Category: Security

  • About 3,000 migrants detained in St. Petersburg on New Year’s Eve

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty and is reprinted with permission.

    Around 3,000 migrants were detained in St. Petersburg on New Year’s Eve as part of a series of mass detentions across Russia, local media reported on January 2.

    The Fontanka news outlet said more than 100 of those arrested in St. Petersburg are going to be deported.

    The SOTA news website reported similar mass detentions in Moscow, though it said the number of migrants held was not known.

    Russian officials have reportedly used such raids on migrants in recent months to find those with Russian citizenship.

    Those people are then forced into military service.



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  • S Korean President stresses military vigilance amid Pyongyang threat

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    South Korea’s President emphasized the importance of military strength in the face of escalating nuclear threats from Pyongyang, which has declared its intention for “conquering the entire southern territory” – a metaphorical reference for South Korea.

    In a new year message sent to the South Korean military on Tuesday, its President Yoon Suk Yeol urged it to maintain a strong posture amid the intensifying North Korea threat.

    “Our military has made every effort to protect the lives and safety of our citizens from North Korea’s relentless provocations and threats, even under challenging conditions,” Yoon said, according to South Korea’s defense ministry.

    Yoon also said defense capability was the foundation for expanding the value of freedom and propelling the prosperous economy, adding that military strength is essential for safeguarding the protection of South Korea’ territories and regional security.

    Yoon’s remarks come a day after North Korean leader Kim Jong Un’s fresh warning to the South. 

    Kim said that military conflicts in the Korean peninsula may “arise at any moment,” as cited by the North’s state-run Korean Central News Agency on Monday.

    KCNA also reported that North Korea’s Foreign Minister Choe Son Hui, along with the head of the United Front Department Ri Son Gwon, hosted a meeting to discuss ways to deliver Kim’s orders to restructure organizations involved in South Korean affairs.

    Similar threat was also made on Sunday as Kim emphasized that the inter-Korean relationship has completely solidified into one of hostility, indicating that he no longer views the South as the same Koreans, but as two belligerent states in a state of war.

    “Reflecting on the long history of inter-Korean relations, our conclusion is that unification can never be achieved with South Korea, which has adopted policies of ‘unification by absorption’ and ‘systematic unification’ that starkly contrast with our nation’s unification policy based on the principles of one people, one state, two systems,” said Kim as North Korea wrapped up its Central Committee Plenary Meeting of the Workers’ Party Korea Saturday.

    In the same speech, Kim also urged Pyongyang to prepare for the possibility of “conquering the entire southern territory” – an apparent reference to South Korea – calling on the military to be ready to mobilize “all physical means and capabilities, including nuclear forces, in response to any potential nuclear crisis that may arise.”

    The inter-Korean tension is expected to escalate on the global stage in the new year, with issues related to North Korea likely to be more frequently addressed in international forums such as the U.N. Security Council.

    Both South Korea and Japan began their two-year term as a non-permanent member of the UNSC in New York from Sunday – marking the next two years a rare alignment of the United States, South Korea and Japan all being members of the same organ, with potential and frequent coordination on curbing North Korea’s military ambitions.

    The U.S., South Korea and Japan, for instance, have long attempted to bring North Korean human rights issues to the UNSC’s agenda, but these efforts have been opposed by China and Russia.



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  • ‘Prolonged crisis’ in US-China ties set to continue this year

    This article was originally published by Radio Free Asia and is reprinted with permission.

    U.S.-China ties remained in a prolonged state of crisis at the end of 2023 despite some “candid and constructive” dialogue at the Xi-Biden summit in November, and will likely stay that way throughout 2024 amid ongoing tensions over democratic Taiwan, analysts told Radio Free Asia in recent interviews.

    While the Xi-Biden talks at the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation forum did result in in the resumption of military-to-military contacts, along with discussion of measures to stem fentanyl exports from China and scientific and technical cooperation, they didn’t make close allies out of the two rivals, President Joe Biden said at the time.

    Coming as it did after an alleged Chinese spy balloon derailed Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s trip to Beijing in February, the presidential summit gave some cause for cautious optimism.

    Yet Sam Zhao, professor of international relations at the University of Denver and director of the Center for U.S.-China Cooperation, described the bilateral relationship as being in a state of “prolonged crisis.” 

