DETROIT – Two people were killed and four others were injured during a shooting in Detroit over the weekend, police said.
The shooting happened at 1:34 a.m. on Sunday, Nov. 3, at a home in the 6300 block of Devereaux Street.
When officers arrived, they discovered that six people had been shot during a house party, with two of them being killed.
Police say the circumstances surrounding the shooting and suspects are unknown at this time.
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An investigation is ongoing.
Anyone with information about the shooting is asked to contact Crime Stoppers at 1-800-SPEAK-UP or the Detroit Police Department’s Homicide Division at 313-596-2260.
Copyright 2024 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
About the Author
Sara Powers
Sara Powers joined WDIV as a digital content producer in Oct. 2024 and has been covering Metro Detroit news since 2021.
Detroit Lions coach Dan Campbell made plenty of waves with his decisions to go for it on five different occasions against the Green Bay Packers. In the team’s 34-31 win, the Lions converted on four of those attempts.
Campbell has gotten extra attention for his aggressiveness given the situations in which the team went for it against Green Bay. Their one failed attempt came on a fourth-and-1 on their own 30-yard line.
Additionally, the Lions elected to go for it with the game tied and less than a minute left in the game. While they were within field goal range, Campbell opted to go for it as a first down would’ve allowed Detroit to run the rest of the clock down prior to a field goal from Jake Bates.
The Lions, who rank ninth in the league in fourth down attempts with 23, converted on a run by David Montgomery. They were able to bleed the remainder of the clock and cement the win with Jake Bates’ field goal at the final horn.
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Speaking Tuesday during his weekly radio interview, Campbell acknowledged that not all coaches are as willing to be aggressive in those situations. He noted the backlash that comes with not converting, as fans can turn on their coaches if decisions like that turn costly.
Campbell encountered this last season, as the Lions’ failed fourth downs in the NFC Championship game led to the doxxing of his address and resulted in angry fans coming to his house. He and his family moved in a decision that became public early in the 2024 season.
“I don’t know. Well, here’s the obvious. What happens when we don’t get that? That’s the obvious. Well, we’re moving to the next house,” Campbell said. “That’s why. To each his own, there’s plenty of philosophies that work in this league. And you can win a lot of games doing it your way, and I just lean more this way. It doesn’t mean that we’re always gonna be this way, but that was right for that game.”
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Now in his fourth-year as the Lions’ coach, Campbell has experience in a number of unique late-game situations. The choice he faced against Green Bay was similar to one the Lions dealt with last season in a game at the Los Angeles Chargers.
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In that game, the Lions went for it on a fourth-and-2 from the Chargers’ 26 with the game tied. Similarly, they were in field goal range and the Chargers were out of timeouts. Jared Goff hit Sam LaPorta for a first down, then took three knees before Riley Patterson kicked the game-winning field goal as time expired.
Situations such as that, along with the many others that Campbell has encountered in his time as a coach, serve as one of the influences for shaping the decisions that the coach makes in these moments. In 2024, the Lions have converted 68.8 percent of their fourth-down attempts.
While Campbell has become one of the figures most synonymous with taking risks, he admitted that he won’t always opt to take a chance. Rather, his decisions are based on evaluating each situation. Against Green Bay, he felt that the aggressive decisions were what the team needed to win.
“I think everything that I’ve been through as a coach, a lot of those come in. Things that happened in New Orleans, certainly things that have happened here,” Campbell said. “And then you think about how the game has gone, where you’re at, where your guys are at. Where you feel like you’re best suited to finish the game out. Look, if you think you can win the game and you don’t have to worry about anything else after that moment, I’m gonna be drawn to that more times than not. It’s not always gonna play out like that, and it doesn’t mean I’m always gonna go for it in that situation. But we were under a yard, and I felt like that was the right thing to do in that moment.”
The Buffalo Sabres continue to search for answers after a 6-5 shootout loss to the Detroit Red Wings on Monday night at KeyBank Center.
Extending Buffalo’s winless streak to seven games (0-4-3), the back-and-forth contest saw the Sabres score early and often, and remedy their recent second-period woes, only to lose a two-goal lead in the third.
“We need to look in the mirror and go get after it,” said forward Jason Zucker, who tallied two goals and an assist in the loss. “We’ve got to have a little bit more urgency, and we’ve got to attack these games and end this right now.”
First-period scoring hasn’t been an issue for the Sabres of late, and that trend continued against Detroit – a fast-paced opening frame saw the Sabres score the first goal, trail, then retake the lead. Dating back to Nov. 29 against Vancouver, Buffalo leads the league with 11 first-period goals.
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In stark contrast to recent games, however, the Sabres continued their scoring into the second period, with Nicolas Aube-Kubel tallying his first goal of the season at 2:26 and Zucker his second of the game at 15:26.
“We were two guys on them, giving them no time and space, transitioning quick and breaking the puck out clean,” Thompson said of the first two periods, after which Buffalo led 5-3.
The third period proved to be a different story as Detroit held a 12-4 shot advantage, tying the game with goals from Andrew Copp – his second of the game – and Moritz Seider.
“We looked tight, and that’s a product of not winning,” Thompson said. “Lose however many in a row, it’s easier for you to grip your stick a little tighter, be a little more nervous to make a mistake. You do that, it just compounds things, makes it worse.
“Just sat back on our heels and let them take it to us. Looked like we were just trying to hold onto a lead instead of taking the game to them.”