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A police officer and a court worker were killed, and two other officers were injured in Independence, Missouri, on Thursday, after gunfire erupted while serving an eviction notice at a Jackson County home.
Independence Police Department Chief Adam Dustman told reporters during a press conference that one of his officers, 35-year-old Cody Allen, was shot and killed while responding to reports that a civil processor had been shot at a home just after 1 p.m. local time.
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Allen responded with two other officers, and when they arrived, they found a man suffering from gunshot wounds. As they attempted to take the man to safety, the officers took gunfire from the person inside.
The other two officers were taken to the hospital and are expected to recover from their injuries.
FORMER MISSOURI SCHOOL PRINCIPAL ADMITS HIRING HITMAN TO KILL PREGNANT TEACHER
Three Missouri police officers and a court process server were shot at a residence near E. Bundschu Road and N. Elsea Smith Road in Independence on Thursday.(WDAF)
“Today is an absolutely devastating day,” Dustman said, telling reporters Allen is survived by his wife, their two small children, and his parents. “He always had a smile…the beard he grew, we always gave him some grief for on his return, but he always had that smile. He is one of a kind – a human being among human beings.”
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The civil processor, Drexel Mac, was also killed in the incident.
The shooting took place in the area of E. Bundschu and N. Elsea Smith roads, which is in the northeast section of Independence, near Highway 24.
MISSOURI POLICE FATALLY SHOOT SUSPECT WHO STABBED 2 OFFICERS
Law enforcement officials and medical personnel work the scene of an officer involved shooting near the intersection of Elsea Smith Road and Budschu Road on Thursday, in Independence, Mo. (Nick Wagner/The Kansas City Star via AP)
According to Dustman, Mac was serving an eviction notice when he was shot.
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One person was taken into custody, who Dustman said was the only suspect.
Judge Jalilah Otto of the 16th Judicial Circuit Court of Missouri said Mac had been with the court for over 12 years.
POLICE: MISSOURI FIRE THAT KILLED A WOMAN AND HER 4 CHILDREN WAS A MURDER-SUICIDE
Law enforcement personnel gather near the scene where two police officers were shot and wounded in a rural area in Independence, Mo., Thursday. Independence Police Department spokesperson Officer Jack Taylor said the two officers were taken to a hospital, and their conditions were not immediately known. One person was arrested, he said.(AP Photo/Heather Hollingsworth)
She told reporters Mac was “a true public servant, and he lost his life doing his job.”
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Out of an abundance of caution, the Fort Osage School District reported that its schools were on lockdown, but it has since been lifted.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
The Detroit Fire Department said no injuries have been reported
DETROIT – Firefighters are battling a large fire at a vacant apartment complex on Detroit’s west side.
The fire was reported on Fenton Street, just off Grand River Avenue near Telegraph Road on Tuesday (July 7).
The Detroit Fire Department said no injuries have been reported.
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Officials also said the fire appears to be under control.
The cause of the fire has not been released, and it was not immediately clear how long crews expect to remain at the scene.
This is a developing story and will be updated as more information becomes available.
Copyright 2026 by WDIV ClickOnDetroit – All rights reserved.
About the Author
Brandon Carr headshot
Brandon Carr
Brandon Carr is a digital content producer for ClickOnDetroit and has been with WDIV Local 4 since November 2021. Brandon is the 2015 Solomon Kinloch Humanitarian award recipient for Community Service.
by Henry Tyson, Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service July 7, 2026
Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service invites community members to submit opinion pieces of 500-800 words on topics of interest to central city Milwaukee. To send a submission for consideration, please email info@milwaukeenns.org. The views expressed are solely those of the authors.
A few years ago, I had a conversation with one of our first-grade teachers that stayed with me.
We were talking about an idea she had for improving reading instruction. She wasn’t looking for recognition. She simply saw an opportunity to help students through a project that could benefit not only her own classroom, but classrooms across our school.
