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A community gathers for the first Mass after tragedy as questions still remain | CNN

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A community gathers for the first Mass after tragedy as questions still remain | CNN
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Father Dennis Zehren struggled to hold back tears as he addressed his Minneapolis congregation, drawing on Jesus’ parable of humility to reflect the community’s grief after this week’s deadly shooting.

“Jesus says… sit with me in this low place,” the Annunciation Catholic Church pastor told the packed auditorium on Saturday, just days after a shooter fired through the church’s stained-glass windows at students in prayer.

The Mass, held in the school auditorium just steps away from the parish’s now-closed sanctuary, marked the first such gathering for the congregation since the attack. The church that three days before was filled with excited students and watchful teachers at the start of a new school year is now a crime scene.

“This is not our normal seat, this is not where we usually gather, this is not our usual worship place,” Zehren said as he joined his parishioners in turning to prayer, music and shared silence in a room overflowing with both people and grief.

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The shooting left two children dead — 8-year-old Fletcher Merkel and 10-year-old Harper Moyski — and wounded 18 others, including 15 students and three elderly parishioners.

“It will never be the same, but it’s a call to begin again,” Zehren said.

Outside the church, a memorial of flowers, stuffed animals and signs grew. A note from Fletcher’s mother read, “I love you always and forever.”

Zehren said the tragedy has brought an outpouring of support from around the world. “We will be sitting in a different pew for a long time to come,” he said, urging parishioners to seek mental health resources as they begin to heal from something “far beyond what we’ve experienced before.”

Police identified the now-deceased shooter as a 23-year-old former Annunciation student whose mother once worked at the parish. Investigators are still searching for a motive.

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With classes suspended, children have already lost cherished traditions such as Spirit Day and a butterfly release. The sanctuary is now missing the familiar sounds of hymns and the children’s voices that once echoed through its halls.

Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara described the attack as “slaughter,” noting the shooter was “standing outside of the building firing through very narrow church windows on the level where they would line up with the pews.”

Ten-year old Weston Halsne recalled he was two seats away from the windows when the shots rang out and his friend dove on top of him, saving him but getting hit in the back: “He’s really brave.”

Families mourn and call for change

Outside the church, Jesse Merkel, Fletcher’s father, mourned the loss of his son. “We will never be allowed to hold him, talk to him, play with him, and watch him grow into the wonderful young man he was on the path to becoming,” he said.

“While the hole in our hearts and lives will never be filled, I hope that in time our family can find healing,” Merkel said, holding back tears.

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He asked the community to “remember Fletcher for the person he was” – a boy who loved his family and friends, “fishing, cooking, and any sport that he was allowed to play,” and “not the act that ended his life.”

Harper Moyski’s parents described their daughter as “bright, joyful, and deeply loved,” urging leaders to take meaningful action to address gun violence and the “mental health crisis in this country.”

“Change is possible, and it is necessary—so that Harper’s story does not become yet another in a long line of tragedies,” they said. “As a family, we are shattered, and words cannot capture the depth of our pain.”

Among the wounded, Endre Gunter, 13, survived surgery after being shot twice.

“Yet we still have our child. Unlike others, we are blessed to hold onto him,” said Endre’s mother, Danielle Gunter.

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He showed “strength and faith beyond his years,” his aunt said, as he recovers surrounded by loved ones.

Community members in Minneapolis say they are finding ways to support victims of the senseless tragedy, but that online fundraisers are simply not enough, reported CNN affiliate WCCO.

Residents are supporting victims by tying blue and green ribbons on street poles and distributing yard signs reading, “Our hearts are with Annunciation.”

Linda Nucci, who organized the signs, said, “You want to take that energy or that grief and figure out what you can do with it.”

“When anything like this happens, you just want to feel useful. You want to take that energy or that grief or that, you know, uncomfortability and figure out what can you do with it,” Nucci said.

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Sarah Henning, another community member leading memorial efforts across the city, told the outlet that 300 volunteers helped her group tie nearly 3,000 ribbons on street poles and trees.

“We were able to get ribbons into Fletcher’s neighborhood yesterday, and we’ve had several neighbors reach out about what that meant,” she told WCCO.

“I want them to experience unbelievable love after unbelievable tragedy,” Henning said. “That’s why we’re doing it.”

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Mexico files criminal complaints in US over migrant deaths in custody

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Mexico files criminal complaints in US over migrant deaths in custody


Mexico has begun filing criminal complaints with state prosecutors in the United States over the deaths of its citizens in U.S. immigration custody and during enforcement operations, the foreign mini

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MEXICO CITY, July 13 (Reuters) – Mexico has begun filing criminal complaints with state prosecutors in the United States over the deaths of its citizens in U.S. immigration custody and during enforcement operations, the foreign ministry said on Tuesday.

Mexico’s government has also sent cease-and-desist letters to U.S. detention centers where Mexican nationals have died, the ministry added in a statement.

