Atlanta police arrested a 14-year-old boy on a murder charge Sunday, one day after a 12-year-old was fatally shot inside a southeast Atlanta home where the two boys had been playing with guns in a bedroom. The victim was rushed to a hospital in critical condition Saturday afternoon but did not survive.
Homicide detectives obtained an arrest warrant Sunday for the juvenile suspect, who was taken into custody without incident and transported to the Metro Youth Detention Center, Fox News Digital reported. Police have not released the names of either boy.
Officers were dispatched to the residence around 1:49 p.m. ET Saturday after a report of a person shot. When they arrived, they found the 12-year-old suffering from a gunshot wound. Despite what police described as life-saving efforts, the boy died. Detectives began questioning the juvenile suspect and the adults who were inside the home at the time of the shooting.
Police told local WSB-TV 2 that the boys were playing with guns in a bedroom when the 12-year-old was shot. Authorities have not said publicly what led to the gunfire, and the investigation remains active and ongoing. Atlanta police cautioned that the information released so far is preliminary and could change.
The shooting did not happen in a vacuum. One neighbor, who asked not to be identified, told WSB-TV 2 that he had already called police after watching young boys engage in shootouts near his home earlier in the week.
"Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, around the same time, kids would come by my house, duck behind the church and just shoot. I was concerned for my safety."
That account paints a picture of a neighborhood where children had access to firearms and were firing them openly, days before one of those children ended up dead inside a home. Whether any of those earlier incidents involved the same boys or the same weapons remains unclear from the information police have released.
Longtime neighbor Michael Dennis told Fox 5 Atlanta that the area is ordinarily quiet. But his plea afterward spoke to the weight of what happened.
"This neighborhood is pretty peaceful most of the time. Every now and then we may hear something. I encourage [family: Stick together], love one another, hug one another. This is a space in life where everybody needs to just come together."
APD Capt. Germain Dearlove, speaking to Fox 5 Atlanta, directed his remarks squarely at the adults in the equation. His message was blunt: lock up your guns and supervise your children.
"For parents and guardians, check your home, make sure these weapons are secured. If they have friends over, don't let them close that door, check on them, do periodic updates."
Dearlove added that police need cooperation from homeowners and that the department's paramount concern is public safety for juveniles. He said detectives intend to build a complete picture of what happened.
"We're going to get the full story, and then we will make our full report on it."
Several basic questions remain unanswered. Police have not said how many firearms were recovered from the home, who owned them, or whether any adults face potential charges. The specific charge or charges listed in the arrest warrant beyond "murder" have not been disclosed, nor has the court that issued it.
The Atlanta case lands amid a broader national reckoning with violent incidents involving minors. In one recent Pennsylvania case, an 11-year-old was charged as an adult in the shooting death of his adoptive father, a reminder that the justice system is grappling with children accused of homicide at younger and younger ages.
The 14-year-old suspect in Atlanta now sits in a juvenile detention center. Georgia law allows prosecutors to seek transfer of certain juvenile cases to adult court depending on the charge and circumstances, though nothing in the public record so far indicates whether that path will be pursued here.
Across the country, similar cases have forced communities to confront hard questions about supervision, accountability, and consequences. A child in Los Angeles was arrested on a murder charge after a classmate died from injuries sustained at school, another case where the accused was barely old enough for middle school.
The common thread is not complicated. Children are committing acts of lethal violence, and the systems meant to prevent it, families, schools, law enforcement, courts, are failing to intervene before someone dies.
In Washington, D.C., officials have wrestled with the problem from a policy angle. The D.C. mayor pushed for a permanent youth curfew as youth crime surged, an acknowledgment that something structural has broken down in how cities protect both the public and the young people themselves.
Nationally, the toll from gun violence continues to climb. A separate AP/USA Today/Northeastern University database tracking identified dozens of mass killings in the United States in recent years, including cases where teenagers were taken into custody after multiple victims were found dead inside homes. The pattern is not slowing.
Captain Dearlove's appeal to parents and guardians carries a particular edge in this case. Adults were inside the southeast Atlanta home when the shooting occurred. Police said detectives were questioning them. Yet somehow, two boys ended up alone in a bedroom with at least one loaded firearm.
The question of adult responsibility looms over this investigation. When a 12-year-old is killed by a 14-year-old with a gun inside a home where grown-ups are present, the failure is not abstract. It is specific, immediate, and fatal.
Georgia, like many states, has laws addressing the negligent storage of firearms where minors can access them. Whether those statutes come into play here will depend on what detectives find as the investigation develops. The fact that a neighbor reported children firing guns openly in the area earlier the same week only sharpens the question of what the adults in this community knew, and what they did about it.
Holding the justice system accountable for how it handles cases involving child victims is a recurring challenge. In Florida, Governor DeSantis signed legislation and demanded judicial accountability after a child was killed following a judge's decision to release a convicted offender, a case that underscored how institutional failures can have irreversible consequences for the most vulnerable.
In Atlanta, the investigation is still in its early stages. Police have been careful to label everything released so far as preliminary. But the core facts are not in dispute: a 12-year-old boy is dead, a 14-year-old boy is in custody on a murder charge, and guns were in the hands of children inside a home where adults were present.
The arrest warrant is only the beginning of what promises to be a difficult legal process. Juvenile cases in Georgia carry their own procedural complexities, and the public may never learn the full details if the case remains in juvenile court.
For the neighborhood, the damage is already done. A child is dead. Another child's life is effectively over in any recognizable form. And the adults who were supposed to prevent exactly this outcome will have to answer for what happened on their watch, if not in a courtroom, then at least to their own consciences.
No policy paper or press conference brings a 12-year-old back. But the simplest intervention, a locked cabinet, a closed door checked by an adult, a phone call to police acted on before Saturday, might have.
The Supreme Court on Thursday shut down a former Democratic candidate's bid to force his way onto Ohio's Republican congressional primary ballot, ending a months-long dispute that state officials called a brazen scheme to infiltrate the GOP from within.
The Court denied an emergency application for injunction filed by Sam Ronan, a self-described progressive with a long Democratic pedigree who signed a declaration claiming Republican Party membership in order to appear on the May 5 primary ballot. Ohio Secretary of State Frank LaRose had removed Ronan from the ballot in March, and two lower courts declined to reverse that decision.
The one-line order, reported by Newsweek, was direct: "The application for injunction pending appeal presented to Justice Kavanaugh and by him referred to the Court is denied." With that, the lower court's ruling stands, and Ohio officials may keep Ronan off the Republican primary ballot as the May 5 election approaches.
The facts of the case read less like a garden-variety ballot-access dispute and more like a political sabotage operation caught in broad daylight. Attorneys representing LaRose, Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, Solicitor General Mathura J. Sridharan, and Deputy Solicitor General Layne H. Tieszen, laid out a damning paper trail in their filings to the Court.
