Midwest
Boyfriend charged in the shooting death of All-American college gymnast Kara Welsh
Chad Richards, a former member of the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater wrestling team, has been charged in the shooting death of girlfriend Kara Welsh, who was found dead in his Wisconsin apartment just before midnight Aug. 30.
Richards, 23, made his initial appearance via video in Walworth County Court Friday. He was charged with first-degree intentional homicide and is facing additional charges of endangering safety by use of a dangerous weapon and disorderly conduct.
The Whitewater Police Department identified the suspect who allegedly killed Kara Welsh as Chad T. Richards, 23, of Loves Park, Ill. (Whitewater Police Department)
Whitewater Police arrived at Richards’ apartment Aug. 30 just before midnight and discovered the body of 21-year-old Kara Welsh. Police initially reported that the victim had a gunshot wound and that an altercation between the two took place before the fatal shooting.
But a criminal complaint released Friday revealed that Welsh was shot multiple times.
Richards placed the 911 call and later told investigators the two were arguing when he said Welsh grabbed his gun from a nightstand. Richards said he wrestled the gun away and shot Welsh because he “feared for his life,” the complaint continued.
According to the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, 11 spent casings were found inside the apartment, and a medical examiner found that Welsh had eight gunshot wounds to the neck, torso and other areas.
This photo provided by the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater shows UW-Whitewater student Kara Welsh, who was killed Aug. 30, 2024, in an apartment near the university campus. (University of Wisconsin-Whitewater via AP)
ALL-AMERICAN WISCONSIN COLLEGE GYMNAST SHOT AND KILLED DAYS BEFORE CLASSES BEGIN, SUSPECT IN CUSTODY
Richards, who is being held on $1 million bond, told investigators Welsh was his girlfriend.
According to online records, Richards was a member of the UW-Whitewater wrestling team for two seasons between 2020-2022. Welsh also attended UW-Whitewater, where she was a member of the gymnastics team.
“To put into words the impact Kara had on the Warhawk community is impossible,” coach Jen Regan said of the national champion and two-time All-American. “A powerful athlete, dedicated teammate and the light in everyone’s dark days, Kara truly lifted each and every one of us up in her time as a Warhawk gymnast. There are no words to describe the void we all feel in our hearts, but Kara’s legacy will live on through Warhawk gymnastics forever.”
Police at the site of Kara Welsh’s murder in Whitewater, Wis. (WKOW)
Welsh was from Plainfield, Illinois, and was majoring in management in the school’s College of Business and Economics. Last year, she won an individual national title on the vault at the NCAA Division III championships.
Richards is due to appear in court Oct. 26 for a preliminary hearing.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Follow Fox News Digital’s sports coverage on X, and subscribe to the Fox News Sports Huddle newsletter.
Read the full article from Here
Milwaukee, WI
Leaders of ‘United for Venezuela Emergency Relief Campaign’ grateful for support
MILWAUKEE — As Venezuela continues to recover from devastating earthquakes, support from Milwaukee’s “United for Venezuela Emergency Relief Campaign” is soon heading to the disaster-stricken country.
The basement of Blessed Sacrament Catholic Church is filled to the brim with donations ticketed for Venezuela, the culmunation of a week of community generosity.
From food to clothing and toys, the outpouring has been remarkable said Father Norberto Sandoval, who is from Venezuela and serves as associate pastor of Blessed Sacrament.
“This [has been] overwhelming,” said Sandoval. “I mean, if you can see [the basement], you were able to get in on Monday. Now we [are not] able to walk.”
(Spectrum News 1/Blake Dietz)
Aura Escobar, who is also from Venezuela, has been doing whatever she can to help her home country, including packing donations. She described the support from friends, coworkers, and strangers as something special to witness.
“In my Venmo, I had three thousand dollars in less than 24 hours,” Escobar said. “And I was able to buy stuff to donate. It’s been amazing. It’s very heartwarming to have so many people that care about Venezuela.”
Due to limited storage capacity and the logistical planning required to transport the supplies to those who need them most, organizers have decided to stop accepting donations after Friday afternoon.
“We have more than a thousand boxes right now. We are expecting two semi-trucks either to move [Friday] in the afternoon or tomorrow,” Sandoval said.
(Spectrum News 1/Blake Dietz)
He acknowledged that corruption in times of trauma is a long-standing concern in Venezuela. For that reason, the trucks will take the local donations to Miami, where a Venezuelan organization he fully trusts will handle the final distribution.
“We have already the person and it’s going to be [done] free. It’s going to be directly to a group of religious groups in Venezuela. So, in that way people will get the donations,” he said.
