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Call about suspicious man was made by Georgia Tech student killed by police, investigators say

September 19, 2017 by  
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The call that led Georgia Tech campus police to respond to a man reportedly wielding a knife was made by the student who was later shot and killed by officers,  police investigators said Monday night.

That student, Scout Schultz, left three suicide notes behind in a dormitory room, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

The developments added further layers of complexity to the death of Schultz, a 21-year-old who led the university’s Pride Alliance and had a history of mental illness.

In the call to police Saturday night, Schultz described a suspicious person “as a white male, with long blond hair, white T-shirt blue jeans who is possibly intoxicated, holding a knife and possibly armed with a gun on his hip,” according to a statement from the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

Investigators said a multipurpose tool that contained a knife was recovered from the scene. The statement did not say whether the knife was displayed but said no firearms were recovered.

An attorney for Schultz’s family said in a statement Monday night the knife remained in its holder and Scout’s arms were at the student’s side.

“It’s tragic that as Scout was battling mental health issues that pushed them to the edge of desperation, their life was taken with a bullet rather than saved with non-lethal force,” said the statement from L. Chris Stewart, the Schultz family attorney.

The parents of Schultz said their child, who identified as neither male nor female, had suffered from anxiety and depression, and had spent time in counseling after attempting suicide by hanging two years ago.

But Scout’s death stunned Lynne and Bill Schultz, who described Scout as “a very loving and caring and empathetic person.”

“I don’t think there was a single person that didn’t love them and cherish them for their involvement in the different causes,” Bill Schultz said.

About 50 people marched Monday night following a memorial vigil, and protesters set one police vehicle on fire and injured two officers, according to University spokesman Lance Wallace. Three people were arrested.

Schultz’s family urged protesters to act peacefully in a statement released through their attorney, according to the Associated Press.

“Answering violence with violence is not the answer. Our goal is to work diligently to make positive change at Georgia Tech in an effort to ensure a safer campus for all students.”

The shooting in Atlanta comes as police nationwide continue to face protest and media scrutiny over the use of deadly force. Police across the country shoot and kill an average of three people each day, a rate virtually unchanged in recent years despite calls from police leaders and the public for reform.

Mental illness remains a major factor in fatal police shootings, playing a role in at least one-fourth of all such shootings — at least 159 so far in 2017 — according to a Washington Post analysis.

Police reform groups have long emphasized the need for officers to undergo specialized crisis intervention training to learn best practices for interaction with people who are in the midst of a mental health crisis, but many police departments still do not require such training.

Since January 2015, police nationwide have shot and killed at least 392 people who were armed with knives, blades or other edged weapons — an average of about one such shooting every four days — according to the Washington Post’s database of fatal police shootings.

At least 102 of those cases, including the shooting of Schultz, occurred in 2017.

Fatal shootings of people armed with knives account for about 14 percent of the nearly 2,700 deadly police shootings tracked by The Post since the beginning of 2015.

Officers from Georgia Tech’s campus police force encountered Schultz, a computer engineering student, in a parking lot outside a dormitory, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation.

Schultz wasn’t holding a gun in video captured from a window above the parking lot shortly before midnight, as the campus was placed on lockdown.

Stewart, the attorney, said Schultz was shot once and that the bullet pierced the heart. Stewart said only one officer fired and that none of the other officers who responded from the Georgia Tech police department had been issued Tasers. A spokesman for Georgia Tech told CNN that campus police do not carry stun guns.

“That’s baffling to me that on a college campus you’d rather give the officers the most deadly weapons and not equip them with less lethal weapons,” Stewart said, noting that Schultz’s family is hoping the death leads to reforms within the department, including better training.

Video shows officers repeatedly telling Schultz to drop the weapon as the student advances.

“Come on, man, let’s drop the knife,” an officer with his gun drawn says in the graphic video. But Schultz walks toward him.

“Shoot me!”

The officer keeps backing up, moving behind a parking barricade and imploring again: “Nobody wants to hurt you, man.”

At least four officers had surrounded Schultz, according to WSB-TV. In the video, one of the officers called out to the student, who turned away from the barricade and began to move toward the new voice.

“What are we doing here?” the officer asked. No reply.

“Do not move!”