    “It’s not a cold war like in the past, but a bilateral relationship that has periods of detente, then further retreat,” Zhao said. “But they remain in a state of crisis.”

    China’s threat to force “unification” on democratic Taiwan – referenced in a pledge by Chinese leader Xi Jinping at New Year and rebuffed by Taiwanese President Tsai Ing-wen this week – along with its military saber-rattling in the South China Sea and Taiwan Strait still looms large over bilateral ties, creating ongoing tension, he said.

    “Neither side has room for concessions,” Zhao said. “There is no possibility of compromise.”

    He said moves to cooperate on climate change, transnational crime including fentanyl exports, artificial intelligence and disease control and prevention were ways for Beijing and Washington to “help stabilize bilateral ties and rescue them from a linear decline.”

    ‘Surely be reunified’

    Xi said in his New Year message to the nation that the merger of Taiwan and China was a sure thing, ignoring years of opinion polls showing that Taiwan’s 23 million people have no wish to be ruled by the Chinese Communist Party.

    “China will surely be reunified, and all Chinese on both sides of the Taiwan Strait should be bound by a common sense of purpose and share in the glory of the rejuvenation of the Chinese nation,” Xi Jinping said in his Dec. 31 address published in English by state news agency Xinhua.

    Taiwan President Tsai Ing-wen said on Monday that the island’s future should be decided by its people, democratically.

    “This is taking the joint will of Taiwan’s people to make a decision,” she said. “After all, we are a democratic country.”

    Much depends on the outcome of the Taiwan presidential and parliamentary elections on Jan. 13, seen as a battle between ruling Democratic Progressive Party’s Lai Ching-te and Hou Yu-ih for the Kuomintang.

    “If Lai does win in three weeks or so, I imagine that [China], regardless of the state of US-China relations, is going to increase its pressure on Taiwan,” said David Sacks of the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations.

    “It will increase its military activities in the Taiwan Strait, and economic sanctions on Taiwan, political and diplomatic pressure and the like,” he said.

    “And so the question then is what the United States would do to respond to try to alleviate pressure on Taiwan and to show that it showed support for Taiwan as well.”

    Possible outcomes

    Lu Yeh-Chung, assistant professor of diplomacy at Taiwan’s National Chengchi University, agreed, adding that the U.S. presidential election in November 2024 would also play a role in deciding the direction of future ties.

    “The most stable outcome will be a victory for the [opposition] in Taiwan, the re-election of Biden in the U.S.,” Lu said. “If Trump won, that would require careful management by all three governments.”

    “The worst-case scenario would be a Lai Ching-te victory followed by a Trump victory in the U.S., which would be the most unstable outcome,” he said.

    Zhao said no Taiwanese leader – even the opposition Kuomintang – will dare to get too close to Beijing, however, for fear of losing voters at home.

    Meanwhile, a growing bipartisan consensus in Washington over the growing threat to democracies posed by Beijing’s overseas activities will likely see more political pressure on the relationship coming from Capitol Hill, Lu said.

    “Even if Xi and Biden hold a second face-to-face summit in November 2024, the window of opportunity for improving bilateral ties will actually be very small,” he said.

    And bipartisan pressure is only likely to get worse as campaigning starts for the U.S. presidential race.

    “It’s a question of whether Beijing can recognize the difference between campaign trail talk and actual U.S. policy,” Lily McElwee, deputy director and fellow in the Freeman Chair in China Studies at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, told RFA Mandarin.

    “I’m not confident that they’re making that distinction right now.”



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  • Adams violates law by again failing to register his Brooklyn rental property with NYC housing agency

    Mayor Eric Adams faces potential fines for failing to register his Brooklyn rental property with the city’s housing agency last year — the latest in a string of violations at the building, according to public records.

    Under city law, landlords must file registration statements with the Department of Housing Preservation and Development once a year spelling out details about properties where they charge rent from tenants. The requirement is meant to make it easier for the agency to keep tabs on rental properties and ensure they’re in good condition and in compliance with all applicable laws.

    Yet, Adams was hit this past Nov. 21 with a violation for failing to submit a registration form for his rowhouse on Lafayette Avenue in Bedford-Stuyvesant, which contains multiple units he’s renting out to tenants, Housing Preservation and Development records show. The Department of Housing Preservation and Development is charged with maintaining the city’s affordable housing stock.