They alleged Ronan had "spent over a decade on a mission" to get Democrats to "primary Republicans in deep red districts, as Republicans." And the evidence did not stop with Ronan himself. His own campaign manager, Ana Cordero, they said, "confirmed that even in the upcoming Midterm Elections, their intent was to 'torpedo the republican party from within.'"
That is not a characterization from political opponents. Those are words attributed directly to the people running the campaign.
Just the News reported that court documents filed in U.S. District Court showed Ronan publicly admitted his candidacy was part of a Democratic strategy to run members of his party against Republicans in GOP-leaning districts. Ronan had previously run as a Democratic state and national candidate before attempting to challenge Republican Rep. Mark Carey in Ohio's 15th Congressional District GOP primary.
The timeline tells the story of a state election apparatus that caught the problem and acted. On February 17, the Franklin County Board of Elections certified Ronan to Ohio's Republican primary ballot. By March 19, LaRose had removed him, citing Ohio's good-faith candidacy-declaration requirement.
LaRose's attorneys argued Ronan was removed for "lying on his candidacy form about his membership in the Republican Party and willingness to abide by the Party's principles." In filings described by the Washington Times, LaRose wrote that "Mr. Ronan's public statements, and those of individuals associated with him and his candidacy, make clear that Mr. Ronan is seeking the Republican nomination as part of his longstanding strategy to have Democrats run as Republicans in Republican primaries."
LaRose did not mince words about the endgame: "The goal of his scheme is to get voters to vote for Democrats, believing they are voting for Republicans."
The Supreme Court's recent term has seen a range of consequential rulings, including its decision to vacate the Steve Bannon contempt conviction, reflecting the Court's continued willingness to weigh in on politically charged cases.
Ronan did not go quietly after LaRose pulled him from the ballot. The day after the March 19 removal, a district court issued a temporary restraining order that briefly restored him. But that reprieve was short-lived. In April, the same district court entered an order denying further preliminary injunctive relief.
That meant Ronan had already been refused an injunction twice in lower courts before asking the Supreme Court to intervene. LaRose's attorneys drove that point home in their filing:
"Ronan asks this Court to circumvent any standards at all, much less the very high one for injunctions pending appeal, and to enter an interim injunction, fashioned as an administrative stay. Having been refused an injunction twice below, Ronan cannot ask for a stay to obtain what he wants, placement on the ballot. This Court should reject both overreaching requests."
Chief U.S. District Judge Sarah D. Morrison, who handled the case at the district level, wrote in her ruling that the First Amendment argument Ronan raised did not save him: "It cannot be the case that a State must allow a candidate on a partisan ballot even if he lied about his party affiliation simply because the First Amendment is implicated."
That is a line worth reading twice. A federal judge stated plainly that the Constitution does not give someone a right to lie their way onto a party's ballot.
Ronan's legal team, attorneys Mark R. Brown and Oliver Hall, tried to frame the case as one of political evolution, not deception. They called the matter "urgent" as the May 5 primary neared and argued Ronan had been honest about his background.
"Here, Ronan did not act in bad faith. He was honest. He made plain that though he was once a Democrat he is now seeking to transport across the aisle ideas that were not embraced by the Democratic Party. Ronan's campaign is a good faith attempt to win over Republican voters by advocating his values, values he believes Democrats have forsaken. That is not a 'strategic candidacy' or some kind of trick. It is not unlawful. It is not wrong."
They went further, arguing that party-switching is a time-honored American tradition:
"The historical record is replete with elected officials, candidates and voters changing political parties from one election to the next. The one constant in American politics is change. People evolve politically just like parties. America's political system fortunately facilitates these changes. Neither voters nor candidates historically have been forcibly fixed into their political positions."
The argument has a surface appeal. People do change parties. Ronald Reagan was once a Democrat. But the state's case was not about a genuine convert. It was about a candidate whose own team described the strategy as torpedoing the Republican Party from within, and who signed a legal declaration affirming Republican membership that state officials concluded was false.
The Court has faced no shortage of high-profile emergency requests in recent terms, as Justice Sotomayor herself has noted in complaints about the pace of emergency appeals. But in this case, the full Court moved quickly and without dissent to deny Ronan's bid.
The practical effect is straightforward: Ronan stays off the Republican primary ballot, and Ohio voters in the 15th Congressional District will not have to sort out whether a candidate who publicly strategized about infiltrating their party is genuinely one of them.
The broader principle matters more. States enforce good-faith candidacy declarations precisely to prevent this kind of manipulation. If a candidate can sign a sworn statement claiming party membership, get caught publicly plotting to subvert that party, and still demand ballot access under the First Amendment, then the declaration requirement is meaningless.
The New York Post reported that lower courts and Ohio officials concluded Ronan fraudulently misrepresented his party affiliation and that the First Amendment did not protect that conduct. The Supreme Court's refusal to disturb those findings sends a clear signal: states have a legitimate interest in policing the integrity of their primary elections.
The case also raises questions about how often similar schemes go undetected. Ronan's plan was exposed in part because he and his campaign manager said the quiet part out loud. Not every infiltration attempt comes with a public confession.
The Court continues to shape the legal landscape around elections and executive authority, with major cases still pending on issues from asylum protections at the border to other contested questions of federal power. This Ohio ruling may not generate the same headlines, but it reinforces a principle that should be uncontroversial: you don't get to lie your way onto a ballot.
Several open questions remain. The specific congressional district, Ohio's 15th, where Republican Rep. Mark Carey holds the seat, will now proceed to its May 5 primary without Ronan on the ballot. Whether Ronan pursues further legal action or attempts to run under a different banner is unclear. The full scope of whatever network was behind the "primary Republicans in deep red districts, as Republicans" strategy remains unexplored in the public record.
But the outcome here is the right one. Ohio officials identified a candidate who, by the state's account, lied about his party affiliation to gain access to a primary election. Two lower courts agreed. The Supreme Court declined to override them. The system worked.
When someone tells you they plan to torpedo your party from within, believe them, and keep them off the ballot.
The Department of Homeland Security on Friday ordered every furloughed employee back to work, ending a staffing standoff that left the nation's largest security agency short-handed for nearly two months while Congress failed to pass a funding bill. The recall notice told all sidelined workers to report on their next regularly scheduled workday, Monday for most, and pointed to a White House emergency order covering their lost pay.
The move came after President Trump signed an April 3 memo authorizing the equivalent compensation and benefits that DHS employees lost during the partial government shutdown. A Trump administration official separately confirmed the directive and said it orders that every DHS worker be paid, the New York Post reported.
DHS employs roughly 270,000 people. That workforce spans border agents, airport screeners, immigration officers, cybersecurity analysts, and disaster-response teams. Leaving any meaningful share of them idle, or working without pay, while illegal border crossings and homeland threats persist is the kind of governing failure that falls hardest on the public, not on the politicians who caused it.