“Drop it!” someone said finally, as Schultz takes three more steps toward an officer, followed by the report of a gunshot and many screams. Schultz died Sunday at an Atlanta hospital.

While the state’s investigative bureau referred to Schultz as a male — “Scott Schultz” — the student and the student’s family used the pronoun “them,” and on the Pride Alliance website Schultz used the description “bisexual, nonbinary and intersex.”

“When I’m not running Pride or doing classwork I mostly play DD and try to be politically active,” Schultz wrote.

Bill Schultz said recently that Scout had expressed interest in the anti-fascist political movement and frustration with news coverage of police-involved shootings.

“I will say this, that recently Scout has been slightly involved with the anti-fascist community and had expressed a number of anti-fascist ideas to me,” he said.

“I tend to think that if there was a cause it might have been anger at the police over all the shootings and all the long litany of police shootings.”

In a statement, Pride Alliance called its late president the “driving force” behind the LGBT group for the past two years.

“They pushed us to do more events and a larger variety events, and we would not be the organization we are known as without their constant hard work and dedication,” the statement reads.

“We love you Scout and we will continue to push for change.”

Scout, a fourth-year student at Georgia Tech, was born in Rockville, Md., and spent time in Iowa, Missouri and Florida before moving to the Atlanta area six years ago. Bill Schultz, a retired computer engineer, said Scout came by an interest in engineering earnestly and was scheduled to graduate a semester early.

“Scout was definitely a chip off the old block,” he said.

Both parents remembered well the time that Scout came out to them.

“It wasn’t a shock because we’re welcoming and loving parents,” Bill Schultz said. “It shouldn’t have been hard for Scout to come out but I think there were some issues involved there which is why they did a session in therapy.”

Lynne Schultz said that any of Scout’s mental health issues appeared to have been resolved and that friends had told them that Scout seemed fine in recent weeks.

“We had no clue that there was an issue in the last four weeks,” she said.

Lynne Schultz said that they have received an outpouring of support from members of the community and that more than 30 friends showed up to the hospital in the middle of the night when Scout was shot.

“Scout had a lot more friends than I realized,” she said.

Bill Schultz said Scout was “all justice for everyone. Now, we have to seek justice for Scout.”

“We’re proud of them for standing up for what they believe in,” Lynne Schultz said.

Had a great time tabling for Pride at FASET today! Always fun to greet the incoming first-years and get a glance at the…

Posted by Pride Alliance at Georgia Tech on Monday, July 17, 2017

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Seven transgender women have been killed this year. Democrats want Jeff Sessions to investigate.

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Trump to lay out vision of US role in the world, focusing on ‘outcomes, not ideology’

September 19, 2017 by  
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President Trump on Tuesday will present a vision of U.S. engagement with the world in a maiden address to the United Nations that aides said will be consistent with the nation’s “values and traditions” but will not focus on advancing democracy abroad.

This dichotomy of a U.S. leader pledging to shape global conditions to ensure America’s prosperity and security without explicitly promoting its way of life is expected to distinguish Trump’s speech from those of his White House forebears.

The president’s nationalist agenda has led to widespread anxiety among the U.S. allies and partners who have gathered here this week among the more than 150 foreign delegations at the 72nd U.N. General Assembly. Amid mounting global challenges, foreign leaders are carefully watching Trump’s moment on the world stage for signals about his willingness to maintain the United States’ traditional leadership role.

Although Trump campaigned on a policy of putting “America first” and spoke dismissively of international bodies such as the United Nations and NATO, he has offered a tentative embrace of them as he seeks to rally international support to confront destabilizing threats from North Korea, Iran and the Islamic State.

Trump began several days of diplomacy at the United Nations with a session Monday devoted to reforming the institution — a theme during his outsider presidential campaign and a key demand of some of his conservative supporters. The focus on reducing bureaucracy lent a critical tone to Trump’s debut.

Thailand’s Foreign Minister Don Pramudwinai, left, and President Trump shake hands while British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, second from right, and U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres greet each other before a session about reforming the United Nations at the U.N. headquarters in New York City. (Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images)

In brief opening remarks, he said the United Nations had not lived up to its billing upon its creation in 1945, asserting that it suffered from a bloated ­bureaucracy and “mismanagement.” Trump urged his fellow leaders to make reforms aimed at “changing business as usual,” but pledged that his administration would be “partners in your work.”

