Officials identify Dallas Ice facility shooter – report
The shooter who killed two detainees, and severely injured another, before taking his own life, has been identified as 29-year-old Joshua Jahn, according to NBC News – who cited several senior law enforcement officials.
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Minority leader Jeffries says that Republican short-term funding bill is an ‘immoral assault on health care’
Speaking to reporters today, House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries, said that Democrats “have drawn a line in the sand” when it comes to the Republican-written short term spending bill, that extends government funding until 21 November.
“This is an immoral assault on the health care of the American people,” Jeffries said. “The legislation that they put before the House, and now the Senate, in a take-it-or-leave-it fashion, is just a continuation of a dirty spending bill that we did not support in March.”
Democrats in both chambers remain resolute that any funding extension needs to include several healthcare provisions to mitigate, they say, the impact of the One Big Beautiful Bill Act – which Trump signed into law earlier this year.
“He [Trump] doesn’t want to discuss the Republican health care crisis,” Jeffries said of the president’s decision to cancel a scheduled meeting with himself and Senate minority leader Chuck Schumer. “They’re running scared. They have no defensible position, and that’s why, unfortunately, they’re marching us to a government shutdown.”
Minority leader Hakeem Jeffries speaks to reporters at the US Capitol. Photograph: Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty ImagesShare
One note about JD Vance’s speech: he did acknowledge that detainees at the Ice facility comprised the fatalities and casualties.
“Just because we don’t support illegal aliens, we don’t want them to be executed by violent assassins engaged in political violence, either. So we’re praying both for our Ice agents, but also for everybody who’s affected by this terrible attack,” the vice-president said.
Updated at 15.23 EDT
House Democratic leadership says political violence has reached ‘breaking point’ following Dallas Ice facility shooting
Top Democrats in the House have issued a statement following the killing of two detainees at the Ice field office in Dallas, Texas. Another detainee is in critical condition.
“Our prayers and deepest condolences are with the families of those killed,” said minority leader Hakeem Jeffries, whip Katherine Clark and caucus chair Pete Aguilar.
No one in America should be violently targeted, including our men and women in law enforcement who protect and serve our neighborhoods, and the immigrants who are too often the victims of dehumanizing rhetoric.”
They added that political violence in the US has reached “breaking point” this year. But said that the country needs “leaders who bring the country together in moments of crisis”.
Updated at 15.23 EDT
Vance blames Democrats for surge in political violence
Vice-president JD Vance has used his speech to take aim at Democratic lawmakers for political violence throughout the US.
“If you look at the political violence in our country over the last couple of months, the last couple of years, it is not a both sides problem. It is primarily on one side of the political aisle,” Vance said, baselessly. “If we are going to truly go after the political violence in this country, we need the Democratic leadership of Washington DC to look in the mirror.”
Vance added, following the killing of conservative activist Charlie Kirk, that lawmakers on the left need to start with “condemning the violence, instead of condemning something that Charlie Kirk said, that they disagreed with”. He went on to claim, without evidence, that there is “an entire network of left wing organizations that encourage, that promote, and that apologize for violence”.
ShareVance claims that ‘violent left-wing extremist’ was behind Ice facility shooting, despite no confirmation from law enforcement
While speaking in Concord, North Carolina today, vice-president JD Vance said that today’s shooting at a Dallas Ice facility was carried out by “a violent left-wing extremist” who was “politically motivated to go after law enforcement”.
While the FBI has said that authorities recovered shell casings with “anti-Ice messaging” near the shooter, officials say the investigation is ongoing. They have neither confirmed the motive behind today’s shooting, nor corroborated Vance’s claims about the shooter’s ideological background. The FBI is investigating the incident as an “act of targeted violence”.
Vance said there was some evidence “that we have that’s not yet public” before repeating his claim that the shooter was targeting “people who were enforcing our border”.