Sandoval and other organizers are putting out one final plea for volunteers to help load the semi-trucks on Friday and Saturday.
Minneapolis, MN
‘Threads of Us’ explores how Minnesota immigrants hold onto home
What does it look like to carry your culture with you? When Minneapolis architect and photographer Patricia Mutebi posted a casting call on TikTok in December, she was looking for a way to map how immigrants and diaspora communities in Minnesota keep their heritage close.
She initially planned to photograph Twin Cities residents in their homes, but Operation Metro Surge, the federal immigration enforcement crackdown in Minnesota, forced her to reconsider the safety of her subjects.
“I didn’t think that people would feel comfortable letting a stranger into their home, trying to take pictures of them,” Mutebi said. “From January all through April, I photographed those who were comfortable coming into the downtown [Minneapolis] area.”
The result is “Threads of Us,” a portrait exhibit featuring 20 Hmong, Thai, Indian, African, Pakistani and Indigenous people who have built a life in the Twin Cities.
After seeing the exhibit, spend the rest of the weekend at the annual Taste of Minnesota, revisit soul music of the 1990s at the Dakota or watch Saturday’s World Cup matches at a street fair in Minneapolis.
Finding home in Minnesota
In “Threads of Us,” Mutebi asked each person she photographed the same question: What does home look like after you’ve left it behind?
“Each person I photographed taught me something new about perseverance and resilience,” Mutebi said. “They’ve come into a new place that doesn’t necessarily welcome them openly, but they’re choosing to show up as their authentic self regardless. Nothing could honestly beat that.”
Mutebi understands the feeling. She was born in Uganda, studied architecture in Kenya, and moved to Minnesota in 2019.
“I have friends here who have families that know how to cook Kenyan food, and whenever I go visit them, there’s a smell that just hits me, and I’m taken back to a time when I was an undergrad,” she said. “In the first house that I bought, I have this gallery wall that shows the journey I’ve traveled. It has art from Kenya, from Uganda, and pictures of friends and family. That’s the most treasured thing I have.”
She also draws inspiration from architects like Burkinabé-German designer Diébédo Francis Kéré, whose work centers on Indigenous materials and community-led design across Africa.
He “didn’t try to bring the Western world with him,” Mutebi said. “He was designing for the culture — where it sat, and using the materials they have to help people understand that we have these resources already.”
For “Threads of Us,” participants arrived in traditional clothing — from Hmong vests and Ethiopian habesha dresses to Ghanaian kente cloth and Pakistani shalwar kameez. They brought meaningful objects, including wedding garments, family heirlooms, Oromo beadwork, Somali incense burners and Ethiopian coffee ceremony sets. Each item served as a tangible bridge to their families and homelands.
“I found people who have photographed cultures in the most beautiful way and have captured joy without trying to modernize the culture,” Mutebi said. “I want to photograph people where they’re at and how they move through life without trying to change them one way or another.”
Threads of Us, now on view at The Residency by Modern Day Me in Minneapolis, is Mutebi’s first exhibit — but she’s already thinking about what comes next. She was recently selected for the cohort of the Little Africa residency program, where she will partner with local African-descent business owners to tell their stories through photography.
“Unless you’re Indigenous, you came from somewhere,” Mutebi said. “I want people to take the time to think about what it means to them and how they can show up in the places they are now.”
Date: Friday, July 3 through Friday, July 17.
Time: 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday
Location: The Residency by Modern Day Me, 401 N. 1st Ave., Minneapolis
Cost: Free
For more information: Visit patriciamutebi.studio/portfolio/threadsofus

Taste of Minnesota
Spend your Fourth of July weekend at the Taste of Minnesota, where 18 local musicians and more than 100 food vendors will take over downtown Minneapolis for the annual two-day festival.
The main stage will feature grunge-pop band Gully Boys, hip-hop artist Nur-D, singer-songwriter Dessa, and DJ Sophia Eris. The North Star Stage will spotlight emerging acts, including Frankie Torres, Adam David Bohanan, and Solana and the Sunsets.
Date: Friday, July 3 and Saturday, July 4
Time: 4 to 10 p.m. on Friday. Noon to 10 p.m. on Saturday
Location: At the intersection of Nicollet Mall and Washington Avenue
Cost: Free. RSVP here.
For more information: Visit tasteofmn.com
A night of ’90s soul
If music from the 1995 film “Waiting to Exhale” still has a place on your playlist, head to the Dakota this Friday for the Ladies of Soul tribute show.