A DHS spokesperson told the Federal News Network that DHS chief Markwayne Mullin "will be utilizing available funding to recall the entire DHS workforce" and that "paychecks are now being processed." The statement placed blame for the partial shutdown squarely on Democrats in Congress, though the spokesperson did not name specific lawmakers.
Trump himself framed the action as relief for families caught in the crossfire. AP News reported that the president said of DHS employees:
"Their families have suffered far too long."
The president had already used a similar executive maneuver earlier in the shutdown to restore pay for TSA employees after staffing shortages triggered airport delays. That precedent made Friday's broader recall a logical next step, and an implicit rebuke of Congress for letting the impasse drag on.
Lawmakers have yet to agree on a fiscal 2026 funding measure for DHS. The partial shutdown, now approaching the two-month mark, has persisted because neither chamber could reconcile competing priorities over immigration enforcement spending.
Republican leaders and Trump aligned around a two-step plan: fully fund most of DHS first, then address Immigration and Customs Enforcement and Border Patrol funding through separate legislation. Trump signaled confidence in the approach on social media, writing that "Republicans are UNIFIED, and moving forward on a plan that will reload funding for our FANTASTIC Border Patrol and Immigration Enforcement Officers." The strategy reflects a political reality, Democrats have resisted funding Trump's immigration crackdown, especially the expanded use of ICE agents.
That resistance has real consequences. While House Republicans have blocked Democratic attempts to curtail executive authority on multiple fronts, the DHS funding fight shows how the same obstructionist impulse can leave federal workers in limbo and border security understaffed.
For nearly two months, thousands of DHS employees either worked without pay or sat at home on furlough. These are not abstract budget-line items. They are customs officers, intelligence analysts, and Coast Guard personnel whose missed paychecks meant late rent, skipped bills, and mounting stress, all because elected officials could not do the most basic part of their job.
Trump has defended his broader approach to DHS by arguing that his actions aim to improve domestic security and curb illegal immigration. Critics, mainly Democrats and some rights groups, have pushed back, particularly on the administration's use of ICE in enforcement operations. Federal agents fatally shot two U.S. citizens earlier this year in Minnesota, an episode that drew scrutiny and fueled the political debate around immigration enforcement tactics.
But the shutdown itself was never about whether ICE should exist. It was about whether Congress would fund the department responsible for protecting the homeland. On that question, the legislative branch failed, and the executive branch stepped in.
The president has shown a willingness to act unilaterally when he believes the situation demands it. That pattern extends well beyond domestic policy. Trump recently suspended military operations and offered a ceasefire in the Iran conflict, demonstrating the same preference for decisive executive action over prolonged institutional stalemate.
The recall gets bodies back to their desks and paychecks into bank accounts. It does not, however, resolve the underlying funding dispute. Congress still has not passed a fiscal 2026 DHS appropriation. The two-step Republican plan remains a work in progress, and Democrats show little sign of dropping their objections to robust immigration enforcement funding.
Open questions remain. What "available funding" DHS is tapping to pay 270,000 recalled workers is unclear. Whether that funding can sustain full operations for weeks or months without a congressional appropriation is equally uncertain. And the political dynamics that produced a two-month partial shutdown have not changed just because the president signed an emergency order.
Trump's willingness to confront institutional resistance head-on has drawn both praise and criticism throughout his presidency. His blunt assessments of foreign adversaries and his domestic policy moves share a common thread: impatience with delay and a belief that executive authority exists to be used.
In this case, that impatience served the 270,000 men and women who keep the country's borders, airports, and coastlines secure. They did not create the funding impasse. They should not have been the ones paying for it.
Democrats who blocked DHS funding to protest immigration enforcement made a political choice. The people who bore the cost of that choice were not politicians. They were federal employees and the communities that depend on them, the same people Washington always claims to champion and always leaves holding the bill.
When Congress won't govern, someone has to. This time, the president did.
House Democrats showed up to a pro forma session Thursday and tried to force through a resolution limiting President Trump's authority to conduct military operations against Iran. They failed. Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.), presiding as speaker pro tempore, gaveled the brief session closed without recognizing the Democrat who sought the floor, and that was that.
The move lasted minutes. The political theater around it will last longer.
Rep. Glenn Ivey (D-Md.) attempted to win recognition on the House floor to pass a war-powers resolution from Rep. Gregory Meeks (D-N.Y.), the ranking member of the House Foreign Affairs Committee. The measure would have limited Trump's ability to conduct military operations in Iran. Ivey tried to advance it by unanimous consent, a procedural route that requires no objection. Smith simply ended the session before that could happen, as The Hill reported.
Several Democrats present on the floor yelled in objection. Reps. Don Beyer (Va.), Sara Jacobs (Calif.), Mary Gay Scanlon (Pa.), Madeleine Dean (Pa.), James Walkinshaw (Va.), and Suhas Subramanyam (Va.) were among those who protested the gavel.
Pro forma sessions are perfunctory by design. They last mere minutes. Congress was not in full session, and the maneuver had no realistic chance of succeeding. Democrats knew that. They came anyway, and then marched to the House steps to hold a news conference.
The timing tells you everything. On Tuesday, President Trump announced a ceasefire deal. The same day, he posted on Truth Social warning that Iran's "whole civilization" could face elimination if it did not reopen the Strait of Hormuz. Democrats seized on the post as the predicate for their push.
Rep. Jacobs spoke to reporters after the session and framed the effort in the most dramatic terms available. She said Republicans should demand both impeachment and invocation of the 25th Amendment:
"Our Republican colleagues know, they know that threatening genocide is not acceptable. I urge them to come back. And all options should be on the table. They should come back. They should realize that their president is putting us in harm's way, is making us less safe. And they should also be demanding impeachment. They should also be demanding the 25th Amendment. They should be here with us on behalf of the American people."
Set aside the overheated rhetoric for a moment. A ceasefire was announced the same day as the social-media post Democrats are citing. The resolution Democrats tried to pass would restrict the president's war powers at the very moment diplomacy produced a result. That sequence matters, even if Democrats prefer to ignore it.
More than 70 Democrats in both chambers have now called for Trump's removal through impeachment or the 25th Amendment. Rep. Dean acknowledged the obvious problem with that strategy on the House steps Thursday.
"As you all know, we are in the minority, so bringing forward impeachment right now, while he is guilty of a litany of high crimes and misdemeanors, I don't think it is a best use of our time. Let us get into the majority."
Read that again. Dean declared the president "guilty", her word, and then admitted her party lacks the votes to do anything about it. The candor is useful. It confirms what the exercise really was: a messaging operation aimed at midterm voters, not a serious legislative effort.