    The violation, which remains open, states Adams’ previous registration on the property expired Sept. 1, meaning the building has as of this week sat unregistered for more than four months.

    “[Adams] is therefore subject to civil penalties, prohibited from certifying violations, and denied the right to recover possession of premises for nonpayment of rent until a valid registration statement is filed,” the violation says.

    Landlords who fail to register their buildings on time can face fines of between $250-$500 per violation, per city law.

    A City Hall spokesman didn’t immediately return a request for comment from the Daily News on Tuesday on whether a fine has been imposed on Adams. HPD did not immediately return a request for comment, either.

    November’s registration snafu isn’t the first time Adams has faced registration issues at his Bed-Stuy digs.

    As first reported by The News, the Lafayette Avenue building went without Housing Preservation and Development registration status for 12 years — from 2009 until 2021.

    Even though Adams campaign spokesman Evan Thies said in 2021 that he would “update the registration immediately,” the mayor failed again in 2022 to register the building before its permit expired, resulting in another violation.

    Since becoming mayor, Adams has also been slapped with nearly a half dozen summonses for alleged rat infestations at the Bed-Stuy building. He has gotten multiple of those summonses dismissed after appearing before administrative judges to make the case that he’s doing everything he can to eradicate four-legged pests at his property.

    According to his latest tax return, Adams collected $19,850 in rental income from the Bed-Stuy building in 2022.

    That’s markedly less than the $24,600 he raked in 2021, a drop Adams spokesman Charles Lutvak earlier this year attributed to the fact that one of the mayor’s tenants only payed rent “intermittently” in 2022. Lutvak would not elaborate on why the tenant isn’t paying rent regularly.

    The registration of the Lafayette Avenue property first landed in the headlines in 2021 after news reports raised questions about whether Adams truly lived there during the mayoral race he went on to win.

    Beyond the registration issues, records show one of Adams’ tenants on Lafayette Avenue filed a complaint with the Department of Housing Preservation and Development this past Oct. 9 complaining there was “no heat” in their unit.

    The department closed the complaint without issuing any fines, though, because an inspector “was not able to gain access to your apartment or others in the building to inspect for a lack of heat or hot water,” an entry in the agency’s database says.

    “If the condition still exists, please file a new complaint,” the entry adds.

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    © 2024 New York Daily News

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Harvard President Claudine Gay is resigning after antisemitism testimony, plagiarism claims

    Harvard President Claudine Gay is resigning following the intense backlash over comments she made about antisemitism on campus, along with claims that she has plagiarized.

    “It is with a heavy heart but a deep love for Harvard that I write to share that I will be stepping down as president,” Gay wrote to the Harvard community on Tuesday. “This is not a decision I came to easily. Indeed, it has been difficult beyond words because I have looked forward to working with so many of you to advance the commitment to academic excellence that has propelled this great university across centuries.

    “But, after consultation with members of the Corporation, it has become clear that it is in the best interests of Harvard for me to resign so that our community can navigate this moment of extraordinary challenge with a focus on the institution rather than any individual,” she added in the letter.

    She will be resuming her faculty position at Harvard.

    Gay has been under fire for several weeks after she testified in front of Congress about antisemitism on campus amid the Israel-Hamas war.

    During the controversial Congressional hearing in front of a Republican-led House committee, Gay refused to characterize calls for the genocide of Jews as a breach of Harvard’s code of conduct. There has been a reported spike in antisemitism following the Hamas terrorist attacks in Israel. Jewish and Israeli students have been threatened and assaulted on campus.

    Many members of Congress and alums have been calling for her to resign since that explosive testimony.

    “Sad as I am to be sending this message, my hopes for Harvard remain undimmed,” Gay said in the letter on Tuesday. “When my brief presidency is remembered, I hope it will be seen as a moment of reawakening to the importance of striving to find our common humanity — and of not allowing rancor and vituperation to undermine the vital process of education.

    “I trust we will all find ways, in this time of intense challenge and controversy, to recommit ourselves to the excellence, the openness, and the independence that are crucial to what our university stands for — and to our capacity to serve the world,” she added.

    Alan Garber, provost and chief academic officer, will serve as interim president.

