West
Columbine High School shooting survivor dies nearly 26 years after massacre
Anne Marie Hochhalter, who was shot and paralyzed in the Columbine High School mass shooting in 1999, died on Sunday of natural causes, Fox News Digital has learned. She was 43.
Hochhalter, one of 23 people who were injured and survived the Littleton, Colorado, massacre, was confined to a wheelchair for the remainder of her life due to her injuries and is being remembered as a “pillar of strength” in her community.
She was shot in the back and chest as she ate with friends in the school’s cafeteria. Twelve students and one teacher were killed in the attack when twelfth-grade students Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold opened fire. The shooters then killed themselves.
Anne Marie Hochhalter, who was paralyzed during the 1999 attack on Columbine High School, pictured in April 2024. Hochhalter died on Sunday. (Hyoung Chang/The Denver Post)
SCHOOL SHOOTING PROTOCOLS CHANGED AFTER COLUMBINE TO AN ‘EVERY SECOND COUNTS’ APPROACH: EXPERTS
Frank DeAngelis, her former principal, announced Hochhalter’s passing and said she was admired for her resilience and tenacity.
“My Columbine Rebel Family. It is with great sadness and sorrow that I share with you that Anne Marie Hochhalter passed away … of natural causes,” DeAngelis said in a statement provided to Fox News Digital.
“Anne Marie was a 2000 graduate. She was a pillar of strength for me and so many others. She was an inspiration and exemplified never giving up. Please keep her family in your thoughts and prayers. She will be missed but never forgotten. Rebels for Life. We love you Anne Marie Hochhalter.”
DeAngelis said that funeral arrangement details have not yet been released.
Columbine school shooting survivor Anne Marie Hochhalter (right) talks with Sue Townsend, the mother of shooting victim Lauren Townsend, during a 25th Year Remembrance ceremony on April 19, 2024, at First Baptist Church of Denver in Denver, Colorado. Hochhalter died on Sunday. (Marc Piscotty/Getty Images)
Hochhalter’s younger brother Nathan was also at the school at the time of the shooting. He was trapped in a classroom with about 30 other students as the gunfire rang out. After four hours later SWAT officers rescued them.
Several months after the shooting, their mother, Carla Hochhalter, took her own life after struggling with depression, per reports.
COLUMBINE SHOOTING 20TH ANNIVERSARY: SURVIVORS REFLECT ON HOW MASSACRE CHANGED THEIR LIVES FOREVER
Anne Marie Hochhalter spoke out in 2016 in support of Sue Klebold, shooter Dylan Klebold’s mother, who released a book reflecting on the mass shooting, especially concerning her relationship with grief and battles with shame, Fox 21 reported.
Hochhalter wrote a lengthy Facebook post at the time in which she wasn’t sure if she would ever read the book but said she had forgiven the mass murderer’s mother.
In 2012, Hochhalter also spoke publicly in support of the families and survivors of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut.
Last April, a vigil was held on the eve of the 25th anniversary of the Columbine shooting which Hochhalter attended. She said at the time that she was unable to attend a vigil marking the 20th anniversary due to her suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
“I’ve truly been able to heal my soul since that awful day in 1999,” Hochhalter wrote in an April 2024 post, adding that everyone’s grief and healing journey is completely different.
“It ebbs and flows, triggered by certain moments, taking us back to memories we once thought were frozen in time.” She wrote.
“I’ve had that happen quite a bit this anniversary, memories from that time period I thought were buried forever have come back to the surface, happy memories of being a teenager who was so focused on the boring mundane things like music videos, basketball, sleepovers at my friends’ houses, and finally beating Tetris on the computer (I was very proud of that accomplishment).”
“No bad memories have affected me this time. It’s like my heart has wanted to flood my mind with happiness instead of trauma.”
People visit the Columbine Memorial, April 17, 2024, in Littleton, Colo. The 12 students and a teacher killed in the Columbine High School shooting will be remembered Friday, April 19, 2024, in a vigil on the eve of the 25th anniversary of the tragedy. (AP Photo/David Zalubowski)
She went on to write about her feelings of sadness about those who had lost their lives that day but said she felt their presence at the vigil.
“When the song ‘Over the Rainbow’ started playing, I looked at the empty chairs and suddenly felt all of them sitting there, with smiles on their faces, wanting us to remember the good times. The happy memories,” she wrote.
