of it.

“It seemed like a rifle, it certainly didn’t sound like a handgun, so he must have reloaded several times.”

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Gunfire happened for ‘several minutes’

His daughter Alexandra, who attended the school for nine years, added: “It makes me sick to my stomach knowing that there’s probably people I know that are injured or maybe have been killed.

“It doesn’t make me feel safe at all in this community that I have been a part of for so long.

“Me and my friends were talking, and we said this is like our version of 9/11.”

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‘My friend saved me’

Madee Brandt, a nanny who works near the shooting scene, pulled into the area just as police arrived and children fled.

“I was thankful to see kids coming out unharmed, safe, but just [seeing] the looks on some of their faces… just the screams coming from the mums who didn’t know where their kids are,” Brandt told reporters.

“You see videos online, but it does not compare to seeing it and witnessing it in person. That was rough.”

Mayor calls shooting ‘unspeakable act’

At a news conference, Minneapolis mayor Jacob Frey said the shooting was an “unspeakable act”.

“Children are dead,” he said. “There are families that have a deceased child. You cannot put into words the gravity, the tragedy, or the absolute pain of this situation.”

He said the community didn’t just want prayers, adding: “These kids were literally praying, it was the first week of school.

“They were in a church, these are kids that should be learning with their friends.”

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Minneapolis mayor calls for action on gun crime

‘Deeply unsettling’

Later, he called for action on gun violence, saying: “I think the impetus has to be on all of us as leaders to do a whole lot more to recognise that we’ve got more guns in this country than we have people.”

Minnesota governor Tim Walz added children at the school had been met with “evil and horror and death”.

Responding to the reports, US President Donald Trump said on Truth Social: “I have been fully briefed on the tragic shooting in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

“The FBI quickly responded and they are on the scene. The White House will continue to monitor this terrible situation.”

Minneapolis Police were already investigating three deadly shootings in the space of 12 hours.

“The level of gun violence across the city within the last day is deeply unsettling,” the Minneapolis Police Department said.

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Charlie Kirk’s movement is growing in the wake of his assassination – as is the chasm in US politics

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Charlie Kirk's movement is growing in the wake of his assassination - as is the chasm in US politics

It was an event organisers had hoped, perhaps optimistically, would be civil. Then comes a shout: “Shut the f**k up!”

In a busy room at Colorado State University, where Charlie Kirk had been scheduled to speak before his assassination, the crowd is riled, loudly heckling the speaker, Steven Bonnell, a left-wing streamer better known as Destiny.

It’s rowdy, gladiatorial and, in some ways, childish. A man in a Donald Trump shirt and a MAGA hat addresses Mr Bonnell: “You’re a fascist! You’re a degenerate!”

“I don’t want to get killed,” the streamer tells me after the debate.

“I’m out here at these events. And I wish that everybody could take a step back and realise that not every single issue that we fight over is the end of the f*****g world.”

This is where Kirk had been due to speak on the next stop on the tour that ended with his assassination in Utah.

A 21-year-old student has said she now carries a handgun because she’s a conservative. A young man says he came here from Florida because he didn’t feel safe.

More on Charlie Kirk

Another man, clearly quite drunk, points out a transgender person in the crowd and says they shouldn’t be allowed firearms. He receives a loud chorus of boos and cheers.

Across the road, in the football stadium, there had been a vigil. Amid a heavy police presence, more than 7,000 gathered to pay their respects, most of them wearing MAGA hats.

It was as much a rally or a recruitment drive for Kirk’s organisation, Turning Point USA, with speakers promising to set up thousands of new chapters around Colorado. I’ve come here to understand the movement he created, how he built it – and what it looks like without him.

“His political ideology is abhorrent, but I think he’s a very effective organiser,” Bonnell says. “And yeah, I’ll give credit where credit is due. He built a very impressive movement in an area that was considered unwinnable by conservatives.”