Dean also asked reporters: "How much farther into the dark corners of this president's mind must we go before leaders stand up?" It is the kind of line designed for a cable-news clip, not a floor debate.
Democrats have struggled with internal divisions over leadership and strategy for months. Impeachment talk from the minority is cheap. It costs nothing, commits nothing, and changes nothing, except the subject.
This was not the first time Democrats pushed a war-powers resolution on Iran. The House defeated a similar measure in early March. That resolution would have forced Trump to terminate military operations against Iran until the administration obtained congressional approval.
The March vote revealed fractures on both sides. Two Republicans supported the measure. Four Democrats opposed it. Since then, three of those four opposing Democrats have expressed openness to supporting the resolution if it comes up again.
House Democrats are expected to force another vote on the matter. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer said Wednesday that the Senate will also vote again on a resolution to limit Trump's war powers. Congressional Democrats in both chambers plan to focus their criticism of Trump's management of the Iran conflict next week.
The narrow GOP majority in the House makes every vote count. Recent shifts in the chamber's composition mean Republican leadership cannot afford many defections on any high-profile measure.
Thursday's gambit fits a broader pattern. Democrats have repeatedly used procedural flashpoints to generate confrontation and media attention, even when the underlying votes are not there. The strategy is familiar: show up, get gaveled down, walk outside, hold a press conference, and let the clips circulate.
Rep. Walkinshaw captured the intended tone in a single line: "End the war. Let us vote." Rep. Ivey added: "The Congress needs to consider this. The time has come."
These are slogans, not arguments. The ceasefire announced Tuesday is either real or it isn't. If it holds, the urgency Democrats claim evaporates. If it doesn't, Congress will have ample opportunity to weigh in. Either way, a pro forma session stunt was never going to change the trajectory of American foreign policy.
The broader dynamic mirrors what Americans have seen in other recent standoffs. Schumer's Senate Democrats have clashed with House Republicans repeatedly over funding and oversight, often choosing confrontation over compromise. The Iran war-powers push is the foreign-policy version of the same playbook.
Rep. Emily Randall (D-Wash.) was also present at the news conference, though no remarks from her were reported. The presence of multiple members from Virginia, Pennsylvania, California, and other states suggests a coordinated effort to project geographic breadth.
Jacobs and others invoked the 25th Amendment, the constitutional provision allowing the vice president and a majority of the Cabinet to declare a president "unable to discharge the powers and the duties of his office" and transfer authority to the vice president as acting president. The suggestion that Trump's social-media rhetoric warrants removal from office under that standard is a stretch by any honest reading of the text.
The 25th Amendment was designed for incapacity, physical or mental inability to serve, not for policy disagreements or provocative public statements. Using it as a political weapon cheapens the constitutional framework Democrats claim to be defending.
When Democrats have stalled on funding critical government operations, they rarely frame their own obstruction as a constitutional crisis. The standard shifts depending on who holds the gavel.
Democrats say they will keep pushing. Schumer has promised a Senate vote. House Democrats are expected to force another floor vote when Congress returns to full session. The three Democrats who flipped from opposing the March resolution to expressing openness to supporting it could narrow the margin.
But the math still favors Republicans. And the political landscape has shifted since early March. A ceasefire is in place. The president's negotiating posture, however blunt, produced a tangible diplomatic outcome. Democrats now face the awkward task of arguing the president's approach is reckless at the same moment it appears to have worked.
The broader pattern of Democratic confrontation and delay on everything from DHS funding to foreign policy has not translated into legislative wins. It has produced press conferences, cable hits, and social-media clips. What it has not produced is results.
When your party's own members admit they can't pass what they're proposing, the exercise isn't governance. It's audition tape.
A New York City mental health nurse lost her job after she recorded herself berating a group of Israeli men in Times Square, calling them "baby-killers" and "terrorists" in a confrontation that ended only when a street performer dressed as Spider-Man stepped in and told her to stop.
Jennifer Koonings, who worked at Manhattan-based Inspire Mental Health Services, shared multiple videos of the encounter on Instagram over the weekend, the New York Post reported. The footage quickly went viral, drawing widespread calls for her termination. By Wednesday, her biography had been scrubbed from Inspire Mental Health Services' website, and Koonings herself bragged on Instagram that she had been fired.
She did not sound particularly sorry about it.
In the clips, Koonings confronted a group of Israeli men at the packed tourist hotspot. After asking where they were from and learning they were Israeli, she launched into a tirade. In one video, she shouted directly at them:
"You guys killed babies in Palestine... Slaughtered babies."
A second clip captured her escalating further, telling the men to their faces:
"We don't want you here, terrorists."
She also referred to the group as "baby-killers" and, in a moment captured on camera, declared: "They're f---ing Israelis." Several other women joined in shouting alongside her, though their identities have not been reported. The Israeli men, for their part, remained calm and did not visibly react to the barrage. One of them responded simply: "Oh, you don't like us now?"
The confrontation only stopped when a panhandler dressed as Spider-Man, a fixture of the Times Square performer scene, intervened. The costumed figure urged Koonings to back off and called for calm.
"You don't need to harass people. You don't know anything about them."
That a stranger in a Spider-Man suit showed more restraint and decency than a licensed mental health professional tells you something about the state of things.
Koonings, who had roughly 141,000 Instagram followers at the time, did not delete the videos or walk back her statements. Instead, she later posted on Instagram that she had been terminated from Inspire Mental Health Services, and appeared to treat the firing as a badge of honor rather than a consequence.
The Post reached out to Inspire Mental Health Services but did not hear back immediately. The facility has not publicly confirmed the termination on its own. What is confirmed is that Koonings' name no longer appears on the company's website as of Wednesday.
It remains unclear what sparked the outburst. The Post noted that investigators and reporters have not identified a triggering event, Koonings apparently walked up to a group of tourists in one of the most crowded intersections on earth and decided to unload on them for being Israeli.
The incident lands in a city already grappling with a surge in antisemitic harassment. New York has seen a steady drumbeat of public confrontations targeting Jewish and Israeli individuals since the outbreak of the Israel-Hamas war, and the Koonings episode fits a pattern that should concern anyone paying attention: ordinary professionals, not fringe activists, carrying out open hostility toward Jews in public spaces, filming it, and posting it for applause.
That Koonings worked in mental health care makes the episode particularly troubling. A nurse entrusted with the psychological well-being of patients demonstrated, on camera, the kind of unhinged hostility that would alarm any employer, and any patient. The fact that she bragged about her termination suggests she views her conduct as righteous rather than reckless.
The broader pattern of anti-Israel hostility spilling into public spaces, from Senate hearing rooms to city sidewalks, has become impossible to ignore.
