North Carolina
Judge sentences teen to life without parole for fatally shooting 5 in North Carolina
RALEIGH, N.C. — A judge sentenced an 18-year-old who acknowledged killing five people in a North Carolina mass shooting to life in prison without parole Friday, rejecting arguments that he deserved the chance for release decades from now.
Austin David Thompson was 15 during the Oct. 13, 2022, attack that began at his Raleigh home when he shot and repeatedly stabbed his 16-year-old brother, James.
Equipped with firearms and wearing camouflage, Thompson then fatally shot four others — including an off-duty city police officer — in his neighborhood and along a greenway. He was arrested in a shed after a self-inflicted gunshot wound to his head.
Thompson pleaded guilty last month to five counts of first-degree murder and five other counts less than two weeks before his scheduled trial.
Thompson, who did not speak in court, was led away in handcuffs after the sentencing. Family members of the shooting victims cried as the sentence was handed down. Thompson’s attorneys announced plans to appeal the sentence.
Superior Court Judge Paul Ridgeway judge had the option to sentence him to life in prison with the chance for parole after at least 25 years, but Thompson did not face the death penalty given his age at the time of the crimes.
“It’s hard to conceive of a greater display of malice,” Ridgeway said, adding that months of planning and fantasizing by Thompson to carry out the rampage also confirmed that Thompson is the rare juvenile offender “whose crimes reflect irreparable corruption.”
Austin Thompson signs documents pleading guilty to five counts of murder in Wake County Superior Court on Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Raleigh, N.C. Credit: AP/Allen G. Breed
During the sentencing hearing that began last week, prosecutors revealed the previously confidential contents of a handwritten note with Thompson’s name and the shooting date found at his family’s house in the Hedingham subdivision.
The note said the “reason I did this is because I hate humans they are destroying the planet/earth,” adding that he killed James Thompson ”because he would get in my way.”
Thompson “cannot tell you why he wrote that note the way that he did,” defense lawyer Deonte’ Thomas said, noting that he had no history of ecological-based anger. “And he cannot tell you why he ran down the streets of Hedingham terrorizing people that day.”
But “he is not unredeemable, he is not incorrigible,” Thomas added in asking Ridgeway to give him the opportunity one day to tell parole commissioners he could “still be a productive person in society.”
Thomas argued that the rampage happened during a behavioral episode caused by medicine he regularly took for acne which dissociated the youth from reality. A psychiatrist who interviewed Thompson and a geneticist testified to bolster the explanation.
Ridgeway decided the evidence did not support the conclusion that Thompson’s acts happened while he entered an altered mental state induced by the medication and a genetic abnormality.
Prosecutors dismissed the medication argument as weak and highlighted Thompson’s internet search history on his phone and computer leading up to the attack. They said it included school shootings and were related to guns, assaults and bomb-making materials.
Nicole Connors, 52; Raleigh police Officer Gabriel Torres, 29; Mary Marshall, 34; and Susan Karnatz, 49, also were killed in the rampage. Two other people were wounded, including another police officer involved in the search for Thompson.
“In the blink of an eye, everything changed for those people and for the people that they left behind,” Wake County assistant prosecutor Patrick Latour said Thursday while urging a sentence with no potential parole. “And the thing that made it change was not some acne medication. It was the defendant’s knowing, researched, well thought out, planned, decisive actions.”
The judge heard from people like Jasmin Torres, the widow of Gabriel Torres and the mother of their 5-year-old daughter. She asked Ridgeway to sentence Thompson to life without parole, calling him a “monster.”
“Not one of us surviving victims, our families, our friends, our community should ever have to worry about a future where his barbaric self is set free,” Torres said last week.
Thompson’s parents testified they couldn’t explain why their son committed the violence, calling him a normal, happy kid who did well in school and showed no signs of destruction.
Thompson’s father pleaded guilty to improperly storing his handgun that authorities said was found when his son was arrested. He received a suspended sentence and probation.
“We both lost our children, one at the hand of the other. We never saw this coming and still cannot make sense of it,” mother Elise Thompson said last week while telling the families of shooting victims she will “forever be sorry for the pain that this has caused you.”
North Carolina
SBI IT volunteers pack 5,200 meals, 1,300 food bags for North Carolina families
Members of the North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation’s IT team volunteered this week at the Food Bank of Central & Eastern North Carolina in Raleigh, according to the SBI.
The agency said team members spent the morning helping pack food for families across the region.
By the end of the volunteer effort, the group had packed more than 5,200 meals and 1,300 bags of food.
The SBI said it appreciates the work of all members of the agency who help improve the lives of North Carolinians.
North Carolina
North Carolina’s Republican-led election board makes it easier to reject ballots
The Republican-led North Carolina State Board of Elections (NCSBE) approved a plan Thursday to make it significantly easier for county election officials to throw out votes.
The rule change — which passed in a 3-2 vote along partisan lines — lowers the threshold for rejecting the form voters submit when they don’t have photo ID.
Previously, the local election board would need a unanimous vote to reject that form and, in effect, throw out the accompanying ballot. Now, members of local boards will only need a simple majority vote — likely a boon for Republicans in many counties.
The new rule is just the latest fallout from the GOP’s partisan takeover of the NCSBE last year.
Since then, Republicans have stripped Gov. Josh Stein (D) of election oversight duties and handed them to State Auditor Dave Boliek (R), who installed GOP operatives at the state board and in his own office. That has even been controversial among some local GOP election officials.
Now Democrats are sounding the alarm about NCSBE’s latest attack on voting.
Siobhan O’Duffy Millen, one of two Democrats on the board, argued the rule change will inject partisanship into the process of counting votes.
“I think that is highly destructive to voters’ trust in elections,” she said during the meeting.