Steven Bonnell, a left wing streamer better known as Destiny
Image:
Steven Bonnell, a left wing streamer better known as Destiny

‘The world of Charlie Kirk’

Kirk grew up in Arlington Heights, a suburb of Chicago, Illinois. Here, another smaller-scale vigil has been set up, organised by Sofia Volpe. She is 18 years old and came across Kirk on social media.

She says: “My family is conservative. I hold those values myself, but it was really nice to hear somebody younger speaking on this.

“I went to Wheeling High School, where Charlie went, and I joined the Turning Point chapter there. So that also kind of brought me into the world of Charlie Kirk.”

I ask her if she gets any backlash for supporting Kirk.

“People say that I’m horrible, that I’m racist, that I’m homophobic, that I’m transphobic, just all the phobics and I don’t identify myself with any of that. I think that I am a very loving and open person to anybody because people are people.”

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At another vigil, in another Chicago suburb, Miguel Melgar acknowledges not everyone saw Kirk that way.

“I don’t personally think that Charlie had hatred in his heart. However, that doesn’t mean that I don’t accept the fact that he did make what could be perceived as some insensitive statements,” he says.

“And I think that especially if you do take certain statements and really only look at them in a vacuum, it could very well be perceived as statements that might have proliferated some type of a culture of a lack of acceptance.”

‘Kirk has become a martyr’

Kirk used social media to spread his message, to win over young minds, but he also built a formidable political organisation, Turning Point USA (TPUSA), to advocate for conservative politics on high school, college, and university campuses: boots on the ground to mobilise the likes online.

Mr Melgar helped him create it. He says TPUSA started as a moderate, bipartisan organisation and only became explicitly conservative after a $100,000 donation from a Republican politician.

“I think that there are plenty of opportunists that will want to see this as a Franz Ferdinand assassination type of event in the culture war… who will want to take any and every opportunity to use this to continue to drive division and to see this as an opportunity to create World War III,” he said.

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Sky’s James Matthews and Tom Cheshire reflect on a frenetic 10 days since Kirk’s assassination

The vigil we meet at is outside TPUSA’s first office, and others have also come to pay their respects. For many, it was Kirk’s faith – and his evangelism – that was most important.

And that’s how to understand his critics, an attendee named Marlene says, when I ask if she sees where they are coming from.

“I certainly do, it’s from the dark side…they don’t understand it and they’re threatened. Satan is always threatened.”

I ask about Kirk’s well-documented views on gay marriage (he opposed it) and Islam (which he wrote was “not compatible with Western civilisation”).

“There is right and wrong,” she says. “And sometimes it’s hard for people to hear that.”

A vigil held for Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated earlier this month
Image:
A vigil held for Charlie Kirk, who was assassinated earlier this month

As I leave, Mr Melgar joins hands in prayer with Marlene and her friend Anna.

Mr Melgar told me he would be going to another vigil later, so we tag along. It’s organised by Matthew Monfore, a young volunteer with Turning Point USA. And for him, Kirk’s fusion of religion and politics is what made him such an inspiration.

“Charlie Kirk has become really a martyr not just for Americans but I think for these nationalist movements across the world,” he said.

“And so when you do take a Christian foundation of Western civilisation, and that’s shipped around the world, and Islam, which is basically antithetical to that in numerous ways, and then also besides Islam, the gay marriage aspect of it, we believe that, according to Christian values, marriage is between one man, one woman, and that’s natural and right and given to us by God.”

The vigil in Colorado
Image:
The vigil in Colorado

This is an explicit Christian nationalism, a term Mr Monfore is happy with – a faith that seeks not merely to inform politics, but to refashion it with Christianity at its centre, with other faiths and non-traditional beliefs relegated.

He is particularly incensed by the online reaction to Kirk’s murder, some of which certainly celebrated his death. I point out that Kirk himself called for President Joe Biden to be put on trial “and/or executed”.

He continued: “That is a good observation. And so I would actually defend that as free speech, because we do believe that Biden is a traitor to our country. And I know that people on the left think that Trump’s Hitler. So I really think that both you and I are in a conundrum here, that both people view each other as evil.”

