Tag Archives: vigil

‘I am not a threat’: Hundreds gather for vigil mourning 6-year-old Palestinian-American boy who was stabbed to death near Chicago – CNN

  1. ‘I am not a threat’: Hundreds gather for vigil mourning 6-year-old Palestinian-American boy who was stabbed to death near Chicago CNN
  2. 6-year-old Muslim boy killed, woman stabbed after she urged landlord to ‘pray for peace’ WHAS11
  3. South Florida mental health expert offers advice on how to help children cope with Mideast violence CBS Miami
  4. Editorial: The killing of Wadea Al-Fayoume shows anguish in Middle East threatens tolerance at home Chicago Tribune
  5. Landlord accused of stabbing 6-year-old charged with hate crimes TODAY
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Unincorp. Plainfield stabbing: Vigil to be held for Wadea Al-Fayoume, 6 year old Muslim boy stabbed to death; Joseph Czuba charged – WLS-TV

  1. Unincorp. Plainfield stabbing: Vigil to be held for Wadea Al-Fayoume, 6 year old Muslim boy stabbed to death; Joseph Czuba charged WLS-TV
  2. 6-year-old fatally stabbed, mother attacked in alleged hate crime FOX 26 Houston
  3. A 6-year-old Palestinian-American was stabbed 26 times for being Muslim, police say. His mom couldn’t go to his funeral because she was stabbed, too CNN
  4. Local mosque speaks out against hate crimes in Illinois WIFR
  5. Hundreds mourn slain Muslim boy as FBI warns of rising threats of violence in U.S. CBS Evening News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil – Fox News

  1. Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil Fox News
  2. Neil Gorsuch cast doubt on a group of atheists’ lawsuit over a Florida city’s prayer vigil, writing that everything done by the government ‘probably offends somebody’ Yahoo News
  3. Atheists avoid — for now — Supreme Court review of lawsuit on Florida shooting prayer vigil CNBC
  4. Supreme Court allows atheists’ lawsuit against Florida city over prayer vigil to continue CNN
  5. Supreme Court declines to hear Florida city’s challenge to atheists Yahoo News
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil – Fox News

  1. Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil Fox News
  2. Supreme Court rebuffs Florida city’s challenge to atheist lawsuit KSL.com
  3. Neil Gorsuch cast doubt on a group of atheists’ lawsuit over a Florida city’s prayer vigil, saying everything done by the government ‘probably offends somebody’ Yahoo News
  4. Atheists avoid — for now — Supreme Court review of lawsuit on Florida shooting prayer vigil CNBC
  5. High court turns down city whose post-shooting prayer vigil inspired suit Courthouse News Service
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Supreme Court declines to decide whether city-backed prayer vigil violated First Amendment – USA TODAY

  1. Supreme Court declines to decide whether city-backed prayer vigil violated First Amendment USA TODAY
  2. Supreme Court denies petition from Florida city to toss atheists’ First Amendment suit over prayer vigil Fox News
  3. Supreme Court rebuffs Florida city’s challenge to atheist lawsuit KSL.com
  4. Neil Gorsuch cast doubt on a group of atheists’ lawsuit over a Florida city’s prayer vigil, saying everything done by the government ‘probably offends somebody’ Yahoo News
  5. Supreme Court declines to hear Florida city’s challenge to atheists The Hill
  6. View Full Coverage on Google News

Read original article here

Idaho State Police adds patrols to university campus as school holds vigil for 4 students killed in unsolved stabbings



CNN
 — 

Idaho State Police has added four campus patrols and 14 patrols for the general community as the University of Idaho hosted a vigil Wednesday night for the four students fatally stabbed earlier this month.

Several hundred people attended the vigil on the campus of 9,300 students to commemorate the victims: Ethan Chapin, 20; Kaylee Goncalves, 21; Xana Kernodle, 20; and Madison Mogen, 21.

Several family members spoke about their loved ones.

“We lost four beautiful souls,” said Goncalves’ father, Steve. Later, he told those watching to find someone they love and tell them. “The only cure to pain is love,” he said.

