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Reporter at Kentucky shooting learned that suspect was her son

January 28, 2018 by  
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2 dead, 17 hurt in Kentucky school shooting

Gov. Matt Bevin says the shooter, a 15-year-old male student, is in custody; Mike Tobin reports from Benton, Kentucky.

One of the reporters who raced to a Kentucky high school on Tuesday after reports that shots had been fired was likely not prepared for what she found out at the scene.

The suspect, a 15-year-old boy, was her son, the Louisville Courier-Journal reported.

The shooting in Benton, which left two students dead and 21 injured, rocked the close-knit community of about 4,500 in southwestern Kentucky.

The mother and other family members declined to comment, the report said.

Authorities have still not announced the suspect’s motive.

‘Cultural problem’

As school shootings become more commonplace, debates are raging in Kentucky and state legislatures nationwide about how to prevent them. 

Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin, a Republican and social conservative, has made it clear that he won’t sign laws that restrict guns.

Bevin instead called on Americans to “wake up,” recognize that school shootings are a “cultural problem,” and to look at the “root causes.”

“Our culture is crumbling from within,” he said.

Bevin said the desensitization to death and killing is coming at an “extraordinary price.”

“We can’t celebrate death in video games, celebrate death in TV shows, celebrate death in movies, celebrate death in musical lyrics and remove any sense of morality and sense of higher authority and then expect that things like this are not going to happen,” he said.

State senator’s plan

Kentucky Gov. Matt Bevin, seated, signs a prayer proclamation as Marshall County High School reopened its doors in Benton, Ky., Jan. 26, 2018.

 (Associated Press)

Just hours after the shooting, his Republican colleague, state Sen. Steve West, rushed to file a bill to put more guns in schools. 

His legislation would let local districts hire armed marshals to patrol public schools, make citizen’s arrests and protect people from “imminent death or serious physical injury.”

Marshals wouldn’t have to be police officers, but school district employees in good standing who have a license to carry concealed weapons.

West’s bill is one of at least two in the state that would allow more guns into Kentucky’s public schools and college campuses. They reflect a sentiment that has found bipartisan support.

“We need armed officers in every school in Kentucky. That is a small price to pay if it saves one child’s life,” state Sen. Ray Jones, a Democrat, said.

In the conservative state where politicians routinely pose in ads with guns, the National Rifle Association has an outsized influence in many state elections and the resulting gun policy debates in those legislatures.

Some Democrats, however, believe the push for more guns is misplaced.

Democratic Rep. Attica Scott from Louisville said she is “definitely an advocate for gun safety and to me more guns is not the answer to gun violence.”

Scott has filed legislation that would ban those convicted of hate crimes from carrying a gun and let local governments pass laws requiring gun sellers to use “responsible business practices.”

“We are sending prayers and thoughts to kids who are clinging to the last bit of faith they have in the system of government that is supposed to keep them safe.”

Meanwhile, Democratic Rep. Jim Wayne of Louisville has filed a bill that would make it a crime for adults to “recklessly” store a gun without a trigger lock, a measure aimed at preventing children and teenagers from obtaining access to their parents’ guns.

People attend a vigil for the victims of a fatal shooting at Marshall County High School, Jan. 25, 2018, at Mike Miller County Park in Benton, Ky.

 (Associated Press)

The Associated Press contributed to this report. 

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Judge to rule Feb 6 on bid to scrap Assange arrest warrant

January 27, 2018 by  
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A British judge says she will rule next month on whether to scrap a U.K. arrest warrant for the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, a move that would free him to leave the Ecuadorean embassy after more than five years.

Assange’s lawyers went to court Friday to argue that the warrant serves no purpose because he is no longer wanted for questioning in Sweden over alleged sex offenses.

Assange has been holed up in Ecuador’s London embassy since he took refuge there in June 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden. Swedish prosecutors were investigating allegations of sexual assault and rape made by two women in 2010.

But prosecutors dropped the case last year, saying there was no prospect of bringing Assange to Sweden in the foreseeable future.

Assange still faces arrest if he leaves the embassy — for jumping bail in 2012.

Lawyer Mark Summers told Westminster Magistrates’ Court that the arrest warrant had “lost its purpose and its function.”

Assange’s attorney’s also said in court papers that five years in conditions “akin to imprisonment, without access to adequate medical care or sunlight” had left his mental and physical health “in serious peril.”

Judge Emma Arbuthnot said that evidence presented to the court said Assange’s health issues included “a terrible bad tooth, frozen shoulder and depression.”

British prosecutors are opposing the removal of the warrant, saying Assange shouldn’t be immune from the law simply because he has managed to evade justice for a long time.

The judge said she would deliver her ruling on Feb. 6.

If she rules in Assange’s favor he will be free to leave the embassy without being arrested on the British warrant.

But Assange suspects there is a secret U.S. indictment against him for WikiLeaks’ publication of leaked classified American documents, and that the U.S. authorities will seek his extradition.

Earlier this month Ecuador said it had granted the Australian-born hacker citizenship, as it tried to unblock the stalemate that has kept Assange as its houseguest for five-and-a-half years.

It also asked Britain to grant him diplomatic status. Britain refused, saying “the way to resolve this issue is for Julian Assange to leave the embassy to face justice.”

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