Bullet fragment found in neck of boy who went viral for saying his friend shielded him from school shootingNew Foto - Bullet fragment found in neck of boy who went viral for saying his friend shielded him from school shooting

Doctors discovered a bullet fragment in the neck of a 10-year-old boy who went viral for recounting how his friend jumped on top of him to shield him during a mass shooting at Annunciation Catholic Church in Minneapolis that killed two children and injured others. Weston Halsne, a fifth-grade student at Annunciation Catholic School, was attending Mass on Wednesday when the shooting occurred. He recounted running under a pew and covering his head while shots came through the stained-glass windows, and said his friend Victor was shot while shielding him. "I think I got, like, gunpowder on my neck," he said after the shooting. But doctors later discovered it was not just gunpowder that hit the 10-year-old's neck, but a bullet fragment as well. Weston's father, Grant Halsne, told NBC News that the fragment came close to — but didn't hit — the 10-year-old's carotid artery, which a doctor described the as a "miracle." "If it [the bullet fragment] went any further, he would've died," Grant Halsne said. The Halsne family is waiting to confirm when the surgery to remove the fragment will be scheduled, but hope it will be sometime early next week. The fragment is in a very sensitive area, but Weston is expected to make a full recovery, his father said. Grant Halsne said the shooting has left his son scared and not wanting to be alone. "He's scared of loud noises," the father said. "The kid to his left was killed." On Wednesday just before 8:30 a.m., 23-year-old Robin Westman fired a rifle through the side windows of Annunciation Catholic School's church, aiming at children sitting in the pews. Weston remembered thinking, "What is that?" when he heard the first gunshot. When he heard it again, he ran under the pew. The student had practiced what to do during an active shooter situation, but never at the church, he said. "I was like two seats away from the stained glass windows," Weston said. "So, they were like, the shots were like right next to me." Westman was found dead at the rear of the church with an apparent self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to search warrants. She was found dressed in black "tactical" gear and officials found approximately 120 shell casings from three different guns that she used, according to Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O'Hara. The investigation into the shooting is ongoing.

Bullet fragment found in neck of boy who went viral for saying his friend shielded him from school shooting

Bullet fragment found in neck of boy who went viral for saying his friend shielded him from school shooting Doctors discovered a bullet frag...
3 Dead, Over 100 Injured After Several Train Cars Flip and Derail — and a Cause of the Crash Remains UnknownNew Foto - 3 Dead, Over 100 Injured After Several Train Cars Flip and Derail — and a Cause of the Crash Remains Unknown

Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population Three people are dead and 103 are injured after a train accident on Saturday, Aug. 30 Some of the injured passengers are receiving "intensive care," according to health officials The cause of the accident, which saw two train cars overturn and seven derail, is under investigation Three people are dead and over a hundred more are injured following a train accident, in which at least two cars were completely overturned. The train was traveling from Marsa Matruh, a port city in northwestern Egypt, to Cairo on Saturday, Aug. 30, when the accident occurred, according to a statement the Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population (MOHP) shared onFacebook. Two train cars were overturned, while seven more were derailed. The accident resulted in the deaths of three people, the MOHP said in its initial post, which was originally penned in Arabic. The number of travelers injured in the accident, meanwhile, kept climbing. Thirty-seven ambulances were sent to the scene, according to the MOHP. Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population Hours after the accident, the government ministry reported in anotherFacebookupdate that the number of injured passengers had increased from 54 to 94. That number later climbed to 103, with three individuals receiving what MOHP spokesperson Dr. Hossam Abdel-Ghafar described inanother statementas "intensive care." According to Abdel-Ghafar, 87 of the injured travelers have already left the hospital after receiving medical care, and 16 more remain stable but under observation. Injuries varied from fractures to cuts and bruises, the spokesperson said. Several officials, including Health Minister Dr Khaled Abdul Ghaffar, visited the Hyena and Ras Al-Hakma hospitals, where the accident victims were transported, following the crash, officials said. The MOHP head also offered his condolences and prayers to the families of the victims. "Medical teams continue to assess the health status of patients, ensuring that all blood needs and derivatives are provided to provide the necessary medical care," the MOHP said in a statement translated from Arabic. Egyptian Ministry of Health and Population Never miss a story — sign up forPEOPLE's free daily newsletterto stay up-to-date on the best of what PEOPLE has to offer​​, from celebrity news to compelling human-interest stories. In the aftermath of the Aug. 30 accident, dozens of people surrounded the scene, and two cranes were positioned to lift one of the overturned train cars, as seen in photos shared by the MOHP and in footage obtained byExtra News. The cause of the crash is not yet known. The transport ministry and the Egyptian National Railways Authority are currently investigating, according to theBBC. Accidents such as this are not uncommon on Egypt's railway network, the British outlet reported, due in part to "poor maintenance and a lack of investment." Read the original article onPeople