“They would want us to remember and laugh at their silly goofy antics when they were alive, instead of focusing on how their lives sadly ended. Those 13 are always with us. They’re never forgotten. We are Columbine.”
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San Diego, CA
Padres win late again, take series from Giants
SAN FRANCISCO — This is who the Padres are.
They are eventually. They are find a way.
They are virtually nothing — and then they are what is necessary.
“When it’s time to go, we’re ready to go,” Gavin Sheets said Wednesday afternoon after another typically untypical victory. “And we’ve got guys to do it, and we’ve got guys that are ready in any moment.”
Ty France was the one who encapsulated that ethic in a 5-1 victory over the Giants at Oracle Park.
Sent to the plate as a pinch-hitter with two outs in the seventh inning with one strike against him, France worked the count full and then lofted the seventh pitch he saw down the right field line.
As the ball fell, right fielder Jesus Rodriguez dove to try to make what would have been an inning-ending catch, but the ball bounced off his glove and rolled into the corner.
“I knew I didn’t hit it great, so I was hoping that it was going to get down,” France said. “He made a great effort, and fortunately for me, it kicked away.”
Yes, that is how it has gone for the Padres.
As the ball bounced off the side wall and died in the dirt, two Padres baserunners raced home and France ran all the way to third base.
Some deliberation in the dugout regarding personnel had resulted in France getting late word he would be hitting and his being assessed a strike for a pitch clock violation not of his own doing.
“Great at-bat by Ty,” manager Craig Stammen said. “I don’t know if the manager put him in the greatest position to succeed, but we got him out there and he came through and made me look good.”
That France went up and delivered one of the more clutch at-bats of the season was entirely on brand for the Padres of 2026.
His hit was the third by a Padres substitute that gave them a lead in the final three innings of a game. It provided the edge for the Padres in their 11th victory (of their 22 total) earned in the seventh inning or later. It required some good fortune, and it masked the fact that they had three hits to that point and had the 17th quality start thrown against them in 36 games.
What they don’t do just doesn’t seem to matter. It has so far been outweighed in great measure by what they do.
“We’re a resilient group,” France said. “It’s going to be someone different every day. We’ve got to keep putting good at-bats together. When we do put those big innings together, it’s because we’ve had, one after the other, just consistent, good at-bats.”
So it is that a riddle of a season continued, as the Padres won for the third time in four games. This comes after they lost five times in six games, which came after a 16-3 stretch, which followed a 2-5 start.
Xander Bogaerts, who entered the game at shortstop after France pinch-hit for Sung-Mun Song, hit a two-run homer in the eighth inning.
In all, 69 of the Padres’ 162 runs have been scored after the sixth inning. That is the second most in the major leagues.
They are batting .283 after the sixth inning in games in which they are leading by a run, tied or at least have the tying run on deck. That compares to a .227 batting average in all other situations.
Their formula for Wednesday did vary on the pitching side.
The Padres began the game with an opener for the first time this season, and it worked magnificently.
Bradgley Rodriguez retired the Giants in order in the first inning. Matt Waldron took over and allowed one run on two hits while striking out seven batters in his five innings.
Adrian Morejón began the seventh and allowed one hit over the next two innings before Mason Miller worked a 1-2-3 ninth.
A solo home run for each side — Gavin Sheets into the bay in the fourth inning; Rafael Devers the other way and just over the wall in left field in the fifth — had the game tied 1-1 when France came to bat.
Giants’ starting pitcher Adrian Houser had allowed three hits and walked one while throwing just 73 pitches through six innings.
He appeared to get the first out of the seventh when Fernando Tatis Jr. grounded a ball toward third base, but Matt Chapman had the ball go off his glove and into left field.
With that, Giants manager Tony Vitello went to reliever Keaton Winn, who began his day by walking Ramón Laureano before retiring Nick Castellanos and Freddy Fermin.
With the left-handed-hitting Song due up, Vitello made another change, bringing in left-hander Matt Gage.
The Padres, meanwhile, were trying to figure out how to handle their substitutions, given that France was serving as the backup catcher with Luis Campusano unavailable after fouling a ball off his toe Tuesday, shortstop Xander Bogaerts was getting a day off and various other players not working at their usual positions.
When Gage completed his warm-up pitches quicker than Stammen anticipated, Song walked to the plate and got in the box before France emerged from the dugout.