Koonings lost her job. That much is clear. But the open questions are worth noting. Did Inspire Mental Health Services fire her, or did she resign and spin it? The company has not spoken publicly. No arrest has been reported. No charges have been filed. The Israeli men who endured the tirade have not been publicly identified.
In other words, Koonings faced professional consequences, but whether she faces legal accountability for what many would consider targeted ethnic harassment in a public space remains an open question.
New York's political leadership has spent years talking about hate crimes and bias incidents. When the perpetrator is a progressive-coded activist targeting Israelis on camera, the silence from city officials is telling. Compare that to the swift institutional response when public figures face removal for far less inflammatory conduct.
The episode also raises a question about social media incentives. Koonings didn't stumble into this confrontation and get caught. She filmed it herself. She posted it herself. She had 141,000 followers watching. The performance was the point, and the applause she expected from her audience mattered more to her than the dignity of the people she was screaming at.
That calculation, harassment as content, bigotry as brand, is not unique to Koonings. It has become a recurring feature of left-wing protest culture, where public confrontation is filmed, posted, and monetized in a cycle that rewards escalation.
The most striking detail in the entire episode may be the simplest one. A costumed street performer, someone who makes a living posing for tourist photos in Times Square, saw what was happening and told Koonings to stop. He didn't film it for clout. He didn't join in. He told her she didn't need to harass people and that she didn't know anything about them.
No bystander intervention training. No institutional protocol. Just a man in a Spider-Man suit with more common decency than a licensed nurse with a six-figure Instagram following.
The collapse of basic civic norms, the expectation that you don't scream ethnic slurs at strangers on a public sidewalk, is not a policy failure. It's a cultural one. And it flourishes in cities where leaders treat antisemitism as a second-tier concern, where political consequences fall unevenly depending on who the target is and who is doing the targeting.
Koonings got fired. She seems fine with it. The Israeli tourists who came to see Times Square got screamed at by a stranger and called terrorists for the crime of existing. Nobody in city government has said a word.
When a guy in a Spider-Man costume is the last line of defense against open bigotry in the middle of Manhattan, the adults in charge have already failed.
President Donald Trump announced Tuesday that the United States would halt its planned bombing campaign against Iran for two weeks, pulling back from a strike deadline of 8 p.m. eastern time after last-minute conversations with Pakistani leaders produced a fragile ceasefire framework. The pause hinges on a single, concrete demand: Iran must agree to the complete, immediate, and safe opening of the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump disclosed the decision in a Truth Social post, calling the arrangement a "double sided CEASEFIRE" and saying the administration had received a 10-point proposal from Iranian officials that he described as "a workable basis on which to negotiate." Israel, Fox News reported, has also agreed to suspend its own bombing campaign in Iran as part of the deal.
The announcement marks a dramatic shift from a posture that, just hours earlier, had the U.S. military poised to deliver what Trump himself described as "the destructive force being sent tonight to Iran." That language, and the abruptness of the reversal, underscores how close the two nations came to a far larger escalation before Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif and Field Marshal Asim Munir intervened.
In his Truth Social post, Trump framed the pause not as a concession but as a position of strength. He wrote:
"The reason for doing so is that we have already met and exceeded all Military objectives, and are very far along with a definitive Agreement concerning Longterm PEACE with Iran, and PEACE in the Middle East."
He added that "almost all of the various points of past contention have been agreed to between the United States and Iran," and that the two-week window would allow the agreement to be "finalized and consummated." The president's framing was unambiguous: this was a pause from a position of dominance, not retreat.
Trump has never been shy about his view of Tehran's leadership. He has previously called Iran's regime serial deceivers who have misled American presidents for decades. That history makes the two-week clock all the more significant. If Iran stalls, the president has left himself a clear on-ramp back to military action.
Iran's Supreme National Security Council issued its own statement, thanking Sharif and Munir for what it called their "tireless efforts" to end the war in the region. The council said it would cease defensive operations, but only if attacks against Iran are halted first.
On the Strait of Hormuz, Iran's language was notably cautious. The council said safe passage through the strait "will be possible via coordination with Iran's Armed Forces" and with "due consideration of technical limitations." What those technical limitations are, exactly, the statement did not say.
That caveat matters. The Strait of Hormuz is the world's most important oil chokepoint. Any ambiguity about what "coordination" and "technical limitations" mean in practice could give Tehran room to slow-walk compliance while claiming good faith. The two-week window will test whether Iran's words translate into open shipping lanes, or into diplomatic stalling.
The most striking diplomatic wrinkle is Pakistan's emergence as the broker. Trump cited conversations with both Sharif and Munir as the basis for his decision to delay the strike. Sharif, in a public statement, said the ceasefire would apply "everywhere," including Lebanon, effective immediately.
Sharif went further, inviting both delegations to Islamabad on Friday, April 10, 2026, for what he called further negotiations toward "a conclusive agreement to settle all disputes." His tone was effusive:
"Both parties have displayed remarkable wisdom and understanding and have remained constructively engaged in furthering the cause of peace and stability. We earnestly hope, that the 'Islamabad Talks' succeed in achieving sustainable peace and wish to share more good news in coming days!"
Whether those talks actually happen remains an open question. White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt told Fox News that "there are discussions about in person talks, but nothing is final until announced by the President or the White House." That careful hedge suggests the administration is not yet ready to commit to a specific venue or format, even as Sharif publicly sets a date.
The gap between Islamabad's enthusiasm and Washington's caution is worth watching. Pakistan has its own interests in positioning itself as a regional peacemaker, and Sharif's eagerness to host could outpace what the White House is prepared to deliver. Meanwhile, political reactions at home have already begun. Kamala Harris notably skipped Trump's earlier Iran address, opting instead for a prerecorded video, a choice that drew sharp criticism and raised questions about whether Democratic leaders are prepared to engage seriously with the administration's Middle East strategy.
Trump's stated condition is straightforward: the complete, immediate, and safe opening of the Strait of Hormuz. Iran's response accepts the general idea but wraps it in qualifications. The distance between "complete and immediate" and "via coordination with due consideration of technical limitations" is the distance between a deal and a delay tactic.
The 10-point proposal Iran reportedly submitted to the administration has not been made public. Trump said officials "believe it is a workable basis on which to negotiate," but neither the White House nor Fox News disclosed the substance of those ten points. Without knowing what Iran has actually offered, it is impossible to judge how close the two sides truly are.
Several other questions remain unanswered. What specific military objectives did the U.S. meet and exceed before the ceasefire? What are the exact terms of Israel's agreement to suspend its own bombing campaign? And what enforcement mechanism exists if Iran fails to open the strait as promised?
These are not trivial gaps. The broader foreign policy landscape has already tested alliances in ways that make the stakes of any Middle East deal even higher. Recent clashes over NATO's future have shown that even within the Republican coalition, there are sharp disagreements about how far the U.S. should go in reshaping its global commitments. A deal with Iran that holds would strengthen Trump's hand considerably. A deal that collapses would hand his critics fresh ammunition.