    “These past several months have seen Harvard and higher education face a series of sustained and unprecedented challenges,” the Harvard Corporation wrote in a letter on Tuesday. “In the face of escalating controversy and conflict, President Gay and the Fellows have sought to be guided by the best interests of the institution whose future progress and well-being we are together committed to uphold. Her own message conveying her intention to step down eloquently underscores what those who have worked with her have long known — her commitment to the institution and its mission is deep and selfless. It is with that overarching consideration in mind that we have accepted her resignation.

    “We do so with sorrow,” the board added. “While President Gay has acknowledged missteps and has taken responsibility for them, it is also true that she has shown remarkable resilience in the face of deeply personal and sustained attacks. While some of this has played out in the public domain, much of it has taken the form of repugnant and in some cases racist vitriol directed at her through disgraceful emails and phone calls. We condemn such attacks in the strongest possible terms.”

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    © 2024 MediaNews Group, Inc

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Fort Worth native and NFL champion Frank Ryan has died at 87

    Fort Worth native Frank Ryan, who is the last quarterback to win a title with the Cleveland Browns, died on Monday. He was 87.

    Ryan was born in 1936 and played football at R. L. Paschal High School where he was recruited by legendary coach Bear Bryant. Following his graduation from high school, Ryan became the first member of his family to not attend Yale University when he enrolled at Rice University.

    In 1958 Ryan was surprised when he was selected by the Los Angeles Rams in the fifth round of the NFL Draft. He had been preparing to give up the sport to pursue his doctorate but decided to pursue both by attending UCLA before transferring to Rice.

    Ryan’s first four years were spent with the Rams without much fanfare until he was traded to the Browns and promoted to starting quarterback after Jim Ninowski broke his collarbone in 1962.

    Ryan went on to make three Pro Bowls from 1964 to 1966 and leading the NFL in touchdown passes in 1964.

    1964 would be a special year for Ryan as he would win the NFL Championship with the Browns and receive his doctorate from Rice within six months of each other. That championship would be the last major title by a Cleveland sports team until LeBron James and the Cavs upset the Golden State Warriors for the NBA title in 2016.

    Over his 13-year NFL career, Ryan passed for 16,042 yards and 149 TDs while going 57-27-3 as a starter.

    Ryan’s accomplishments were also prolific off the field with him becoming a mathematics lecturer and athletic director at Yale University while also playing a crucial part in helping to modernize the U.S. House of Representatives voting system in 1971.

    Ryan is survived by his wife Joan with whom he was married for 65 years.

    Funeral arrangements have not yet been finalized.

    ©2024 Fort Worth Star-Telegram. Visit star-telegram.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Bomb threats target state capitol buildings across US

    Multiple bomb threats targeting state capitol buildings across the United States led to evacuations Wednesday morning.

    At least six state capitol buildings were impacted by the bomb threats, including Connecticut, Georgia, Kentucky, Michigan, Mississippi and Montana.

    “While everyone is safe, KSP has asked everyone to evacuate the state Capitol and is investigating a threat received by the Secretary of State’s Office,” Kentucky Democratic Governor Andy Beshear wrote on X, formerly Twitter. “We are aware of similar threats made to other offices across the country.”

    A representative for Kentucky Secretary of State Michael Adams said multiple secretaries of state nationwide received threats in a “mass email,” according to the Lexington Herald-Leader.

    The capitol buildings in Connecticut, Georgia, Kentucky, Mississippi and Montana were all reopened after authorities gave the all-clear.

    “Today a bomb threat was made against our Mississippi Capitol building. Thankfully, the situation is clear. I’m incredibly thankful to the Capitol Police and all the Mississippi law enforcement officers who immediately responded to the incident,” Mississippi Governor Tate Reeves posted on X.

    Michigan State Police said Michigan’s state capitol building “will remain closed for the rest of the day” out of “an abundance of caution.”  

    The bomb threats occurred just days into election year 2024 – which will likely include a rematch between former President Donald Trump and President Joe Biden – and shortly after the first trailer for an upcoming “Civil War” movie was released.

    A24’s first trailer of “Civil War,” which is directed by Alex Garland, portrays a future where the United States is split by civil war, the government conducts air strikes against civilians, and journalists are targeted. 

    According to Entertainment Weekly, the official synopsis of the movie states, “A race to the White House in a near-future America balanced on the razor’s edge.”

    This was a breaking news story. The details were periodically updated as more information became available.