Home plate umpire Tripp Gibson assessed the Padres a pitch clock violation, and France faced an 0-1 count.
After fouling off successive 2-2 pitches, he watched a ball in the dirt and then went the other way with a fastball left up and in.
“Luckily, Ty is such a pro,” Stammen said, “he went out there and did his job and it worked out for us.”
It has not always. But it has an inordinate amount of the time.
Because that is who the Padres are.
Alaska
Anchorage international airport jumps into first for cargo volume in the US
The Ted Stevens Anchorage International Airport has reached new heights, becoming the largest cargo hub in the U.S. last year.
It may be a first for the Anchorage airport, based on historical data from the Airports Council International.
The ascendance is based partly on the airport’s steady growth in cargo volume landed there in recent years, according to figures from the group.
It came even as President Donald Trump’s tariffs upended global trade patterns, the group’s latest rankings show.
A key part of the rise? The state’s strategic perch near much of the industrialized world.
But perhaps more important in the latest figures was the large decline in cargo volume at the Memphis International Airport last year.
The FedEx superhub has long been the dominant cargo airport in the U.S., and sometimes the world. But FedEx has restructured its operations, contributing to the airport’s drop in cargo volume.
That helped the Anchorage airport leapfrog past Memphis last year.
With 3.9 million tons of cargo landed, Anchorage was behind only the Hong Kong and Shanghai airports, globally.
In recent years in particular, the Anchorage airport has become a critical crossroads for aviation shippers, in part due to the increase in e-commerce packages moving between Asia and the U.S.
Carriers often drop into Anchorage to refuel, allowing them to haul more of their valuable payload, and less fuel traveling between continents.
“Aircraft can reach 90% of the industrialized world within 9 1/2 hours from the airport,” said Teri Lindseth, the airport’s development manager, in an interview Friday.
Also important is the “targeted effort by the airport development team and the (Alaska) Department of Transportation to expand Anchorage’s cargo presence and overall airport development,” she said. “We’ve focused on supporting our existing partners at the airlines, creating opportunities for growth, and we’re seeing that strategy pay off.”
Over 30 cargo carriers using the airport have helped boost those numbers, Lindseth said.
Some of the carriers have significantly increased their cargo landings in Anchorage last year, she said, including China Airlines and Taiwan-based EVA Air Cargo, and Kalitta Air and Atlas Air, based in the U.S., she said.
Greg Wolf, head of the Alaska International Business Center, said that the airport has done a good job marketing the benefits of the Alaska route to cargo carriers.
The extra cargo each jet can carry as it lands in Anchorage helps give extra oomph to the numbers, compared to other airports, he said.
The Anchorage airport’s rise to first place came as Alaska reached its highest-ever volume in foreign exports, at $6.7 billion, Wolf said.
Some of that product moved by air, adding to the airport’s cargo numbers, he said.
And while Trump has slapped extra-high tariffs on China, Alaska exports still traveled there, apparently after first reaching other Asian countries with lower tariffs before making their way to China, Wolf said.
Alaska’s export value to China fell to fourth last year — behind Korea, Australia and Japan — though it’s typically been the state’s top export partner.
“I’ve talked to businesses, not just from Alaska, but other American businesses, and they’ve done their best to work around the tariffs,” he said.
Arizona
Triple-digit temps return to Arizona for Mother’s Day weekend
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Warmer weather is in store for Mother’s Day weekend in the Valley, with temperatures jumping 10 to 15 degrees above average.
We have issued First Alert Weather Days for Saturday and Sunday with high temps expected near 104-105. A heads-up in case you’re planning any Mother’s Day activities, because you may want to take part in outdoor events in the morning or move those activities indoors.
And high temperatures could get even warmer by next week. Right now, models are hinting at temps near 107 Monday and 106 Tuesday. These above-average temperatures are due to a ridge of high pressure building from the west.
For the weekend, a widespread Moderate Heat Risk is expected. What that means is that the weather will affect those who are sensitive to heat, especially those without cooling/hydration, and some health systems and industries.
Right now, there are no Extreme Heat Watches or Warnings in effect from the National Weather Service, but we will keep you posted.
By the end of next week, an incoming weather system could lead to slightly cooler temperatures, but temps should still stay above average.
We’re not tracking any chances for rain in the Valley for the next five to seven days.
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