The two-week ceasefire window is, by design, short. Trump has structured it so that the pressure stays on Tehran. If Iran opens the strait, allows verifiable passage, and shows up in Islamabad ready to finalize terms, the president can claim a historic diplomatic achievement. If Iran hedges, delays, or exploits the "technical limitations" language to restrict shipping, Trump has already laid the rhetorical groundwork to resume strikes.
Trump closed his Truth Social post with a note of ceremony, writing:
"On behalf of the United States of America, as President, and also representing the Countries of the Middle East, it is an Honor to have this Longterm problem close to resolution."
That is a bold claim. Iran has been a destabilizing force in the Middle East for decades, and no American president, from either party, has managed to produce a durable agreement that changes Tehran's behavior. Trump's willingness to bring the country to the brink of a full-scale bombing campaign and then pivot to diplomacy is either a masterstroke of leverage or a gamble that Iran will exploit. The next two weeks will tell.
The security environment around these decisions is itself a reminder of the pressure this president operates under. Just recently, the Secret Service investigated gunfire near the White House while Trump was inside, a stark illustration that the commander-in-chief faces risks at home even as he manages a potential war abroad.
Diplomacy built on deadlines only works if the deadline means something. Iran has spent decades running out the clock on American presidents. This one has two weeks to prove he's different.
Amanda Lynn Tully, 37, hasn't made a single repayment on her $65,000 in federal student loans in seven years. Not because she lost her job. Not because she faced a medical crisis. Not because some catastrophe wiped out her savings. She moved to Prague.
Tully, who holds a master's degree in historic preservation and a bachelor's in art history from the University of Oregon, relocated to the Czech capital just months after graduating in 2017. She couldn't find a job with her credentials, so she left the country and the debt behind.
Her repayment was just $60 a month.
The New York Times profiled Tully's situation, and the reaction was swift and merciless. Tully told the Times she had been on an income-based repayment plan, which would have allowed her to have the remaining debt forgiven after 20 years of making qualifying payments. Instead of making those payments, she stopped entirely.
"I was never financially stable because I was never taught to be financially stable."
That was Tully's explanation. She also complained that even the $60-a-month payment was "psychologically burdensome," according to the Times. The payments, she said, weren't covering the interest.
"The payments weren't even paying off the interest, so it was frustrating."
So she chose a different path: flee the country, stop paying, and hope the problem resolves itself. She has been working in Prague as an "E-learning content developer" for various companies since 2019 and currently describes herself as "open to work" on her LinkedIn profile. She did not respond to requests for comment.
Social media users on X shredded the Times piece and its subject with the kind of precision that only genuine public frustration produces. One user put it plainly:
"This is just Whole Foods shoplifting. They fancy it a better kind of theft bc they're educated elites and their reasons for doing it are more therapized than the average thief."
Another cut deeper:
"But if you move to another country to escape a $60 a month payment, you're a loser and a whiny b—h."
The Times itself took collateral damage for choosing Tully as a sympathetic figure. One user noted the paper's habit of selecting protagonists who generate the opposite of the intended response:
"The NYT has an uncanny ability to illustrate a 'hardship' story with people who are so unsympathetic that I end up actively rooting against them."
Another user noticed that Tully appeared to be wearing designer headphones in her photoshoot for the Times, prompting the observation: "She couldn't afford $60 a month but could afford Beats by Dre."
Perhaps the most telling response came from a user who captured the political effect perfectly:
"I was already opposed to student loan forgiveness and now I'm radicalized all over again."
Tully is not an outlier. She is a mascot. Recently released figures from the Education Department show that almost 8 million of the 40 million borrowers with federal student debt have defaulted on their loans. That's one in five. The scale of the problem is enormous, and it raises a question the student loan forgiveness movement would rather not answer: how many of those defaults look like Amanda Tully's?
The standard progressive framing presents student debt as an unbearable structural burden imposed on helpless young people by a predatory system. And for some borrowers, that framing contains a kernel of truth. But Tully's case exposes what the movement actually protects in practice: people who borrowed money for degrees of questionable market value, declined to make even minimal payments, and now expect the public to absorb the cost.
A master's in historic preservation is a fine thing to study if you understand what you're buying. It is not a vocational credential. It does not command a salary that justifies $65,000 in debt. Tully apparently discovered this after graduation, which means either she didn't research her field's earning potential before borrowing, or she did and borrowed anyway. Neither version supports the narrative that she was victimized.
The income-based repayment plan Tully was enrolled in already represented a significant concession by taxpayers. It capped her payments at $60 a month and promised full forgiveness after 20 years. The system bent over backward to accommodate her. She walked away from even that.
This is the part of the student loan debate that never gets honest airtime. Forgiveness advocates talk about crushing debt, unaffordable payments, and a generation locked out of homeownership. Those problems are real for some people. But the poster children the media selects keep turning out to be people who borrowed for unmarketable degrees, made no effort to repay what they owed, and treat the obligation itself as an injustice.
The progressive position requires you to believe two contradictory things at once: that these borrowers are sophisticated enough to deserve advanced degrees but too helpless to understand a loan agreement. That they are capable adults who should be trusted with the franchise, a mortgage, and a career, but not with the consequences of their own financial choices.
Tully told the Times she was never taught to be financially stable. She has a master's degree. At some point, the expectation that other people will teach you basic adult responsibility expires. For most Americans, that point arrives long before age 37.
There is something almost poetic about the specifics. Not a border town. Not a developing country where the cost of living might genuinely prevent someone from scraping together $60. Prague. A European capital with craft beer, Instagram-worthy architecture, and a thriving expat scene. The decision wasn't survival. It was a lifestyle.
Almost 8 million borrowers are in default. Taxpayers are on the hook. And somewhere in the Czech Republic, a woman with a master's degree in historic preservation is open to work, hasn't paid a dime in seven years, and wants you to know that $60 a month was just too psychologically burdensome to bear.
A 57-year-old man drove his car into a crowd of parade-goers during a Lao New Year Festival celebration in Iberia Parish, Louisiana, on Saturday afternoon, striking multiple pedestrians and sending victims to area hospitals with injuries that officials described as critical.
Todd Landry was arrested and booked into the Iberia Parish jail after Louisiana State Police troopers determined he was impaired. His breath sample registered a blood alcohol concentration of 0.137g%, well above Louisiana's legal limit. He now faces charges of Driving While Impaired (first offense), First-Degree Negligent Injuring on 18 counts, Careless Operation, and Open Container.
Eighteen counts. That means at least 18 people were struck by a man who allegedly got behind the wheel drunk, in broad daylight, and aimed his vehicle into a festive crowd.