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  • Air Force audit exposes major B-52 issue

    A recent audit of the Boeing B-52 Stratofortress revealed that the United States Air Force’s $48.6 billion modernization plan is at risk of being negatively impacted by supply chain issues as the Air Force has failed to track spare parts for the aging bombers.

    A Nov. 28 press release by the Department of Defense Office of Inspector General revealed the key findings of the “Audit of B-52 Diminishing Manufacturing Sources and Material Shortages.”

    “The report identified that the U.S. Air Force did not effectively manage diminishing manufacturing sources and material shortages (DMSMS) for the B-52 Stratofortress aircraft,” the Inspector General’s press release stated. “Failure to effectively manage these shortages contributed to spare part shortages.”

    According to Stars and Stripes, the Air Force currently operates 76 B-52H bombers, with the most recent of the bombers constructed in 1962. Boeing built 744 total B-52s for the Air Force, with the first B-52 bomber being used in the service in 1955.

    “Despite its age, the B-52 remains a cornerstone in the Air Force’s arsenal,” Air Force Inspector General Robert P. Storch wrote in his audit. “The supply chain challenges identified in this audit could impact the Air Force’s ability to keep the aircraft flying.”

    Stars and Stripes reported that the Pentagon has developed a $48.6 billion modernization plan for the B-52 bomber, which is expected to extend the service life of the Stratofortress to 2060.

    Under the Air Force’s modernization plan, the B-52 bombers would have new Rolls Royce F130 engines, improved radar, a modernized and expanded weapons bay, and avionics upgrades. Additionally, the modernization plan would change the bomber’s designation to B-52J.

    READ MORE: US Air Force increasing Pacific presence, rebuilds WWII base

    While the Air Force’s modernization plan would enable the B-52 bombers to remain an essential military asset with updated capabilities, Stars and Stripes reported that the aircraft still relies on original parts from the manufacturing of the B-52 bombers in the 1960s.

    The “Audit of B-52 Diminishing Manufacturing Sources and Material Shortages” discovered that the Air Force did not have an adequate list of spare parts that are needed in order to maintain the B-52 bombers; instead, the audit found that the Air Force relies on using parts from other B-52 bombers when spare parts are required.

    Additionally, the audit showed that the Air Force needs to obtain an accurate count of companies that have stopped producing B-52 parts.

    While the “Audit of B-52 Diminishing Manufacturing Sources and Material Shortages” noted that the Air Force agreed to do an annual “Weapon System Support Program” coding review based on the Inspector General’s recommendation, it also noted that the Air Force had not adequately addressed two other recommendations from the audit regarding the compilation of a list of B-52 spare parts, as well as the implementation of a system to identify and keep track of manufacturing companies that still make parts for the B-52 bombers.



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  • Armed man breaks into Colorado Supreme Court building, causes ‘significant and extensive’ damage

    A man shot through a window and broke into the Colorado Supreme Court building early Tuesday morning, causing “significant and extensive” damage in several areas of the building before surrendering to police, according to the Colorado State Patrol.

    The incident happened two weeks to the day after the state Supreme Court ruled Donald Trump cannot appear on the state’s primary ballot based on his actions surrounding the Jan. 6, 2021, U.S. Capitol breach and the riot by his supporters. Colorado State Patrol officials said in a news release that Tuesday’s incident is not believed to be “associated with previous threats to the Colorado Supreme Court justices.”

    Police were investigating threats made to the Supreme Court justices in the week after the ruling and increased patrols around their Denver homes following at least one “hoax report,” the Associated Press reported.

    The man who broke into the courthouse was involved in a crash about 1:15 a.m. near 13th Avenue and Lincoln Street a short time before he forced his way into the Ralph L. Carr Colorado Judicial Center, which houses the Colorado Supreme Court, the Colorado Court of Appeals and several other state agencies.

    After the crash, the man allegedly pointed a handgun at the other driver involved before breaking into the judicial center. The man then held an unarmed CSP Capitol Security Unit guard at gunpoint and took their keys, according to the CSP.

    The man accessed an unknown number of floors in the courthouse, then made his way to the seventh floor and fired additional shots inside the building, CSP officials said.

    Denver police officers and CSP troopers set up a perimeter around the building, and the man fired at police, Denver7 reported. Police did not fire back. The man called 911 around 3 a.m. and voluntarily surrendered to police, according to the CSP.

    Neither the man nor any building occupants or police were injured during the incident. Police have not yet publicly identified the suspect.