Chapin’s mother, Stacy Chapin, talked about how their family was very close. They shared meals when they could, they played games together and loved spending days on the boat listening to country music, Ethan’s “most favorite thing in the whole world.”

“We are eternally grateful that we spent so much time with him,” she said, and then, as her voice cracked, she implored the audience to do the same with their families. “Because time is precious and it’s something you can’t get back.”

The parents – including Mogen’s father, who spoke lovingly about his “great kid” who was “just nice to everybody” – also thanked law enforcement and university officials for their work since the November 13 slayings.

Investigators have yet to identify a suspect or find the murder weapon, but a spokesperson for the Idaho State Police said they have begun to receive forensic testing results, Fox News reported.

“I do know that each type of testing… some take longer than others. And I also do know that there have been results that have been returned and those go directly to the investigators, so that way they can help, again, paint that picture as we keep talking about,” spokesperson Aaron Snell said, while declining to say who the DNA belonged to.

CNN has reached out to Snell for comment.

State police are assisting police in Moscow, a city of about 26,000 people, with the investigation. The uncertainty and lack of information around the unsolved killings has left the campus emptier than usual after Thanksgiving break.

While there is no official number on how many students returned, Provost and Executive Vice President Torrey Lawrence told CNN professors are reporting that about two-thirds to three-quarters of students are attending in-person.

“This is a heavy situation, and we are moving forward by trying to be supportive of all of our people, our faculty, our staff, our students, and trying to address their needs,” Lawrence said.

One student told CNN that, with a killer not identified, people are “sketched out.”

“It definitely feels a little bit different,” said student Hayden Rich. “It seems kind of a sad setting. It is kind of quiet.”

Snell told CNN on Tuesday they’ve seen an uptick in 911 calls while the cases remain unsolved. Most of those calls are concerning “suspicious person” activity, or “welfare check.”

“We are recognizing that there is heightened fear in the community and so the officers are going to those calls and they’re handling them as they come up,” Snell said.

University of Idahos President Scott Green acknowledged last week that some students did not want to return until a suspect is in custody.

“As such, faculty have been asked to prepare in-person teaching and remote learning options so that each student can choose their method of engagement for the final two weeks of the semester,” he wrote in a statement.

Dozens of local, state and federal investigators are still working to determine who carried out the brutal attack. Investigators have yet to identify a suspect or find a weapon – believed to be a fixed-blade knife – and have sifted through more than 1,000 tips and conducted at least 150 interviews.

The four students were found stabbed to death in an off-campus home in Moscow. The killings have unsettled the campus community and the town, which had not seen a murder since 2015.

Police said they believe the killings were “targeted” and “isolated” but have not released evidence to back up that analysis. They also initially said there was no threat to the public – but later backtracked on that assurance.

“We cannot say there’s no threat to the community,” Police Chief James Fry said days after the killings.

Authorities said they have not ruled out the possibility that more than one person may be involved in the stabbings.

So far, using the evidence collected at the scene and the trove of tips and interviews, investigators have been able to piece together a rough timeline and a map of the group’s final hours.

On the night of the killings, Goncalves and Mogen were at a sports bar, and Chapin and Kernodle were seen at a fraternity party.

Investigators believe all four victims had returned to the home by 2 a.m. the night of the stabbings. Two surviving roommates had also gone out in Moscow that night, police said, and returned to the house by 1 a.m.

Police earlier said Goncalves and Mogen returned to the home by 1:45 a.m., but they updated the timeline Friday, saying digital evidence showed the pair returned at 1:56 a.m. after visiting a food truck and being driven home by a “private party.”

The next morning, two surviving roommates “summoned friends to the residence because they believed one of the second-floor victims had passed out and was not waking up,” police said in a release. Somebody called 911 from the house at 11:58 a.m. using one of the surviving roommates’ phones.

When police arrived, they found two victims on the second floor and two victims on the third floor. There was no sign of forced entry or damage, police said.

Investigators do not believe the two surviving roommates were involved in the deaths.