Does Mr Monfore think the other side is evil?

He replies: “The left embraces ideology that’s antithetical to morality… So I think that the left embraces evil.”

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Donald Trump hailed Charlie Kirk a ‘hero’

‘I’m not going to send thoughts and prayers’

If the left has a spiritual home, it may be the University of California, Berkley. Two young Republicans, Martin Bertao and Miguel Muniz, are ploughing a relatively lonely furrow, pitching a tent with a sign that says “Change My Mind” – a tactic popularised by Kirk.

On their desk is a cap emblazoned with the logo of ICE, the US immigration authority that has been carrying out a crackdown, and another with Trump 2028, a reference to a third presidential term currently forbidden by the US Constitution.

Mr Bertao says it’s “rage bait” but also admits: “If they somehow repealed the Constitution and he won the primary, sure I’ll vote for him.

“We just try to spread the good word of conservatism, spread the amazing job that Donald Trump’s doing for our country.”

How does that tend to go down, I ask.

“Yeah, so, I don’t want to say unsafe, but sometimes people spit at us, sometimes people will yell at us,” Mr Muniz says.

Martin Bertao and Miguel Muniz at the University of California, Berkley
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Martin Bertao and Miguel Muniz at the University of California, Berkley

A student called James passes by. He tells me: “I’m not excited about (Kirk’s death), but you know I’m not going to mourn someone who was actively rooting for my death as a trans person.

“So it’s not like I’m going to feel bad about it or send thoughts and prayers because if it were me, he’d be so happy.”

Kirk said in 2023 that “the transgender thing happening in America” is a “throbbing middle finger to God” and called trans athlete Lea Thomas “an abomination to God”.

“Speakers like him had, and like how, you know, his talks about transgender ideology, that changed a lot of how people treated me at my own high school,” James says.

Kirk also started a database called Professor Watchlist, dedicated to “unmasking” radical professors.

Read more from Sky News:
Musk and Prince Andrew named in Epstein files release
Diplomats walk out as Israeli PM Netanyahu speaks at UN

Republican Miguel Muniz claims he has been spat on since the death of Charlie Kirk
Image:
Republican Miguel Muniz claims he has been spat on since the death of Charlie Kirk

Grace Lavery, an associate professor of English at Berkeley, was put on that list. She says she has changed her public office hours as a result.

“The part that feels more dangerous to me is that the conspicuousness and the sharing of that kind of information is then drawn on by people who are far more dangerous,” she says.

“There’s a significant population of far-right militants in the broader northern Californian scene. And those people are dangerous.”

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Charlie Kirk’s widow Erika vows to continue his mission

But although she describes Kirk as “an absolutely loathsome figure”, she doesn’t condemn him alone.

“We find ourselves in this polarity whereby we are so disgusted at the conduct of the people we understand as our enemy that we point out every time they do something vulgar,” she says.

“And then the moment that it falls to us to do something equally vulgar and disgusting, we do so anyway, and then blame the other side because they started it.

“And it is that form of split thinking which makes hypocrites of all of us, including me.”

‘I hope there’s a chance we can meet in the middle’

In Glendale, Arizona, people have spent the night camping outside the State Farm Stadium, “a bit of a party” according to one of them, to make sure they get a seat for the official memorial for Charlie Kirk.

The 63,000 stadium is quickly filled, and the overflow is directed towards another 20,000 seater not far away. Christian rock blares loudly, and when the speakers take to the stage, the entire crowd holds up the Turning Point USA signs placed on their seats.

Kirk’s movement isn’t going anywhere. In fact, it’s growing.

Thousands gather to remember right-wing influencer Charlie Kirk
Image:
Thousands gather to remember right-wing influencer Charlie Kirk

Callie, 18, Shaye, 27, and Britney, 32 and carrying her one-year-old son, drove 10 hours from California to be here.

“But it was worth it, and I’m so glad to be here,” Callie says. “It’s just powerful to be in the midst of all these people and be gathered together.”