    The judicial center will be closed for some time because of “significant water damage,” said Colorado Judicial Department spokesman Jon Sarché. He added that he does not believe any court personnel were in the building at the time, aside from security personnel.

    Colorado State Patrol’s security guard unit is separate from its troopers. The agencies’ unarmed security guards are not certified law enforcement officers and can be as young as 18, while troopers, who carry guns, must be at least 21 and be certified by the Colorado Peace Officers Standard and Training Board, Trooper Gabriel Moltrer said Tuesday.

    The security guards patrol a variety of state buildings, Moltrer said. He was not sure whether troopers are stationed at the buildings overnight as well.

    The Denver Police Department is leading the investigation into the break in. Spokespeople for the police department did not return multiple requests for more information Tuesday.

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    © 2024 MediaNews Group, Inc

    Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.



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  • Explosion kills 2, injures 9 in New York

    An explosion caused by a New Year’s Day car crash resulted in the death of two individuals and nine injuries after the driver of an SUV filled with gas cans sped toward multiple pedestrians and collided with another car outside the Kodak Center in Rochester, New York.

    A Tuesday morning joint press conference with the Rochester Police Department, federal law enforcement authorities, and the mayor provided clarification regarding initial reports of the incident being linked to terrorism.

    While the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Buffalo Field Office confirmed that it is providing assistance to the Rochester Police Department in the investigation of Monday’s tragic explosion incident, the Rochester Police Department noted that there is no evidence that the New Year’s Day crash was a terror attack or motivated by any political bias.

    During Tuesday’s press conference, Rochester Police Chief David M. Smith identified the suspect as 35-year-old Michael Avery. Smith, who is reportedly from the Syracuse region, died Monday night as a result of the injuries he suffered in the car crash.

    Smith told reporters that the investigation has not yet revealed Avery’s motive; however, he said law enforcement authorities have been in contact with the suspect’s family, who indicated that Avery “may have been suffering from possible undiagnosed mental health issues.”

    Smith added, “We have not recovered any information that his actions were motivated by any form of political or social biases,” The police chief also said that preliminary findings from the investigation suggest that Avery acted alone.

    READ MORE: Videos: 18-wheeler explosion sparks 200-foot flames

    NBC News reported that Monday’s crash occurred just before 1 a.m. after a “moe” concert” at the Kodak Center. Avery was reportedly driving a Ford Expedition on West Ridge Road toward an area where local police officers were directing traffic.

    “At this time, Avery sped up, crossed into the oncoming lane of traffic and appears to have intentionally been driving towards the pedestrian crossing,” Smith said. 

    Avery reportedly crashed into a Mitsubishi Outlander, which resulted in both vehicles going “through a group of pedestrians” located in the crosswalk. Police reported that both passengers in the Mitsubishi Outlander were killed, while the driver suffered non-life-threatening injuries.

    According to NBC News, the car crash resulted in an explosion and a fire that took over an hour for firefighters to put out. After the fire was extinguished, firefighters reportedly discovered gasoline cans “in and around” the Ford Expedition, according to the police. The discovery of the gasoline cans resulted in the FBI being notified of Monday’s incident.

    While early reports indicated that three pedestrians were injured by the car crash, Smith told reporters Tuesday that the number of injured pedestrians had risen to nine. Smith said that one pedestrian sustained “life-altering injuries.” He added that the other eight individuals are expected to fully recover from their injuries.

    In the aftermath of Monday’s tragic incident outside the concert, the band released a statement on social media.

    “Last night’s events outside the Kodak Center have left us all in profound shock and sadness,” the band members wrote. “On a night that was meant for celebration and togetherness, we are faced instead with a tragedy that defies understanding. Our hearts go out to the family and friends of those who lost their lives, and our thoughts are with those who were injured.”

    During Tuesday’s press conference, Smith explained that Avery is believed to have traveled to Rochester on Dec. 27 and checked into the WoodSpring Suites, which is located in a suburb of Rochester. Two days after his arrival, Smith reportedly left his vehicle at the Rochester Airport parking garage and rented a Ford Expedition.

    According to Smith, Avery made “at least half a dozen purchases of gasoline and gas containers at different locations” in Monroe and Ontario Counties on Dec. 30. Smith added that no suicide note was found during the execution of a search warrant at Avery’s hotel room on Monday. 



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