2 kids killed in Minneapolis Catholic school shooting, many injured
Armed with a rifle, shotgun and pistol, Robin Westman approached church and shot dozens of rounds through the windows toward the children sitting in the pews during Mass at the Annunciation Catholic School.
PTI
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Two kids were killed while 17 others were injured. Photo: PTI
Minneapolis, 27 Aug
A shooter opened fire with a rifle Wednesday through the
windows of a Catholic church in Minneapolis and struck children celebrating
Mass during the first week of school, killing two and wounding 17 people in an
act of violence the police chief called “absolutely incomprehensible.”
Armed with a rifle, shotgun and pistol, 23-year-old Robin
Westman approached the side of the church and shot dozens of rounds through the
windows toward the children sitting in the pews during Mass at the Annunciation
Catholic School just before 8.30 am, Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara said
at news conferences. He said the shooter then died by suicide.
The children who died were 8 and 10. Fourteen other kids and
three octogenarian parishioners were wounded but are expected to survive, the
chief said.
Fifth-grader Weston Halsne told reporters he ducked for the
pews, covering his head, shielded by a friend who was on top of him. His friend
was hit, he said.
“I was super-scared for him, but I think now he's okay,” the
10-year-old said, adding that he was praying for the other hospitalised
children and adults.
Halsne's grandfather, Michael Simpson, said the violence
during Mass on the third day of school left him wondering whether God was
watching over.
“I don't know where He is,” Simpson said.
FBI Director Kash Patel said on X that the shooting is being
investigated as an act of domestic terrorism and a hate crime targeting
Catholics.
O'Hara said police hadn't yet found any relationship between
the shooter and the church, nor determined a motive for the bloodshed. The
chief said, however, that investigators were examining a social media post that
appeared to show the shooter at the scene and contained “some disturbing
writings.”
“The sheer cruelty and cowardice of firing into a church
full of children is absolutely incomprehensible,” said O'Hara, who gave the
wounded youngsters' ages as 6 to 15. He said a wooden plank was placed to barricade
some of the side doors, and that authorities found a smoke bomb at the scene.
Westman's uncle, former Kentucky state lawmaker Bob
Heleringer, said he did not know the accused shooter well, last saw Westman at
a family wedding a few years ago, and was confounded by the violence: “It's an
unspeakable tragedy.”
The police chief said Westman did not have an extensive
known criminal history and is believed to have acted alone.
Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey said the violence had forever
changed the students' families and the city along with them.
“Don't just say this is about thoughts and prayers right
now,” Frey said at a news conference. “These kids were literally praying."
Bill Bienemann, who lives a couple of blocks away and has
long attended Mass at Annunciation Church, said he heard as many as 50 shots
over as long as four minutes.
The police chief said officers immediately responded to
reports of the shooting, entered the church, rendered first aid and rescued
some of the children hiding throughout the building as other emergency
responders arrived.
Frey and Annunciation's principal said teachers and
children, too, responded heroically. “Children were ducked down. Adults were
protecting children. Older children were protecting younger children,” said the
principal, Matt DeBoer.
Amid a heavy uniformed law enforcement presence later
Wednesday morning, children in dark green uniforms trickled out of the school
with adults, giving lingering hugs and wiping away tears.
Aubrey Pannhoff, a 16-year-old student at a different
Catholic school, rushed to Annunciation after her own school's lockdown and
prayer service, and she said she was asking God: “Why?”
“It's little kids,” she said through tears. “It's just
really hard for me to take in.”
A string of fatal shootings in Minneapolis
Monday had been the first day of the school year at
Annunciation, a 102-year-old school in a leafy residential and commercial
neighborhood about 5 miles (8 kilometers) south of downtown Minneapolis.
Karin Cebulla, who said she had worked as a learning
specialist at Annuciation and sent her two now-college-aged daughters there,
described the school as an accepting, caring community. “Everyone felt safe
here, and I just pray that it continues to be a place where people feel safe,”
she said.
The gunfire was the latest in a series of fatal shootings in
Minnesota's most populous city in less than 24 hours. One person was killed and
six others were hurt in a shooting Tuesday afternoon. Hours later, two people
died in two other shootings in the city.
O'Hara, the police chief, said the Annunciation shooting
does not appear to be related to other recent violence.
Alongside many major US cities, violent crime in Minneapolis
has decreased since the COVID-19 pandemic. The number of homicides between 2020
and 2024 fell by about 7 per cent, based on data from AH Datalytics and its
Real-Time Crime Index, which tracks crimes across the country using law
enforcement data.
Over the first six months of 2025, the index shows a 21 per
cent decrease in homicides over the same period of 2024, while aggravated
assaults—which includes non-fatal shootings—were down 8 per cent.
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