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Then she told me what she was doing that summer; she was taking on a side gig at a local business. Here was a brilliant educator who had more to give, yet there was no meaningful way for her to spend part of her summer strengthening her classroom or our school.
Shortly after, I had a similar conversation with one of our second-grade teachers. She had just spent the summer developing research-based spelling resources. The following school year, a new teacher used those materials consistently, and the results were clear. One student began the year unable to spell a simple word like “cat.” By the end of the year, that student was spelling words like “train” and “stream.”
Those two moments stayed with me—one showing what’s lost when ideas stall, the other what’s possible when teachers have the time to bring them to life and share with their colleagues. It reinforced a simple truth: meaningful outcomes at St. Marcus are driven by educators who invest in their students every day.
Henry Tyson (Photo provided by Henry Tyson)
However, it also highlights the reality we are living in: the ideas don’t run out. The time does.
Creating dedicated time
During the school year, for instance, teachers are planning, grading, communicating with families, and responding to countless needs. There simply aren’t enough hours.
That’s why creating dedicated time for this work matters so much. It’s also where partnerships with organizations like the Northwestern Mutual Foundation are helping make a difference—giving educators the opportunity to bring those ideas to life through funding that provides time, resources and support to develop and strengthen their work.
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We have exceptional educators, but until recently, many haven’t had the time or support to bring those ideas forward. That’s a gap we’re beginning to close. Since 2022, the Northwestern Mutual Summer Teacher Grants have supported nearly 200 teacher-led projects, including 11 at St. Marcus, with more than $925,000 in funding—expanding what’s possible for educators across schools like ours.
Across our school, these projects have ranged from curriculum development to hands-on STEM and student support initiatives. These efforts are shaped by school leaders and educators who identify and prioritize the needs of their students, with support from partners helping bring as many of those ideas to life as possible.
I’ve spent the past 24 years at St. Marcus, and in that time, I’ve seen our school grow from about 100 students to nearly 1,300 across three campuses—growth driven by one constant: our teachers.
Priorities
When I became superintendent in 2010, I focused on two priorities: building an exceptional school and expanding access for more students.
We serve a diverse community of students and families, and understand the educational challenges across Milwaukee, but we’ve never believed those challenges define our students. Our goal has always been clear: create a school where children thrive academically, feel safe, and grow in character while building confidence to succeed.
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As a Lutheran school, we also believe that every child is created by God with immeasurable worth and potential, and that belief shapes how we invest in both our students and the educators who serve them. We also measure ourselves against the statewide average because we believe our students deserve the same opportunities and outcomes as any child in Wisconsin.Today, our eighth-grade math proficiency exceeds the statewide average, while our eighth-grade reading performance continues to narrow the gap with the state.
Demand has steadily grown, with families seeking schools where their children are known, supported and challenged. Each time we’ve been able to welcome more students, we have done so with purpose, knowing there are more children who deserve that opportunity.
But neither priority becomes reality without outstanding teachers. That’s why I have grown increasingly convinced that one of the most underused resources in education is not a new curriculum or initiative, but the expertise our teachers already bring to the work.
Every educator I know is constantly thinking about how to improve—whether supporting a struggling student or making lessons more engaging. Years ago, before formal programs existed to support this kind of work, we began creating those opportunities at St. Marcus. If a teacher wanted to spend the summer developing a third-grade reading intervention or creating instructional materials that could be shared across classrooms, we sought out donors to help make it possible.
The goal was never just to complete another project. It was to create a pathway for teachers to extend their impact beyond their own classroom.
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As support from community partners expanded these efforts, more teachers gained the time and opportunity to develop curriculum, strengthen intervention strategies, and create resources to share across classrooms.
That shift mattered. Strong ideas no longer stayed within a single classroom—they could be shared across grade levels and campuses, strengthening instruction and reaching hundreds of students.
The impact extends beyond individual projects. Today, St. Marcus serves nearly 1,300 students across three campuses and earned the state’s highest 5-star accountability rating. Our students consistently outperform schools serving similar populations. Investing in teachers has become one of the most important drivers of that progress.
