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Man accused of possessing meth-making substances at Michigan State

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Man accused of possessing meth-making substances at Michigan State


LANSING, MI — A man has been accused of possessing substances to operate a methamphetamine lab after authorities found him inside the largest academic building at Michigan State University earlier this week.

Xin Tong, 31, was charged with malicious destruction of a building over $20,000 and felony controlled substance, operating or maintaining a lab involving methamphetamine, according to the Ingham County Prosecutor’s Office. Tong was discovered inside Wells Hall at around 9:30 p.m. local time on April 26 after campus police responded to a call about a suspicious person, odor, and substances on the floor.

He was initially charged with misdemeanor trespassing after he was found carrying multiple bags in the building, according to court documents. After a search was conducted, officers found multiple substances that are known to be used to manufacture methamphetamine.

Authorities said he was also in possession of an expired student identification card but had no apparent current affiliation with the school.

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During an arraignment hearing on April 29, Ingham County Chief Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Nicole Matusko told a judge that Tong was not a current student at Michigan State University and had not been enrolled since 2022. Police and university officials have not responded to questions about how Tong gained access to the building or how often he frequented the building before April 26.

The announcement of Tong’s arrest came two days after the university suddenly closed Wells Hall at the start of final exams week. The university initially said the building would close for the day on April 27 after an “unknown chemical” was found, but later shifted course and announced it would be closed all week.

Michigan State University Vice President and Chief Communications Officer Emily Guerrant did not immediately respond to a request for comment regarding Tong’s affiliation with the school, the Lansing State Journal, part of the USA TODAY Network, reported.

Damage still being assessed

Campus police listed his offense date in court records as April 10, 16 days before authorities said they found him in the building with chemicals and materials that can be used to manufacture methamphetamine.

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Campus police said in a statement that Tong had sodium hydroxide pellets, hydrochloric acid, methanol, isopropyl alcohol, acetone, and butane, all of which can be purchased legally through retail stores or online.

Court documents said the substances caused an estimated $20,000 in damages, specifically in doors and flooring at the university. During a news conference on April 29, Michigan State University Police Chief Mike Yankowski said the damage is still being assessed, but is a “significant amount more than $20,000.”

Tong is being held at the Ingham County jail on a $500,000 cash bond, according to court records. He would face up to 20 years in prison and a fine of $25,000 if convicted on the methamphetamine lab charge, and up to 10 years and/or $15,000 or three times the amount of the destruction, whichever is greater, if convicted on the property destruction charge.

A jail inmate database indicates the U.S. Department of Homeland Security placed a bond hold on Tong, effective April 28. Tong is scheduled for a preliminary examination on May 14.

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Michigan State University building evacuated hours after police found bags with unknown substances

Yankowski said officers responded to a malicious destruction of property call on April 23. Officers also responded to other calls about unknown substances found on floors and doors throughout Wells Hall, but Yankowski did not specify when those calls occurred.

When officers responded to a call on April 26, they found Tong on the fifth floor of the building with four to five bags, according to Yankowski. Officers received a search warrant to review the bags around 4 a.m. on April 27, at which point several labeled and unlabeled containers with unknown liquids were found, Yankowski said.

“All of this was occurring early on Monday morning, and because of the presence of those unknown substances, the MSU Police Department made the decision to evacuate Wells Hall so we could have a better understanding of what these substances are,” Yankowski said.

The announcement that Wells Hall was being evacuated and closed came shortly after 10 a.m. on April 27, hours after a search warrant was obtained and after some students arrived at the building for final exams. He said the investigation continued from April 27 into April 28, when the building was closed again, and an additional search was conducted.

Yankowski did not say whether Tong was seen on the cameras entering the building. He said Wells Hall is typically open from 7 a.m. until 6 p.m. local time during the week and closed on weekends, though it is sometimes open for events.

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The investigation remains active, and the department is continuing to review digital evidence and awaiting lab results from the Michigan State Police, according to Yankowski.

Campus police say they did not ‘locate a methamphetamine laboratory’

In an update on the investigation on April 30, Michigan State University police said they “did not locate a methamphetamine laboratory inside Wells Hall.”

“The suspect was found in possession of chemicals and/or equipment that could be used in the production of methamphetamine, which were contained within his personal property,” according to campus police. “The felony malicious destruction of building criminal charge is based on allegations that between April 10 and April 26, the suspect intentionally damaged and/or destroyed property within Wells Hall.”

Wells Hall was supposed to hold 50 exams on April 27 before the closure was announced. The building is just east of Spartan Stadium and about a half-mile walk away from the Breslin Center, where around a dozen graduation ceremonies will be held at the university before the end of the weekend.

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Bralyn Campbell told the Detroit Free Press, part of the USA TODAY Network, that he was halfway through the final exam in his second-year Japanese course when an alarm sounded inside Wells Hall on the morning of April 27. He said students had noticed a bunch of police officers outside, but did not learn until later that they were investigating whether there was a meth lab in the building.

“I thought it was interesting because we weren’t told anything about what was going on, just that there was a potential, like, chemical leak,” Campbell said. “When we saw the news that it was like a meth lab thing, it was like a couple days after.”