“Make the United Nations great,” the president told reporters when asked about his message this week, riffing off his campaign slogan. “Not again. Make the United Nations great. Such tremendous potential, and I think we’ll be able to do this.”

White House aides said the address would be consistent with Trump’s foreign policy speeches this year in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, where he challenged other ­nations to do more in the global fight against terrorism, and in Warsaw, where he warned that Western civilization was under attack.

President Barack Obama used his final U.N. address last year to urge his peers to continue to embrace the multilateral cooperation that had marked the post-World War II era, and to warn of a global retreat into “tribalism” and “building walls” — an implicit reference to Trump just weeks before the 2016 presidential election. Trump campaigned on a pledge to build a wall on the U.S.-Mexico border and to curtail immigration.

In the vast U.N. chambers, Trump will give a “clear-eyed” view of the challenges facing the international community and offer a path that is based on “outcomes, not ideology,” said a senior administration official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to preview the president’s speech.

Trump, as he has before, intends to emphasize the need for other nations to take up more of the burden of providing for their own prosperity and security, rather than relying on the United States.

“It’s a shared risk,” the administration official said. “Nations cannot be bystanders to history.” The aide added that Trump “will talk about the need to work toward common goals. But he will not tell them how to live. He will not tell them what system of government to have. He will ask countries to respect the sovereignty of other nations. That’s the rationale for the basis of cooperation.”

Foreign leaders have sought to influence Trump this week on a range of issues.

Trump’s first meeting with a world leader here was with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, a choice meant to underscore the U.S. commitment to Israel and displeasure at what U.S. officials see as systemic anti-Israel bias at the United Nations.

It was also a nod to the open question of U.S. participation in the U.N.-backed nuclear deal with Iran — one of the most pressing issues hanging over the session this year. Netanyahu, who will also address the gathering Tuesday, opposes the international deal and lobbied hard against it during the Obama administration.

“When we look at the agreement, we have reservations,” Israel’s U.N. ambassador, Danny Danon, said in an interview. “We should not be the one who will tell our allies what to do and how to do, but we have some hand-on experience.”

Trump, whose administration faces an Oct. 15 deadline to certify whether Tehran has complied with the agreement, said last week that Iran had violated the “spirit” of the deal by supporting terrorism in the Middle East. A statement that Iran is not complying would set off a congressional review of whether to re­impose some U.S. sanctions, which could sunder the deal.

The president believes the deal is “deeply flawed,” said Brian Hook, a State Department official who accompanied Trump in his meetings with foreign leaders Monday. Trump told his foreign counterparts “what he thinks are the shortcomings,” Hook said.

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, who will address the United Nations on Wednesday, told CNN that a U.S. withdrawal would harm American credibility.

“Exiting such an agreement would carry a high cost,” Rouhani said.

The White House said Trump spoke by phone Monday with Chinese President Xi Jinping, who is not attending the U.N. meetings, to discuss North ­Korea’s efforts to “destabilize” Northeast Asia with its nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles.

Ahead of the meetings, U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley lauded the United Nations for a pair of recent votes to enact severe economic sanctions against North Korea over its nuclear and ballistic missile programs. The sanctions seek to cut off oil imports to the regime of Kim Jong Un — who Trump recently dubbed “Rocket Man” — and block exports from the country.

In another bilateral session Monday, French President Emmanuel Macron pressed Trump to keep the United States in the Paris climate accord. Trump, who told him the deal imposed oppressive regulatory burdens on American businesses, has vowed to withdraw the United States from the agreement at the earliest opportunity, in 2020.

“There is a worrying degradation of the world environment,” French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said at a news conference. Without mentioning Trump by name, Le Drian lamented an “increasing breakdown of international cooperation” and “withdrawal out of fear or selfishness.”

Yet as Trump sat down with Macron, he reflected fondly on his official trip to Paris in July to watch a Bastille Day military parade down the Champs-Elysees. This, the president ruminated, would be an import from abroad that has his support.

“It was a tremendous thing,” Trump said. “And to a large extent, because of what I witnessed, we may do something like that on July Fourth in Washington, down Pennsylvania Avenue. . . . We’re going to have to try and top it.”

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