A coroner determined the four victims were each stabbed multiple times and were likely asleep when the attacks began. Some of the students had defensive wounds, according to the Latah County coroner.

Student Ava Forsyth said her roommate is staying home because she does not feel safe. Forsyth said she feels “moderately” safe, but “not so much” at night, when she takes advantage of a free campus walking security service.

Rich, the student who said people are “sketched out,” said he decided to come back for the many tests he has this week. Student Lexi Way told CNN that she feels safe with upped campus security and “tends to learn better in class.”

Read original article here

17-year-old killed, 2 others shot, during candlelight vigil, DeKalb police say – WSB-TV Channel 2

DEKALB COUNTY, Ga — DeKalb police said a 17-year-old was killed and two other people were also shot while attending a candlelight vigil for a recent homicide victim.

Police told Channel 2 Action News the suspect walked up to the victim and shot the 17-year-old during a candlelight vigil for Taneaious McCune, who was shot and killed during a Friday home invasion on Gresham Road.

DeKalb police said that at 6:18 p.m., officers responded to 2051 Flat Shoals Parkway in reference to a person shot. When they arrived, they located a 17-year-old dead on the scene.

The address is listed as the Highlands at East Atlanta Apartments.

While investigating this scene, an 11-year-old boy arrived at the Walmart at 2427 Gresham Road with a gunshot wound to his finger. He told police he was at this location when the shooting began.

The 11-year-old was taken to an area hospital.

[DOWNLOAD: Free WSB-TV News app for alerts as news breaks]

Police said another teen, a 16-year-old boy, is at a nearby hospital with a gunshot wound to the hand.

The shooter ran away from the scene, according to police.

Detectives are on the scene investigating the situation.

TRENDING STORIES:

Channel 2 has a crew on the scene working to learn more about this developing incident on WSB Tonight at 11.

[SIGN UP: WSB-TV Daily Headlines Newsletter]



Read original article here

Queen Elizabeth: King Charles and his siblings hold vigil beside their mother’s coffin



CNN
 — 

King Charles III and his siblings Princess Anne, Prince Andrew and Prince Edward held a brief vigil beside Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin in Westminster Hall on Friday, joining members of the military who have mounted a continuous watch over her remains for the past two days.

Standing quietly, their heads bowed, the King was at the head of the Queen’s coffin, while his sister Anne, the Princess Royal, and brother Edward, the Earl of Wessex, were on the sides. Andrew, the Duke of York, was at the coffin’s foot.

In a break with royal tradition, Prince Andrew – the Queen’s second son – wore his military uniform for the vigil. While custom dictates that only working members of the royal family wear military uniforms during ceremonial occasions, Andrew was allowed to wear his as a mark of special respect for the Queen. The King, Anne and Edward were also in military dress.

Andrew stepped away from his royal duties in 2019 over his ties to disgraced financier and convicted pedophile Jeffrey Epstein.

Many other members of the royal family came to observe the vigil. Camilla, the Queen Consort, accompanied the King, standing beside Princess Anne’s husband Vice Admiral Sir Tim Laurence.

Prince Edward’s wife Sophie, Countess of Wessex, was also there along with her two children Lady Louise Windsor and James, Viscount Severn.

The Queen’s granddaughters Zara Tindall and Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie were there, as was the Queen’s cousin Prince Michael of Kent.

Seen for the first time since the Queen’s death last Thursday, some of the Queen’s youngest great-grandchildren including Mia and Lena Tindall were also in attendance.

The Queen has been lying in state in Westminster Hall, the oldest part of the Palace of Westminster, since Wednesday. The medieval hall is where the Queen’s ancestors also lay in state. Her father King George VI in 1952, her mother Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother in 2002, her grandfather George V in 1936 and her great-grandfather Edward VII in 1910 – the first royal to lie in state.

The Queen’s coffin is draped with the Royal Standard and has the Imperial State Crown, the Orb and the Sceptre lying on top of it.

The public has a chance to view the closed coffin in person until 6.30 a.m. on Monday, when the hall will close in preparations for the state funeral later that morning.