Law enforcement officials today said that no federal agents were wounded in today’s shooting, but two detainees were killed, and another is in critical condition. The shooter died from a self-inflicted gun wound, per DHS secretary Kristi Noem.
Updated at 15.23 EDT
Officials identify Dallas Ice facility shooter – report
The shooter who killed two detainees, and severely injured another, before taking his own life, has been identified as 29-year-old Joshua Jahn, according to NBC News – who cited several senior law enforcement officials.
The Department of Homeland Security (DHS) noted, in their statement on today’s shooting, that this isn’t the first time the Dallas field office was targeted this year.
In August, Bratton Dean Wilkinson, 36, arrived at facility’s entrance and claimed to have a bomb in his backpack. Officials said that Wilkinson showed the security officer what he claimed to be a “detonator” on his wrist.
A shelter-in-place was issued for the field office, and Dallas police responded with a bomb squad. Wilkinson was later charged with making terroristic threats, per DHS.
ShareOklahoma official says all high schools will have Turning Point chapters after Charlie Kirk killingRachel Leingang
The state superintendent in Oklahoma announced plans to put Turning Point USA chapters in every high school in the state, saying it would counter “radical leftist teachers’ unions” and their “woke indoctrination”.
After far-right activist Charlie Kirk was killed on a college campus earlier this month, requests to start chapters of his conservative youth group, Turning Point, at colleges and high schools have surged, the organization has said.
Oklahoma is the first state where the government is getting involved to promote starting these chapters. In a press release Tuesday, Ryan Walters, the Oklahoma superintendent, detailed how students could start a chapter of “Club America”, the organization’s high school program, by gathering at least three students from the same school and completing a charter agreement. Then, Turning Point will help the club get a teacher sponsor and official recognition, and send materials like an “activism kit”.
“We will be putting TPUSA on every high school campus in Oklahoma,” Walter said in the press release. “Charlie Kirk inspired a generation to love America, to speak boldly, and to never shy away from debate. Our kids must get involved and active. We will fight back against the liberal propaganda, pushed by the radical left, and the teachers unions. Our fight starts now.”
ShareFollowing the press conference, here’s what we know about the Dallas immigration facility shooting
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Two detainees have been killed, with another in critical condition, after a shooting at an Ice field office near downtown Dallas. Dallas police chief Daniel Comeaux says that the FBI is investigating the incident as an act of targeted violence. The shooter died from a “self-inflicted gun wound”, according to DHS secretary Kristi Noem.
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DHS say that no members of law enforcement were hurt in the attack. But Comeaux also said that officials would not releasing the identities of any victims at this time.
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DHS officials say this was “an attack on ICE law enforcement”. At both today’s press conference and in a statement, law enforcement said that shell casings found near the shooter had “anti-Ice” messaging on them.
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Earlier, Dallas police said that shots were fired “from an adjacent building”. DHS, later added that the shooter “fired indiscriminately” at the Ice facility, “including at a van in the sallyport where the victims were shot”.
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Despite the fact that no federal agents were wounded in the shooting, Governor Greg Abbott of Texas called the attack an “assassination”. For her part, Noem said that “these horrendous killings must serve as a wake-up call to the far-left that their rhetoric about ICE has consequences.”
Updated at 13.18 EDT
The 12-ft bronze statue depicting Donald Trump and Jeffrey Epstein holding hands and prancing together that was erected on the National Mall early on Tuesday has been taken down.
The statue appeared courtesy of a group of anonymous artists that goes by The Secret Handshake, who said they received a permit from the National Park Service that allowed the statue to stay up until 8pm on 28 September.
A member of the group told the Guardian that despite this, it was removed in the early hours of Wednesday. They do not know the statue’s whereabouts. “This is a literal example of the Trump administration toppling free speech when it has been legally permitted and approved,” they said.
A spokesperson for United States Park Police told the Washingtonian that the force assisted the National Park Service in removing the statue Wednesday at 5:30am, “due to it not being in compliance with the permit”.
Updated at 12.48 EDT