Contributing: Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY; John Wisely, Detroit Free Press



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Michigan football’s toughest games in 2026: Ranking top-4 gantlet

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Michigan football’s toughest games in 2026: Ranking top-4 gantlet


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This is part three of a three-part series ranking Michigan football’s toughest games in the 2026 season, the first under new coach Kyle Whittingham. Part 1 and part 2 can be found here.

No. 4: Oklahoma (Sept. 12, noon, Fox)

The first evidence that Michigan football’s 2025 campaign might not be what fans hoped came Week 2 in Norman, Oklahoma, when the Wolverines lost 24-13 in Bryce Underwood’s first road start. While the game is at home this year, the Sooners’ trip to Ann Arbor in the second week of the year will likely be telling about which way the season is headed.

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Oklahoma had the No. 17 transfer portal class in the country this past offseason, per 247Sports, bringing in 16 players from schools like Texas, Florida, Tennessee and even Michigan. Linebacker Cole Sullivan leaving for OU to take a spot in the middle of Brent Venables’ defense was perhaps the biggest portal loss the Wolverines suffered all offseason.

On offense, wide receivers Parker Livingstone (Texas) and Trell Harris (Virginia) and tight end Jack Van Dorselaer (Tennessee) are three more weapons for an Oklahoma offense looking to take the next step.

One reason to believe it will is the return of quarterback John Mateer, who carved Michigan up last season and is the key to another solid Oklahoma team. Mateer threw for 270 yards, ran for 74 and accounted for all three touchdowns in Oklahoma’s win over Michigan before an injury sidelined him for the middle portion of the season and slowed him the rest of the way as he fought through it.

Oklahoma came in at No. 9 on The Athletic’s top-25 rankings after spring ball and is a notably difficult test, particularly so early in the season.

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No. 3: Indiana (Oct. 24, kickoff time TBD)

The only reason Indiana is not higher on this list is because Michigan gets the game in Ann Arbor.

Outside of that, this is going to be an absolute battle. The defending national champion Hoosiers lost eight starters to the NFL this past season, including No. 1 overall pick and Heisman Trophy winning quarterback Fernando Mendoza, but have once again reloaded under Curt Cignetti, who has orchestrated the greatest turnaround the sport has ever seen.

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In come quarterback Josh Hoover (TCU), running back Turbo Richard (Boston College) and wide receiver Nick Marsh (Michigan State) to restock the offensive supply and pair with wideout Charlie Becker. On defense, the Hoosiers return defensive tackle Tyrique Tucker, linebackers Isaiah Jones and Rolijah Hardy and corner Jamari Sharpe.

Hoover is yet another proven quarterback, coming to Bloomington after four years at TCU and enters as the nation’s leader in career passing yards (9,629). Hoover ran the second most RPO’s of any quarterback last year, behind only Mendoza, so he appears to fit the scheme.

According to CBS Sports, Indiana’s roster is No. 8 in cumulative FBS snaps played (30,540) and No. 4 in FBS level starts (462), so this should be a veteran group playing for a scheme that’s proven to work. An argument could be made this is U-M’s toughest game.

No. 2: at Oregon (Nov. 14, kickoff time TBD)

Michigan makes its first trip to Autzen Stadium as Big Ten foes − the only remaining stadium in the league it has not played as league opponents is UCLA in the Rose Bowl − against an Oregon side that has, per usual, reloaded.

It started with the decision of former five-star quarterback out of Detroit King, Dante Moore, who opted to spurn the NFL where he was expected to be a top-five draft pick, to return for one more year in the NCAA ranks. He will be buoyed by Evan Stewart, one of the top wide receivers in the country, who returns after missing the 2025 season with a torn patellar tendon in his knee.

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There are new faces leading both the offense and the defense after last year’s offensive coordinator, Will Stein, took the head coach job at Kentucky and defensive coordinator Tosh Lupoi took over as head coach of California. Dan Lanning opted to keep a semblance of continuity and promote from within for both positions, with Drew Mehringer now leading the attack and Chris Hampton in charge of the defense.

Oregon brought in 13 players through the portal this year including a pair of Big Ten defensive standouts in cornerback Aaron Scott Jr. (Ohio State) and safety Koi Perich (Minnesota).

Oregon made the CFP national semifinal last season before it was routed by Indiana (both of Oregon’s losses last season came to the Hoosiers) and now appears poised to get back to the playoffs at the very least.

This is just about as tough as games come.

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No. 1: at Ohio State (Nov. 28, noon, Fox)

As if there was any doubt about who would finish off this list, it is of course the Buckeyes.

Ohio State led the way with 11 selections in the 2026 NFL Draft, which included four first-rounders and three second-rounders, but the NFL factory in Columbus, simply reloads every offseason. OSU returns its starting quarterback, Julian Sayin, running back Bo Jackson and the undisputed top wide receiver in the country, Jeremiah Smith.

They also brought in a number of stars from the portal in running back Ja’Kobi Jackson (Florida), edge Qua Russaw (Alabama) and defensive backs Earl Little Jr. (Florida State) and Dominick Kelly (Georgia), not to mention five-star freshman wide receiver Chris Henry Jr.