“I wouldn’t have realised how much of an impact that Charlie Kirk’s organisation has had on the country and on the world until he was gone,” Shaye says.

What she says next brings her to tears: “And it’s so sad that that had to happen. But I know that God really does give beauty for ashes. I’m so grateful to Jesus Christ because I know Charlie Kirk’s gone on Earth, but he lives in heaven with Jesus Christ. And I’m so happy to be here to honour his legacy and his life.”

I ask whether they feel the US can come together with this memorial – or whether it will remain ever more divided.

“We have to be hopeful that there’s a chance that we can come in the middle. I think we felt hurt by how they treated the situation because we all lost somebody,” Britney says.

“We’re definitely praying that we can get together and meet.”

Matthew Monfore, a young volunteer with Turning Point USA
Image:
Matthew Monfore, a young volunteer with Turning Point USA

‘Fight, fight fight!’

If Kirk built his power on the smartphone screen, this memorial is the jumbotron version of his politics: a mix of entertainment, religion and politics on a bombastic scale.

And on display are two interpretations, two visions, of his Christian nationalism, vengeance and forgiveness, Old Testament and New.

Stephen Miller, the White House deputy chief of staff and one of the speakers, labels the left “wicked”.

“You are nothing. You produce nothing,” he says.

The President of the United States says: “I hate my enemies and I do not wish them well.”

But Erika Kirk, Charlie’s widow, is responsible for the most arresting moment of the memorial. Citing Jesus’s example on the cross, she addresses her husband’s murderer: “I forgive you.”

Afterwards, I catch up with Matthew Monfore, the Christian nationalist I met at the vigil in Illinois. He’d driven 26 hours to make it to Arizona, and he preferred the less tolerant message.

“We view the left as very irrational. The term was used by Stephen Miller and people on the cabinet. The term wicked came about that to deny these basic truths and being taught that you should be ashamed for standing otherwise came out today.

“The President of the United States spoke. He, along with people in his cabinet, essentially spoke to using the ‘fight’ word.

“Fight, fight, fight!”

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Gunman who targeted skyscraper housing NFL HQ ‘had brain disease that’s linked to playing American football’

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Gunman who targeted skyscraper housing NFL HQ 'had brain disease that's linked to playing American football'

A gunman who murdered four people in a New York office building before taking his own life had CTE, a degenerative brain disease which has been linked to playing American football.

It is believed Shane Tamura targeted the skyscraper in Manhattan because it houses the headquarters of the NFL.

The 27-year-old, who played high school football, had “unambiguous diagnostic evidence” of low-stage CTE, or chronic traumatic encephalopathy, the New York City medical examiner said.

In a three-page note discovered by police after the mass shooting, Tamura made repeated references to CTE.

Shane Tamura. Pic: AP
Image:
Shane Tamura. Pic: AP

In his note, which was written on notepad paper and using a variety of ink, Tamura wrote “CTE study my brain please. I’m sorry.” And again: “Please study brain for CTE. I’m sorry.”

He also specifically refers to Terry Long, a former NFL player who starred for the Pittsburgh Steelers. Long was diagnosed with CTE after drinking antifreeze to take his own life 20 years ago. CTE can only be diagnosed after death via post mortem.

In a statement, the NFL said: “We continue to grieve the senseless loss of lives, and our hearts remain with the victims’ families and our dedicated employees.

“There is no justification for the horrific acts that took place. As the medical examiner notes ‘the science around this condition continues to evolve, and the physical and mental manifestations of CTE remain under study’.”

A Sky News investigation last year explored the link between CTE and violent attacks, including mass murder.

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July: New York shooter’s note: ‘CTE study my brain please’

We looked at the case of former high school football player Noah Green. He was 25 when he crashed into a security cordon protecting the capitol building in Washington DC and stabbed police officer William Evans to death, before he too was shot dead by responding police.

Green’s mother, Mazie, told me she believes his crime was caused by brain injuries sustained on the American football field. He also had CTE.