3 Dead, Over 100 Injured After Several Train Cars Flip and Derail — and a Cause of the Crash Remains Unknown

3 Dead, Over 100 Injured After Several Train Cars Flip and Derail — and a Cause of the Crash Remains Unknown Egyptian Ministry of Health and...
Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.1 billion after no winning tickets SaturdayNew Foto - Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.1 billion after no winning tickets Saturday

ThePowerballjackpot has risen to an estimated $1.1 billion, the fifth-largest ever in the game's history, after there were no winning tickets for Saturday night's $1 billion grand prize. Saturday's winning numbers were 3, 18, 22, 27 and 33, with a Powerball of 17. Nine tickets matched all five white balls to win $1 million, but no ticket matched all six. Four of those tickets were sold in California, and one each was sold in Connecticut, Florida, Illinois, Massachusetts and Pennsylvania, according to Powerball. Lottery officials also said three tickets that matched all five white balls were sold with the game's "power play" option, which costs an extra $1 per ticket and doubles the value of any prizes. In the latest drawing, those tickets were worth $2 million each and sold to Powerball players in Colorado, Indiana and New Hampshire. The $1.1 billion jackpot for Monday night's drawing has an estimated cash value of $498.4 million. Based on the jackpot estimate, a single jackpot winner on Monday would have the choice of taking a lump sum payment of $498.4 million before taxes, or going with the annuity option, which would consist of one immediate payment followed by 29 annual payments that increase by 5% each year, each payment also before taxes. Saturday's drawing marked the sixth time in the game's 33-year history that the top prize has climbed to the billion-dollar mark. No one has won Powerball's jackpot since May 31, when a single ticketin Californiawon a $204.5 million jackpot with a cash value of $91.6 million. Four of the five previous billion-plus-jackpot-winning tickets were sold in California, including a single ticket sold in Altadena in 2022 that claimed a $2.04 billion jackpot, thelargest in both Powerball and lottery history. The next drawing, which takes place from the Florida Lottery live draw studio in Tallahassee, is on Monday at 11 p.m. ET. Tickets are $2 and are sold in 45 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands. The Long Island home renovation that uncovered a hidden story Passage: In memoriam Dr. Sanjay Gupta on the mysteries of chronic pain

Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.1 billion after no winning tickets Saturday

Powerball jackpot jumps to $1.1 billion after no winning tickets Saturday ThePowerballjackpot has risen to an estimated $1.1 billion, the fi...
Boy rescued by bystanders from Hersheypark elevated monorailNew Foto - Boy rescued by bystanders from Hersheypark elevated monorail

A young boy was rescued as he walked along an elevated monorail track at the Hersheypark theme park in Hershey, Pa., Saturday in a momentcaught on video. According to a statement from park officials, the boy was reported missing just after 5 p.m. ET Saturday after becoming separated from his parents. "While our team was actively searching, the child entered a secured area for the Monorail, which was not in operation," the park statement said, adding that the ride was closed and barricaded at the time. "The child remained at the closed station for about 20 minutes before briefly walking along the track," the park statement continued. "A guest quickly noticed and helped guide the child to safety." MORE: Death of 9-year-old girl at Hersheypark ruled accidental, no criminal activity found: Police The video, captured by a park attendee, shows the boy walking back and forth along the elevated monorail track. A bystander then climbs atop a nearby building and then onto the track, where he takes the boy into his arms and lowers him to safety with the assitance of another bystander. "Our team members immediately responded after he was spotted on the tracks, and at approximately 5:28 p.m. the child was safely reunited with his family. He was unharmed," the Hersheypark statement said. "We are grateful for the vigilance of our guests and the swift response of our team, and we remain committed to maintaining the highest levels of guest safety throughout Hersheypark," the park statement concluded. Just over one month ago, a 9-year-old girldrownedin the wave pool at Hersheypark in a death that was ultimately ruled accidental. A review by police concluded that the park upheld safety standards and that the number of people in the wave pool at the time was "significantly less than its designed maximum capacity," according to a Derry Township Police statement released on Aug. 1.

Boy rescued by bystanders from Hersheypark elevated monorail

Boy rescued by bystanders from Hersheypark elevated monorail A young boy was rescued as he walked along an elevated monorail track at the He...
After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on displayNew Foto - After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display