The queue to pay respects reached as much as 10 miles on Friday and had to be closed repeatedly after hitting its maximum capacity. At one point the wait was at least 14 hours, according to the official tracker provided by the government.

The continuous watch inside Westminster Hall is being kept by the King’s Body Guards of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen at Arms, the Royal Company of Archers, the Yeomen of the Guard assisted by the Yeomen Warders of the Tower of London and by Officers of the Household Division during the lying in state and lying at rest.

Each watch lasts for six hours, with individuals within those watches keeping vigil for 20 minutes at a time.

The royal vigil on Friday evening took place alongside the military watch and was similar to the one the Queen’s children held in St. Giles’ Cathedral in Scotland earlier this week.

The Queen’s eight grandchildren are expected to take the same spot on Saturday evening when it will be their time to stand vigil beside their grandmother’s coffin, a royal source told CNN on Friday.

Prince William, the Prince of Wales, will stand at the head of the coffin, and Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, will stand at its foot. The source added that the Prince of Wales will be flanked by Zara Tindall and Peter Philips, who are the children of Princess Anne. The Duke of Sussex will be flanked by Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, the daughters of Prince Andrew, alongside Prince Edward’s children, Lady Louise Windsor and Viscount Severn.

King Charles III and Camilla, the Queen Consort visited Wales earlier on Friday, meeting members of public and receiving a motion of condolences.

The King said that he was taking up his new duties as the monarch with “immense gratitude for the privilege of having been able to serve as Prince of Wales.”

“It must surely be counted the greatest privilege to belong to a land that can inspire such devotion,” he said. Speaking in Welsh, the King said that his son, Prince William, who has taken over the title of Prince of Wales from his father, has “a deep love for Wales.”

But the new King also encountered some signs of disapproval on Friday. When he arrived at Cardiff Castle in the afternoon, he was greeted with both cheers and boos.

While many people in the crowd were cheering and waving flags, some protestors were booing loudly. King Charles appeared to be shaking his head slightly as his car drove by and into the castle.

After his return to London and before joining the vigil at Westminster Hall, Charles held a reception for faith leaders in the Bow Room at Buckingham Palace, the palace said in a statement.

To get updates on the British Royal Family sent to your inbox, sign up for CNN’s Royal News newsletter.

Read original article here

William and Harry to stand vigil at Queen’s coffin on Saturday


London
CNN
 — 

The late Queen Elizabeth II’s eight grandchildren will stand vigil beside her coffin in Westminster Hall on Saturday evening, a royal source told CNN.

Prince William, the Prince of Wales, will stand at the head of the coffin, and Prince Harry, the Duke of Sussex, will stand at its foot for the 15-minute vigil, according to the source. At the King’s request, both will be in uniform.

The Queen’s other grandchildren will be wearing morning coats and dark formal dress with decorations, the royal source said.

The source added that the Prince of Wales will be flanked by Zara Tindall and Peter Philips, who are the children of Princess Anne. The Duke of Sussex will be flanked by Princesses Beatrice and Eugenie, the daughters of Prince Andrew, alongside Prince Edward’s children, Lady Louise Windsor and Viscount Severn.

The grandchildren, at the King’s invitation, are very eager to pay their respects – just as their parents are doing the previous evening, the source told CNN.

Read original article here

Royal Guard Collapses While Holding Vigil by Queen Elizabeth II’s Coffin

As Queen Elizabeth II lay in state in Westminster Hall on Wednesday, one guard fainted off the coffin’s regal platform—known as a catafalque—shocking somber lines of mourners filing through the medieval hall to pay their respects. The BBC’s live stream captured the moment in which the unidentified man is seen collapsing, landing face-first on the stone floor. Aides at the ceremony then rush over to help him to his feet. The BBC then cut away to an exterior shot of the building, before the stream was briefly suspended. It was not immediately clear why the guard fell. The queue to view the Queen stretched more than two miles on Wednesday, with would-be well-wishers waiting for hours. Elizabeth II will lie in state until her state funeral on Monday, with guards standing around her coffin 24 hours a day, switching places every 20 minutes.

Read it at Daily Mail

Read original article here