The parade was underway near Savannaket Street and Melancon Road in Broussard when Landry's vehicle approached. A young man who witnessed the crash described the moments before impact, according to Breitbart:
"I just simply thought that he was coming to join the parade because the car was kind of nice. He inched closer and closer, revs his engine again, and just plows through everybody. In that moment, my brain just stopped. I just thought, 'Is this actually happening?'"
That account is harrowing. A community gathered to celebrate a cultural tradition, families lining a parade route on a Saturday afternoon, and a man with a BAC nearly twice the legal limit drove straight into them.
The Iberia Parish Sheriff's Office is leading the investigation into the crash and has moved quickly to address public concern about the motive. In a social media post, the office stated that "based on the preliminary investigation, this does not appear to be an intentional act." The investigation remains active, and officials said further information would be released as it becomes available.
Louisiana State Police confirmed the details in a news release, noting that Landry "showed signs of impairment" during the investigation and that troopers ultimately processed the arrest. LSP also asked anyone with photos or videos of the crash to share them with officials.
The distinction between intentional and negligent matters legally, but it offers cold comfort to the families now sitting in hospital waiting rooms. A man too drunk to operate a vehicle killed no one's intention but destroyed an afternoon, and possibly lives, all the same.
The Louisiana Lao New Year Festival released a statement expressing grief over the incident:
"We are profoundly saddened by the news of the incident near the festival grounds."
The organization canceled its music programs Saturday evening. It indicated that if security resources were restored, it would reopen Sunday for religious services only, with vendors remaining open. The festival's cautious, measured response reflects a community trying to hold something together after a senseless act tore through it.
These are the kinds of events that bind communities. Families attend. Children watch parades. Elders gather. The Lao New Year celebration is a cultural and religious tradition, and 18 people paid the price for one man's decision to drink and drive.
There is no policy debate here. No partisan angle to spin. Drunk driving is one of the clearest moral failures a person can commit: a conscious choice to endanger everyone around you. Todd Landry allegedly made that choice on a Saturday afternoon in a parish full of families.
The charges he faces, 18 counts of First-Degree Negligent Injuring among them, suggest the scope of damage was enormous. Some of those struck had critical injuries. The full toll remains unknown as the investigation continues.
Conservatives have long argued that the foundation of a functioning society is personal responsibility. Not government programs. Not awareness campaigns. The individual decision to do the right thing, or the catastrophic consequences when someone refuses. This is what refusal looks like: 18 people on the ground, a festival silenced, and a community asking how a celebration turned into a crime scene.
Landry is charged with DWI as a first offense. Whether that means he has never driven impaired before or simply never been caught before is a question worth asking. The justice system will determine what comes next. But the people of Iberia Parish already know what happened: a man chose a bottle over basic human decency, and 18 of their neighbors are paying for it.
HuffPost published a report claiming the Pentagon "invited more than 3,500 employees to attend a Good Friday service at its in-house chapel," but that "it's only for Protestants, not Catholics." The outlet's senior politics reporter, Jennifer Bendery, cited a memo from Air Force leadership that read: "Just a friendly reminder: There will be a Protestant Service (No Catholic Mass) for Good Friday today at the Pentagon Chapel."
The implication was clear. The Pentagon, under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, had deliberately excluded Catholics from worship on one of the holiest days of the Christian calendar. Bendery wrote that Hegseth, whom she called "a far-right evangelical Christian, has tried to infuse his religious views into Pentagon activities.
There was just one problem. Catholics don't celebrate Mass on Good Friday. They never have.
The correction came swiftly, and from every direction. Washington Examiner reporter Salena Zito addressed Bendery directly:
"Catholic here ... we do not celebrate Mass on Good Friday. It is the only day of the year without a Mass, as the church commemorates Jesus' death."
National Review senior editor Charles C.W. Cook was less patient:
"Yes. It says that there is no Catholic Mass on Good Friday because Catholics do not do Catholic Mass on Good Friday. Is there literally nobody you could have asked? Not one person? Not even Google?"
"Fox & Friends Weekend" co-host Rachel Campos-Duffy offered a more detailed explanation of what actually happens in Catholic churches on Good Friday. Catholics hold a service, not a Mass, because there is no consecration of the Eucharist on that day. Communion is distributed using hosts consecrated the day before, on Holy Thursday. Worshippers read the Gospel of the Passion of Christ and venerate the cross, as Fox News reports.
Hot Air managing editor Ed Morrissey made the same point, noting that what HuffPost framed as exclusion was simply a matter of terminology:
"FYI: Catholics do not have Mass on Good Friday. It's a service, as there is no transubstantiation. Where communion is offered, it's with previously consecrated hosts. This sounds like a misunderstanding of terms by the sources or the reporters."
"Misunderstanding" may be generous.
A Department of War official told Fox News Digital that Catholic Masses are held on a daily basis at the Pentagon and that religious services are open to all Pentagon employees. In other words, the Pentagon wasn't excluding Catholics from anything. The memo simply noted that the Good Friday service would be Protestant in form, which is exactly what you'd expect when the Catholic Church itself does not hold Mass on that day.
The phrase "No Catholic Mass" wasn't a prohibition. It was a description.
But HuffPost ran with it anyway, constructing an entire narrative around the idea that Hegseth was weaponizing religion inside the Defense Department. The framing required its audience to know nothing about Catholic liturgical practice, and apparently required the same of its reporters and editors.
Conservative radio host Erick Erickson pointed to a pattern:
"This person continues to write about Christianity and keeps proving to be completely ignorant of Christianity. Catholics do not celebrate Mass on Good Friday."
Townhall editor Larry O'Connor widened the lens beyond Bendery herself:
"Anybody here surprised that Jennifer doesn't have a good working understanding of Catholicism? Me neither. But, It IS extraordinary that not one person in the editorial chain has even the slightest knowledge of Catholics."
That's the real indictment. This wasn't a tweet fired off in haste. It was a published report from a senior politics reporter at a national outlet, presumably reviewed by at least one editor. Not a single person in that chain caught the error or bothered to check. A ten-second search would have killed the story before it was written.
RedState writer Bonchie cut to the political motive:
"Catholics do not do Mass on Good Friday. It would be offensive to them to try to hold one. Just incredible how hard the left is trying to cause divisions that don't actually exist."
What followed was arguably worse than the original mistake. Daily Wire reporter Megan Basham noted that despite being corrected by thousands of Catholics online, Bendery refused to acknowledge the error:
"What's wild about the hubris of journalists like this lady at @HuffPost is she has literally THOUSANDS of Catholics correcting her that there is no Catholic mass on Good Friday."
Basham added that Bendery continued to suggest Catholics would be barred from attending the Pentagon's Good Friday service entirely, a claim Basham said she was "quite certain is not true."