The weapon used to kill Black teenagerEmmett Tillin one of the most notorious lynchings that helped ignite the civil rights movement is nowon displayat a museum in the Deep South. Emmett was just 14 when he was kidnapped from his great-uncle's house by two White men who later admitted to beating and torturing the teen before shooting him in the head and throwing his body into the Tallahatchie River, weighed down by a 75-pound cotton gin fan. The .45-caliber pistol and worn saddle-brown holster, marked with the initials J.M., are part of an exhibit at the state's Two Mississippi Museums – the interconnected Museum of Mississippi History and Mississippi Civil Rights Museum – that aims to tell"the whole story"70 years after Emmett's murder. Emmett's murder in the Jim Crow South, and his mother's decision to hold a public open-casket funeral where thousands saw Emmett's mangled body, sparked global outrage and accelerated the civil rights movement in America. Writer Wright Thompson, who wrote an account of Emmett's death in his book "The Barn: The Secret History of a Murder in Mississippi," said inan article in The Atlantiche was tipped off about the gun and found it "sitting in a safe-deposit box" in a Mississippi bank. CNN reached out to Thompson for comment but did not immediately hear back. A spokesperson for the Mississippi Department of Archives and History confirmed Thompson's account of the events. The gun and its holster had been in the private ownership of a Mississippi family "that is not connected to the case," the state's Department of Archives and History said. TheFoundation for Mississippi Historynegotiated with the family and was able to acquire the weapon and holster under the condition that the family remain anonymous, Two Mississippi Museums Director Michael Morris said. "It wasn't until earlier this year that I fully understood that he (Emmettl) was shot," Morris said at a news conference about the artifacts on Thursday. "Most people know about the fact that he was brutally beaten and tortured, but it's important to know that he was shot as well, and so that gun being on display is going to help us tell that story." The weapon was authenticated through its serial number, which matches information from FBI records, according to Morris. The FBI and the Justice Department's Civil Rights Division closed their investigations into the infamous killing without filing federal charges, due to thestatute of limitationsand because they could not prove a key witnesslied to federal investigatorsabout her story. Deborah Watts, Emmett's cousin and the co-founder of theEmmett Till Legacy Foundation, said the family is "wrestling with an intellectual and spiritual conundrum" over the recovery and display of the gun. "The gun that was used in Emmett's heinous murder is in fact evidence in a case that, while closed, is one in which we still seek justice," Watts said in a statement to CNN. But in the absence of charges and with most people involved in the case now dead, the family said the exhibit honoring Emmett has special bearing. "We also understand the importance of the gun as an artifact for education so that current and future generations are able to reflect and grasp the importance in resisting erasure or the changing of historical facts," Watts said. TheChicago teenwas visiting family in Money, Mississippi, in thesummer of 1955when he had his fateful encounter withCarolyn Bryant Donham, who was 21 at the time. Accounts from that day differbut witnesses alleged Emmettwhistledat Bryant Donham after purchasing somebubble gumfrom the store she owned with her then-husband. Emmett wasfalsely accusedof flirting and making advances at Bryant Donham. Four days later, Bryant Donham's husband at the time, Roy Bryant, and his half-brother, J.W. Milam, rousted Emmett from his bed in the middle of the night, ordered him into the bed of a pickup and eventually beat him viciously before shooting him in the head. Both the gun and the holster originally belonged to Milam, who along with Bryant, admitted to the killing in a 1956 interview withLook Magazine, about four months after an all-White jurydeliberated for underan hour before acquitting the two, despiteeyewitnesses identifying the defendantsand the men confessing to kidnapping the teen. Morris said the Mississippi Department of Archives and History told Emmett's family that the artifacts would be on permanent display in a theater where a narrative film describes what happened "from the teen's entry into Bryant's Grocery & Meat Market to his murder." Rev. Wheeler Parker, whowitnessed his cousin Emmett's abduction, said displaying the murder weapon and holster is "good because it brings closure," according to theMississippi Department of Archives and History. "This weapon has affected me more so than any other artifact that I've encountered in my 30-year museum career," said Nan Prince, the director of collections for Mississippi's Department of Archives and History. "The emotions that are centered around it are hard. It's a hard thing to see and a hard thing to convey." To mark the 70th anniversary of Emmett's kidnapping and murder, the Emmett Till Interpretative Center this past week held a multi-daycommemoration programwhere national and civil rights leaders met to reflect on "the life and legacy of Emmett Till and advance the ongoing movement for racial justice." Commemorative events included a train ride from Chicago to Mississippi that echoed the one Emmett and his family took 70 years ago, "linking together sites that are important to the Emmett Till tragedy." The new exhibit comes as museums across the country face increased federal scrutiny, afterPresident Donald Trump allegedmuseums were too focused on highlighting negative aspects of American history, including "how bad slavery was." That announcement prompted the American Alliance of Museums, which represents 35,000 professionals in the sector, tospeak out against"growing threats of censorship against US museums." "These pressures can create a chilling effect across the entire museum sector," the group said. When asked about the current national debates about how to teach difficult history, Morris said his museum will continue doing public history work. "One of the reasons why the Civil Rights Museum was created is to tell the unvarnished truth about what happened in terms of the civil rights movement here in Mississippi, and that's our mission," he said. "And I think the acquisition of this artifact is a part of our mission, and so we're just going to continue doing public history work. And for us, you know, we're just doing our jobs." For more CNN news and newsletters create an account atCNN.com

After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display

After being hidden away from public view, the gun used to kill Emmett Till is now on display The weapon used to kill Black teenagerEmmett Ti...

 

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