OSU landed the No. 2 freshman class in the nation and the No. 7 portal haul in the country as the Buckeyes, who were stunned by Miami in the national semifinal, look to get back to the national championship for the second time in three seasons.

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Michigan has won the past two games in Columbus − a 45-23 pummeling in 2022 and then a 13-10 stunner for the ages in 2024 − but have not won three straight games at OSU since doing so from 1986-90 under Bo Schembechler and Gary Moeller.

All eyes, as always, will be on this game and there’s a decent chance (like last season) U-M will be playing for a spot in the CFP with this game deciding its fate.

Tony Garcia is the Michigan beat writer for the Detroit Free Press. Email him at apgarcia@freepress.com and follow him on X at @RealTonyGarcia.





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Michigan’s state parks deserve better funding and care | Letter

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Michigan’s state parks deserve better funding and care | Letter


Michigan’s state parks remind us that beauty was and always will be a part of our state. They alone account for one-third of all nature-based recreation. In them, people can connect with the freest parts of themselves while plants and wildlife thrive freely in their natural habitats.

I remember climbing down a hill on the far side of Sleeping Bear Dunes, taking a moment to look out at the water before attempting the famous climb back up. The boats I saw on the water looked more like pirate ships in my memory after climbing through what felt like a desert. The view has remained one of my mind’s strongest memories of nature.

Access to nature comes with responsibility, yet the parks are not being well-maintained. Roads around them are collapsing, and it is not uncommon to find a trail closure or two or even sewage spilling in certain areas.

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This doesn’t have to be the case. This July, state leaders have the opportunity to pass a more park-friendly budget that can increase funding for the parks and begin chipping away at the $748 million deferred maintenance backlog. With a little more love, our state parks can serve for generations to come as shining examples of nature’s beauty, just as they did for me.

Zach Hogan

Bloomfield Hills



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Trieu: For Michigan State targets, visits, in-state decisions loom

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Trieu: For Michigan State targets, visits, in-state decisions loom


Two more weekends remain for colleges to host recruits for official visits.

Michigan State had bigger groups on campus for the first two weekends, so this week’s list is not as large in quantity. 

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Roswell (Georgia) Blessed Trinity Catholic defensive back Noah Willis will be making his first trip to East Lansing. Willis was only offered by the Spartans in mid-May, but they quickly found a home on his official visit schedule.

The 6-foot, 170-pound Willis can play outside corner or slot corner. Kansas State and Cincinnati already have hosted him, and he has BYU scheduled for the weekend of June 19. 

Logansport (Indiana) offensive tackle RJ Clem also will be on campus for the first time. Spartans offensive line coach Nick Tabacca offered in May. 

A 6-foot-7, 265-pound prospect, Clem is also a state qualifier in discus and plays basketball. Wake Forest will get an official next weekend. Kansas State and Iowa State also have offered.

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Michigan State commit Grant Adloff, a three-star offensive lineman from East Grand Rapids, also will be on campus for his official. 

In-state targets nearing decisions

The name to watch for Spartan fans this week is Detroit King’s Don Spillers. A two-way athlete, Michigan State is recruiting the 6-foot-2, 190-pound Spillers as a safety while Illinois, his other finalist, is recruiting him as a wide receiver.

Spillers is expected to make a decision by this weekend. Michigan State has led his Rivals predictions for much of his recruitment, but last weekend’s official visit with Illinois have made the Illini a very real threat to those predictions.

Spillers’ teammate, offensive lineman Jameer Henry, also is believed to be nearing a decision. Henry (6-5, 300 pounds) also is considering Illinois. Missouri was considered the primary competition, but the Tigers have faded in the race.

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First summer camp brings talent from all classes

Michigan State hosted their first one-day camp of the summer on June 9.

No offers were extended at the camp, but there were many potential future offers within the group.

Toledo Central Catholic’s David Yharbrough and Troy Yharbrough were two of the standouts. David Yharbrough is a rising junior receiver while Troy Yharbrough is only an incoming freshman, but already looks like a national recruit with several programs offering already.

In-state cornerbacks Jacob Patton and Wendell Childs impressed. Patton (Detroit Country Day) is a 2028 recruit with an offer from Wisconsin. Childs (Clarkston) is a 2027 with track speed. The Spartans are down the road in their 2027 recruiting, but Childs made a play to be considered.

The NFL Academy, a boarding school in the United Kingdom brought several of their top prospects as part of their stateside college tour. That included 6-foot-8, 310-pound offensive tackle Adam Ibironke, a class of 2028 recruit.

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Tabor (Massachusetts) Academy wide receiver Xander Odenyo, a multi-offer prospect also stood out in one-on-one work.

Grand Rapids Catholic Central quarterback Odin Spencer, along with wide receivers Grayson Tidd and Jace Cummings, were also among the camp’s top performers.

Spartan defensive line commit Jack Schuler also took part in the camp.

Allen Trieu covers Midwest football recruiting for On3. He has been featured on the Big Ten Network on its annual Signing Day Show. His Michigan and Michigan State recruiting columns appear weekly at detroitnews.com.



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