The filings follow the deaths of at least 14 Mexican nationals in ICE custody and several others during arrest operations, including the recent fatal shooting of a Mexican citizen by an ICE agent in Houston.

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President Claudia Sheinbaum announced Mexico’s intention to escalate its response to the deaths last Friday, as she claimed that the government “cannot turn a blind eye to the Mexicans who have died.”

In addition to the measures in the U.S., Mexico’s foreign minister also contacted the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights regarding the deaths of Mexican nationals in ICE custody.

Mexico expects the U.N. office to gather information from U.S. authorities, analyze the events and “refer the case to the relevant special procedures of the Human Rights Council,” the statement added.

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A guard punched him on camera. It was still nearly impossible for him to sue

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A guard punched him on camera. It was still nearly impossible for him to sue

Michelle Mildenberg Lara for The Marshall Project

This much is undisputed: On Nov. 2, 2023, a guard and a prisoner at a federal penitentiary in California got into it over a straw sunhat that the officer had confiscated. The man — identified in court records by his initials, J.M. — walked out of the office, as Officer Sandra Munagay followed him. When he stopped and turned around, Munagay “cocked back … and punched me in my face,” he said in an interview. That is on camera. Munagay admitted to the assault and pleaded guilty this January to falsifying records about it.

But the more severe harm came after, J.M. said, in a hallway without security cameras. As Munagay kicked and hit him, she shouted to other officers that J.M. had attacked her. According to a lawsuit, at least three other guards then rushed in, forced him into a blind spot, and pinned him face-first to a wall. With J.M.’s hands cuffed, he says an officer then sexually assaulted him with an unknown object.

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That night, J.M. was transferred to another prison, where a nurse noted bleeding and tenderness in his rectum, medical records show. That gave J.M. more proof than most people behind bars in his situation.

But guards still had near-total control over whether he could file a complaint, or someday sue over what happened to him. J.M. knew they could destroy his paperwork, claim it got lost, or simply deny him the forms he needed. And like he had experienced in other federal prisons, he says, they might punish him for even trying to speak out.

It’s the same dilemma presented to anyone who faces violence in federal prison: Try to file an administrative grievance and risk opening yourself up to retaliation — or stay quiet, endure the abuse, and forgo your chance to someday bring your case to court.

Under federal law, people in prison must go through the facility’s own grievance process before they can attempt to sue. That gives prison staff a “chokehold over access to the courts,” said Colin Prince, a civil rights attorney and former federal defender who is representing J.M. in his lawsuit.

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“The guards functionally have power over whether a prisoner can sue them for their own misconduct,” he said. “The entire system is layer upon layer of bureaucratic insulation against accountability. It simply prevents prisoners from getting access to the courts.”

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One person killed in Maine in second fatal ICE-involved shooting in less than a week | CNN

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One person killed in Maine in second fatal ICE-involved shooting in less than a week | CNN

A person was killed Monday in an ICE-involved shooting in Biddeford, Maine, according to the state’s speaker of the house — just days after a federal agent fatally shot a Mexican immigrant during a traffic stop in Houston, sparking mass protests and demands for transparency and accountability.

“A person was killed. ICE was involved. State Police and the Department of Public Safety are now on scene to gather details and would expect the FBI to investigate as well,” Maine House Speaker Ryan Fecteau said in a statement on Facebook. “These are the details that I have at this time. I will provide further updates, as they are relayed to me.”

CNN has reached out to Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the Department of Homeland Security for comment.

Biddeford police told CNN there was a “police incident” in the area, about 18 miles south of Portland, and said there is no threat to the public at this time, but declined to provide additional details.

Maine Democratic US Rep. Chellie Pingree said she was “disturbed and angry” upon hearing the news of the shooting. She called for an investigation into the incident, adding a question directed at ICE officers: “Why are you in Maine?”

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The incident comes less than a week after a man on his way to work in Houston was shot and killed by an ICE agent. Lorenzo Salgado Araujo was killed during a traffic stop in what ICE initially described as a targeted enforcement operation, though a source later said Salgado Araujo was not the target of the operation.

The shooting has reignited calls for accountability among ICE agents, which reached a fever pitch earlier this year after 37-year-old mother Renee Good and 37-year-old ICU nurse Alex Pretti were killed by federal immigration agents during the Trump administration’s operation in Minneapolis.

The administration dubbed a similar surge in immigration enforcement across Maine in January “Operation Catch of the Day.” The ACLU and other advocates filed a lawsuit against federal immigration agents for “abducting a lawful immigrant” during the surge.

Some community groups and advocates that rallied against the surge earlier this year have already started to organize in response to Monday’s shooting. The group “Maine Resists” has planned an emergency community rally in the city at noon. The racial justice and immigrant rights group Project Relief said it is in touch with the victim’s family.

This is a developing story and will be updated.

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