The precious gift of time
Partners did not provide our teachers with the ideas; they already had them. They helped create the time and financial support to bring more of those ideas to life.
Take the second-grade teacher. Her initiative and dedication represent far more than spelling. Rather, it shows what is possible when teachers have the time to research, refine, and build with intention, instead of squeezing that work into evenings and weekends. When educators are given the opportunity to go above and beyond, students benefit most.
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I have seen something else happen, too. Teachers feel seen and valued. Many would do this regardless because they care about their students and take pride in their profession. But it matters to say, “We see your expertise. We believe your ideas matter. We want to invest in them.” It reinforces that their leadership extends beyond the four walls of their classroom.
As Milwaukee works to improve educational outcomes, we should continue conversations about funding, curriculum, and accountability. Those efforts matter. But we should also ask: Are we fully leveraging the talent already inside our schools? In my experience, the answer is no.
Milwaukee is filled with educators who have more to give. They have ideas worth sharing, solutions worth testing, and expertise that can strengthen instruction for hundreds of students, not just those in front of them each day. Often, they simply need the opportunity.
We have been fortunate to partner with families who believe in our mission, leaders who make thoughtful decisions and organizations that are committed to Milwaukee’s children. But it always comes back to the teachers.
I still think about the educator who planned to spend her summer waiting tables instead of building something that could help students learn. She is not the exception—she is the rule. Milwaukee is full of educators just like her: talented, passionate, and ready to do more. If we want better outcomes for students, we cannot keep asking teachers to do this work on the margins. We need to create the time, support and trust for them to lead, share their expertise and expand their impact.
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Henry Tyson is the superintendent of St. Marcus Lutheran School in Milwaukee, where he has served for more than two decades. During his tenure, he has helped grow the school into a nationally recognized leader in urban education while advocating for innovative approaches that expand opportunities for students and strengthen the teaching profession.
This <a target=”_blank” href=”https://milwaukeenns.org/2026/07/07/opinion-milwaukee-teachers-have-more-to-give-lets-give-them-the-chance/”>article</a> first appeared on <a target=”_blank” href=”https://milwaukeenns.org”>Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service</a> and is republished here under a <a target=”_blank” href=”https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nd/4.0/”>Creative Commons Attribution-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License</a>.<img src=”https://i0.wp.com/milwaukeenns.org/wp-content/uploads/2025/07/cropped-NNS-Favicon.png?resize=150%2C150&ssl=1″ style=”width:1em;height:1em;margin-left:10px;”>
A 26-year-old man was sentenced this week to 2 ½ years in federal prison for robbing a Walgreens in Minneapolis, then a St. Paul bank the next day.
Korey Maurese Hale (Courtesy of the Sherburne County Sheriff’s Office)
Korey Maurese Hale of Minneapolis pleaded guilty in U.S. District Court of Minnesota to one count of armed bank robbery in connection with the June 2024 hold ups.
Hale used the same .22-caliber Mossberg rifle in both robberies, making off with about $200 from Walgreens at Chicago Avenue and 43rd Street and approximately $1,833 from BMO Bank at Snelling and Randolph avenues, according to his January plea agreement. St. Paul police arrested Hale near the bank shortly after the heist.
In an interview with a St. Paul police investigator, Hale said people were trying to kill him and voices in his head made him rob the bank, according to initial charges filed in Ramsey County District Court.
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Hale was civilly committed as mentally ill and chemically dependent in September 2024. Eight months later, he was ordered to undergo a federal psychiatric and psychological examination, which found his medication treatment was effective and he was competent to stand trial, Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew Forbes wrote in a presentencing memo.
Hale’s sentencing Monday at the federal courthouse in St. Paul includes five years of supervised release following incarceration.
“Once released, if Hale continues to take his medications, continues to receive mental health treatment, and stays away from controlled substances, he will dramatically reduce his risk of recidivism,” Forbes wrote in the memo. “A five-year term of supervision will best ensure that the federal crimes in this case are Hale’s last.”