Local singers Solorah, Ashley Commodore and Monique Blakey will perform the soundtrack from start to finish, revisiting songs by Whitney Houston, Toni Braxton, Mary J. Blige, Brandy and Aretha Franklin.

World Cup watch party
Catch the knockout rounds between Canada and Morocco and Paraguay and France at the World Cup Street Fair in Minneapolis this Saturday.
Utepils Brewing will show both games on large indoor and outdoor screens, while the street fair will feature food trucks, art vendors, mini soccer games and DJ sets between kickoffs.
Indianapolis, IN
Police advise against celebrating Fourth of July by shooting in the air
IMPD Chief Chris Bailey gives briefing following mass shooting
IMPD Chief Chris Bailey addresses the problem of youth with guns downtown following a mass shooting that killed two teens and injured 5 on July 5, 2025.
Two years ago on the Fourth of July, an 11-year-old visiting Indianapolis was struck in the back by a bullet fired into the air. Jataevious Ragsdale – who recovered quickly – was visiting family in Indianapolis for the holiday.
Had he been struck differently by the bullet, Ragsdale may not have had the chance to experience Fourth of July again. Falling bullets have killed other children, like 13-year-old Noah Inman in Hammond in 2017 and 4-year-old Marquel Peters in Atlanta in 2010.
Holidays like Fourth of July and New Year’s Eve often prompt individuals to celebrate by firing their gun in the air, something the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department strongly advises against doing.
“Every bullet that goes up comes down,” Downtown District Commander Shane Foley said. “So if people think that’s not dangerous, they’re wrong.”
This story continues below the image.
Those who choose to fire their gun into the air can risk causing serious damage, Foley said, and doing so can lead to an arrest and prosecution. Criminal consequences for firing into the air include criminal recklessness, battery, vandalism and even homicide depending on the damage done.
“People think of it as a harmless act, but those bullets coming down may very well hurt somebody, damage property, hurt animals,” he said.
Bullets shot into the air can travel more than a mile before falling. Smaller rounds can fall at roughly 300 feet per second and larger rounds can descend at nearly 500 feet per second. Speeds of 150 to 170 feet per second can break skin, while 200 feet per second can penetrate a human skull. That’s what happened to 4-year-old Marquel, who was sitting next to his mother in an Atlanta church for New Year’s Eve services.
IMPD respects Hoosiers’ Second Amendment rights, Foley said, but says people must handle firearms safely so others don’t get hurt.
While it may be hard to distinguish gunfire from fireworks during the Fourth of July weekend, Foley said, anyone who sees someone firing a gun in the air should immediately call police.
The simple advice he offers to those thinking of shooting their gun in the air on the Fourth of July?
“Don’t do it. It’s illegal.”
This story continues below the image.
Holiday comes in the wake of last year’s mass shooting
Fourth of July 2026 follows a mass shooting in downtown Indianapolis on July 5, 2025 that happened hours after thousands gathered for a fireworks show. Two teenagers died and five other people were injured in the shooting. Police arrested at least 11 individuals throughout the night for charges ranging from weapons possession, criminal recklessness and battery.
“Reckless or disruptive behavior will not be tolerated” during Indianapolis holiday festivities, Deputy Chief Matthew Thomas said.
Foley said there will be a “very strong public safety presence downtown” over the weekend. Officers will patrol on foot, bikes and undercover, using safety cameras and drones to monitor what’s happening in the city.
“We will not allow the actions of a few individuals to negatively impact the experience of thousands of families,” Thomas said.
Mia Thurow is the breaking news and criminal justice reporting intern for the Indianapolis Star. She can be reached at mthurow@gannett.com.
-
Milwaukee, WI59 seconds ago
Leaders of ‘United for Venezuela Emergency Relief Campaign’ grateful for support
-
Atlanta, GA6 minutes agoMets celebrate America’s 250th with four-game series in Atlanta
-
Minneapolis, MN13 minutes ago‘Threads of Us’ explores how Minnesota immigrants hold onto home
-
Indianapolis, IN16 minutes ago
Police advise against celebrating Fourth of July by shooting in the air
-
Pittsburg, PA21 minutes agoFireworks Near Me: July 4th Events Around USC, Pittsburgh For 2026
-
Augusta, GA28 minutes agoAs temps rise, Augusta officials open May Park cooling center
-
Washington, D.C30 minutes agoWhat’s that noise? What you need to know about D.C. flyovers Friday and Saturday – WTOP News
-
Cleveland, OH36 minutes agoExtreme heat warning ends Friday evening: What to expect