The theory of a link between CTE and violent crime is increasingly cited in the courtroom.

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At least four dead in New York shooting

Kellen Winslow, a former NFL player, argued for his sentence for multiple rapes to be reduced because of head trauma suffered on the football field.

Former San Francisco 49ers star Phillip Adams shocked the country when he shot dead six people, including grandparents and their two grandchildren, then himself in 2021. He had severe CTE.

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Elon Musk and Prince Andrew named in latest Epstein files release

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Elon Musk and Prince Andrew named in latest Epstein files release

Elon Musk’s name has appeared in files relating to Jeffrey Epstein, with a reference made to the world’s richest man potentially visiting the paedophile’s island.

The Duke of York is also named as a passenger on the sex offender’s private jet in documents released by Democrats on the House Oversight Committee in the US.

They show Musk as a potential visitor to Epstein‘s island, Little St James, on 6 December 2014 – six years after Epstein became a listed sex offender.

His name appears on what appears to be Epstein’s daily schedule, with the entry reading: “Reminder: Elon Musk to island Dec.6 (is this still happening?)”

Jeffrey Epstein. File pic: New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP
Image:
Jeffrey Epstein. File pic: New York State Sex Offender Registry via AP


In June, Musk claimed Donald Trump appeared in files relating to the disgraced financier and alleged his administration was concealing information about the US president’s association with Epstein.

He gave no evidence for the claim, which he made on X, and later appeared to have deleted the posts.

Sky News has approached Musk for comment.

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Watch: Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein together in 1992

Prince Andrew named as passenger on Epstein jet

The documents also show Prince Andrew as a listed passenger on a flight on Epstein’s jet from Teterboro, New Jersey, to Palm Beach, Florida, on 12 May 2000.

He is named alongside Epstein, his then-girlfriend Ghislaine Maxwell, who is now a convicted sex trafficker, and two names that have been redacted.

Read more from Sky News:
Farage on course to be next PM, mega poll projects
Terror charge against rapper cannot continue, court says

Prince Andrew. Pic: Reuters
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Prince Andrew. Pic: Reuters

Details of the duke travelling on Epstein’s jet have previously been heard in court in Maxwell’s trial. One of her accusers, who was 14 at the time, recalled she had travelled on a flight with Andrew.

The duke strenuously denies any wrongdoing.

In addition to Musk and the duke, the records also show he was in contact with Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates, PayPal founder Peter Thiel and Steve Bannon, who was Mr Trump’s chief strategist during his first term.

A passenger manifest for a flight involving Jeffrey Epstein and Maxwell, and Prince Andrew. Pic: Oversight Dems
Image:
A passenger manifest for a flight involving Jeffrey Epstein and Maxwell, and Prince Andrew. Pic: Oversight Dems

New documents from Epstein's estate. Pic: Oversight Dems
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New documents from Epstein’s estate. Pic: Oversight Dems

Pic: Oversight Dems
Image:
Pic: Oversight Dems

Pic: Oversight Dems
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Pic: Oversight Dems

The names of victims in the records are redacted and the committee said it plans to release more files once they are redacted as well.

Duchess of York dropped by charities over Epstein email

The release comes days after an email surfaced from Sarah, Duchess of York, to Epstein, in which she apologised to him for disowning him in the media.

In the letter, the duchess, Prince Andrew’s ex-wife, called the sex offender a “supreme friend”.

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Duchess of York explains message to Epstein

Her spokesperson said the message was written because he had threatened to sue her for defamation.

The emergence of the email led to the duchess being dropped by a number of charities she had been a patron of.

Earlier this month, Peter Mandelson, the British ambassador to the US, was sacked by Sir Keir Starmer after it was discovered he had also sent messages to Epstein, calling him “my best pal”, after he was jailed awaiting sex trafficking charges.

Epstein was found dead in his cell at a federal jail in Manhattan in August 2019 while he was awaiting trial on sex-trafficking charges. The death was ruled a suicide.

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