Jeff Carmon, the second Democrat on the board, argued the rule change is motivated by the national GOP’s big lie: that election fraud is widespread and unchecked.
“I think we need to really be careful, as well as be prepared, for the blowback as we continue to do what appears to be an agenda throughout the country,” he said.
Cuts at the polls
Making it easier to reject ballots wasn’t the NCSBE’s first controversy. And it won’t be the last.
Next month, the board will meet to approve early voting hours and polling locations for all counties where local boards couldn’t approve their own plans in a unanimous vote.
In some counties, board meetings have erupted into heated arguments, as voting advocates and community members fought to protect weekend voting hours and polling places that are easily accessible for minority voters and students.
Millen warned her colleagues Thursday that they will need to create overflow space for their August meeting — she’s anticipating significant turnout.
Approving early voting plans may sound like a fairly innocuous administrative task. But this year the process has been mired in controversy after GOP operative Dallas Woodhouse, the state auditor’s liaison to local boards, was caught pressuring Republican election board members to enact partisan plans that often reduced voting hours and cut polling places in locations that were seen as more favorable for Democrats.
Woodhouse, who asked local boards to make similar cuts when he served as executive director of the state GOP in 2016, resigned from the State Auditor’s office this week — evidence his pressure campaign outraged local officials from both parties.
At Thursday’s meeting, Carmon blasted Woodhouse’s actions as a pattern of attempting to improperly influence local decisionmaking.
“Given the seriousness of these allegations and the public attention that they have generated, I believe we have an obligation to establish a complete and factual record,” Carmon said. He proposed that the board subpoena Woodhouse to answer questions under oath.
But Stacy “Four” Eggers IV, a Republican NCSBE member, was quick to dismiss Carmon’s concerns.
“If we start subpoenaing those who engage in First Amendment-protected political speech to come in and discuss things with us… there’s really going to be no end to that,” Eggers said.
Public scrutiny
Partisan tensions are also running high on the local level. When Granville County’s election board met this week to finalize its early voting plans, community members showed up in force.
They filled the room, hoisted signs and vocally opposed the GOP plan to close a polling place at a convenient location for Black voters. Even Democrats on the board seemed surprised by the high turnout at a meeting that rarely attracts public attention.
But this is no ordinary election year.
Last month, Granville County board chair Larue Ulshafer, a Republican, pushed to cut one of the county’s four early voting sites and relocate two others. At that time, she deferentially referred to Boliek as “the boss.”
But then, when Woodhouse’s influence campaign came to light, she abruptly resigned.
The board met Wednesday to reconsider the plan — this time, with just four members.
Sharyn Alvarez, one of two Democrats on the board, argued that closing one of the voting site would create long lines elsewhere while also inconveniencing voters who would need to drive to a different location. Most of all, the closure was unnecessary, she said, because county leaders had just worked to secure funding to make sure the fourth polling place would remain open.
Both Democrats on the board urged their GOP colleagues to keep the voting site open, particularly given the public turnout.
“We have never had a subject that brought out this much reaction,” Alvarez said. “We’ve got to take into consideration what has drawn the public to these meetings.”
Still, the two Republican board members voted to close the polling place. Now, without a unanimous vote, the state board will get the final word on Granville County’s early voting plan at its meeting next month.
Teresa Gilreath, the second Democrat on the board, criticized local Republicans for supporting a plan that seemed to align with the partisanship emanating from the state capital.
“When you take a look at what’s happening in Raleigh, we don’t want any part of that mess. It is a hot mess,” Gilreath said. “We’re on a trajectory that we don’t need to be on.”
North Carolina
Gunman killed after opening fire outside North Carolina gay bar
Police shot and killed an armed man outside a gay bar in Asheville, North Carolina.
Shakey’s staff said in a social media post that police were called after a man who had been ejected from the bar earlier that night for concerning behavior was seen in the parking lot brandishing a gun, according to ABC affiliate WLOS. The Instagram post is no longer publicly available.
Asheville police officers responded to the dive bar around 1:57 a.m. Wednesday after receiving a report that a person had discharged a firearm, according to the department. Officers arrived to find the man firing a gun in the parking lot and returned fire, striking him. When Asheville Fire personnel arrived at the scene, the man was pronounced dead.
Phoenix man arrested for allegedly threatening to shoot up LGBTQ+ bar over Charlie Kirk killing
Asheville Police Department
“No officers were injured during the incident,” the police release states.
The North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation will investigate the officer-involved shooting. The bureau has not released further information. The name of the man killed has not been released.
Interim Police Chief Jackie Stepp told reporters, “There is no evidence at this time that suggests the shooter had any type of bias or hate motive.”
Witness Taylor Pace told WLOS that he watched the man firing from inside the bar. “I was in the window watching, and then he started firing at the building where the window was,” Pace said. “He literally pulls the gun up and starts shooting at the building. You hear them hitting the bricks, and at that point, I’m like, ‘Everyone get down.’ Everyone’s screaming. Panic, chaos, and fight or flight set in.”
Related: Shots fired at Myrtle Beach gay nightclub, one detained
According to the bar’s social media post, staff members called 911 and were advised to lock all doors to prevent the man from entering. No one else was struck by gunfire.
“There are no words to fully express how grateful we are for our staff and patrons. In a moment of fear and uncertainty, everyone came together, stayed calm, looked out for one another, and followed directions without hesitation. Watching people care for each other in the middle of such a terrifying situation is something we’ll never forget,” the bar wrote in its Instagram stories.
“Because of everyone’s quick actions, cooperation, and concern for one another, every customer and every employee inside Shakey’s made it home safely. We are incredibly thankful.
“We also want to thank the Asheville Police Department, emergency dispatchers, EMS, and every first responder who responded so quickly and professionally.
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