HuffPost's parent company BuzzFeed did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
This episode is small in scale but revealing in kind. It shows what happens when a newsroom's animating purpose is opposition rather than information. If your goal is to catch the Defense Secretary doing something sinister, you'll find sinister things everywhere, including in a routine chapel memo describing a liturgical reality that predates the Pentagon by roughly two thousand years.
The irony is thick. A story meant to expose religious intolerance inside the military was built entirely on religious illiteracy inside a newsroom. The reporters who positioned themselves as defenders of Catholic inclusion didn't understand the first thing about Catholic worship.
Every Catholic in America who has ever attended a Good Friday service knew immediately that this story was nonsense. Every editor at HuffPost apparently did not. The gap between those two groups tells you everything about who these outlets are actually writing for, and it isn't the faithful.
Los Angeles police arrested a 12-year-old on suspicion of murder Thursday in connection with the death of Khimberly Zavaleta Chuquipa, a classmate who was struck in the head with a metal water bottle during an alleged bullying incident at a Reseda school campus in February. The arrest came more than five weeks after Khimberly died, and her family says the tragedy was preventable.
LAPD Officer Charles Miller confirmed the arrest but said he could not release additional information because both the victim and the suspect are juveniles, the Associated Press reported. The Los Angeles County District Attorney's office said Friday that the case remains under investigation. No formal charges had been announced at the time of the report.
The family's account, laid out in a wrongful-death claim filed last month against the Los Angeles Unified School District, paints a grim picture of institutional failure. Khimberly was walking in a hallway at Reseda Charter High School, which also houses a middle school, on Feb. 17 when she stepped in to defend her older sister, Sharon Zavaleta, from a group of students who had been bullying her. Another student struck Khimberly in the head with a metal water bottle.
What followed was an eight-day ordeal that ended with a child's death.
The family said Khimberly was taken to Valley Presbyterian Hospital after the Feb. 17 attack, where she was evaluated and released the same day. Three days later, her condition deteriorated sharply. She was rushed to UCLA Mattel Children's Hospital, where doctors discovered a severe brain hemorrhage. Khimberly was placed in a medically induced coma and underwent emergency brain surgery.
She did not recover. Khimberly Zavaleta Chuquipa died on Feb. 25. She was 12 years old.
Her mother, Elma Chuquipa, described the final hours in an interview with a local television station. Fox News reported that Chuquipa told KABC: "My daughter goes and pulls her away, so they don't hit her sister, and that's when [Khimberly] gets hit in the head." She also told the station: "We took her to the emergency room, where she arrived with no vitals."
The family has also raised questions about whether Valley Presbyterian Hospital missed warning signs during the initial evaluation. Robert Glassman, the family's attorney, said the family has not ruled out legal action against the hospital.
The arrest of a single student does not close the book on this case, and the family's attorney has made clear he intends to keep it open. Glassman said in an email Friday that the sisters had been "bullied, harassed and physically attacked for months" at the school and that their mother had reported the incidents to school officials, who he says failed to stop the abuse.
That claim sits at the center of the wrongful-death filing against LAUSD. The district, for its part, offered no defense and no explanation. A spokesperson said only that the district does not comment on pending or ongoing litigation.
Glassman framed the arrest as necessary but insufficient. As AP News reported, he stated:
"This arrest is an important step toward accountability, but an arrest alone does not equal justice and does not answer the larger question of how this was allowed to happen in the first place."
He followed that with a pointed demand directed at the adults who were supposed to be in charge of these children's safety:
"The focus cannot stop with one student, there must be a hard look at what the adults in charge knew, when they knew it, and why meaningful action wasn't taken sooner."
Those are questions that deserve answers. A mother says she warned the school. The school apparently did nothing effective. A child is dead. And the district's only public response is a boilerplate refusal to comment.
The Zavaleta Chuquipa family set up a GoFundMe page to help cover expenses. Just The News reported that the family wrote on the page: "As the baby of our family, she brought a special light and joy into our lives."
Khimberly's mother told NBC Los Angeles, as the New York Post reported: "I'm devastated. I'm full of pain, thinking about how I will never see my daughter again."
Meanwhile, the DA's office has said only that the case is under investigation. Whether formal murder charges will be filed against the juvenile suspect, and what form those charges might take given the suspect's age, remains unclear. The Washington Times confirmed the arrest occurred on April 2.
Cases involving children accused of killing other children are mercifully rare, but they raise some of the hardest questions the justice system faces. An eleven-year-old in Pennsylvania was recently charged as an adult in the shooting death of his adoptive father, illustrating just how varied and difficult the legal responses can be when the accused is barely old enough for middle school.
In this case, the family is pursuing accountability on multiple fronts. The wrongful-death claim targets LAUSD directly. Glassman has signaled that Valley Presbyterian Hospital could face legal action as well. And the criminal case against the juvenile suspect is just beginning.
The core failure here is not complicated. A family says it reported months of bullying, harassment, and physical attacks to school officials. Those officials, by the family's account, did not stop it. The earlier reporting on Khimberly's death laid out the same pattern: warnings ignored, a child left vulnerable, and a preventable tragedy.
LAUSD is the second-largest school district in the country. It has layers of administrators, counselors, and safety staff. Yet a 12-year-old girl walked into a school hallway, tried to protect her sister from known bullies, and ended up dead eight days later.
Fox News reported that the family is also pushing for new pediatric head-injury protocols through a proposed measure they call "Khimberly's Act." The details of that proposal were not fully described, but the impulse behind it is clear: the family believes the medical system, like the school system, failed their daughter.
Across the country, communities are grappling with youth violence that seems to outpace the institutions meant to prevent it. In Washington, D.C., the mayor has pushed for a permanent youth curfew in response to rising juvenile crime. The approaches differ, but the underlying problem is the same: adults in positions of authority failing to keep children safe.
The AP noted a separate recent case in Georgia, where a sixth grader named Jada West died after a fight with another student from Mason Creek Middle School broke out at an intersection near her home. The details differ, but the pattern is familiar, school-age children, unresolved conflict, and a fatal outcome.
In Los Angeles, the open questions remain stark. What did Reseda Charter High School officials know about the bullying of the Zavaleta sisters? When did they learn about it? What, if anything, did they do? And why wasn't it enough?
LAUSD has chosen silence. The DA's office has chosen caution. The family has chosen to fight. And Khimberly Zavaleta Chuquipa, the 12-year-old girl who stepped into a hallway to protect her sister, is gone.
When officials in other states have faced similar failures to protect children, the political consequences have been swift and direct. Whether anyone in Los Angeles faces real accountability, beyond a single juvenile arrest, will say a great deal about how seriously this city's leaders take the safety of the children in their care.
A child tried to defend her sister. The adults who should have prevented that moment failed before it ever arrived. An arrest is a start. It is not an answer.
