Politics
Four killed in Georgia high school shooting; 14-year-old suspect charged with murder
Two students and two teachers were killed and nine others were injured in a shooting at Apalachee High School in Georgia, authorities said at a news conference Wednesday afternoon.
The suspect is a 14-year-old student at the school who immediately surrendered after being confronted by school resource officers, said Chris Hosey, the director of the Georgia Bureau of Investigation. The teen, identified as Colt Gray, will be prosecuted as an adult, he added. The suspect has been charged with four counts of felony murder with additional charges expected, the GBI said on Thursday.
The victims of the shooting have been identified as students Mason Schermerhorn, 14; and Christian Angulo, 14; and math teachers Richard Aspinwall, 39; and Christina Irimie, 53. Aspinwall was also a defensive coordinator for the school’s football team, NBC News reported.
In a news conference Wednesday night, officials said all nine people injured — eight students and one teacher — were hurt by gunfire in some capacity but are expected to recover.
The suspected shooter used “AR platform-style weapon,” Hosey said Wednesday. There’s no evidence of any additional shooters, he added. Investigators are working to determine if there are any active threats against other schools in Georgia, Hosey said.
On Thursday, the GBI announced the suspected shooter’s father, 54-year-old Colin Gray, was arrested in connection to the shooting and charged with four counts of involuntary manslaughter, two counts of second-degree murder and eight counts of cruelty to children.
“These charges stem from knowingly allowing his son … to possess a weapon,” Hosey said during a news conference on Thursday.
FBI investigated past threats
The FBI’s Atlanta field office and Jackson County Sheriff’s Office released a joint statement saying the suspect was interviewed by law enforcement in May 2023 over alleged online threats about a school shooting. The suspect’s father was also interviewed at the time, and told police that the child, then 13, did not have unsupervised access to his hunting rifles. Though school officials were notified, authorities at the time determined they had no probable cause to make an arrest or pursue the matter any further.
Officials have not commented on a potential motive. The suspected shooter had shown interest in prior mass shootings, including the 2018 shooting at Parkland High School in Florida, two senior law enforcement officials briefed on the investigation told NBC News.
Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith told reporters that investigators have not determined how the suspect obtained a firearm.
The suspect will have his first court appearance on Friday at 8:30 a.m. ET, the Georgia Department of Corrections told NBC News. He is expected to appear virtually from the Gainesville Youth Detention Center, where he is being held.

Law enforcement officers and emergency services personnel responded to reports of an active shooting shortly before 10:30 a.m., the sheriff’s office said earlier.
About 1,800 students attend Apalachee High School in Barrow County, about 50 miles northeast of Atlanta. The school has been in session since Aug. 1, according to its student calendar. All county schools will be closed the rest of the week, the school system’s superintendent said Wednesday.
At the news conference Wednesday night, Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp said“This is everybody’s worst nightmare,” adding, “I just want to offer my sincere condolences and our thoughts and prayers to the families that have lost loved ones, for those that are injured continuing to fight through just a tragic time.”
Miguel Eduardo Perichi Orta, a 10th grader at Apalachee,”_blank”>spoke with NBC affiliate WXIA of Atlanta about the fear he felt during the shooting. He said his stomach dropped when the students were finally let out of the classroom and he saw blood and gunpowder on the ground.
“It was heartbreaking to see that,” he told WXIA.
He added: “If something like this can happen here, when you think it’s a normal day, it can happen anywhere, and that’s what really hurts.”
‘We have to end this epidemic of gun violence’
In a statement, President Joe Biden thanked the first responders and said that he and first lady Jill Biden are mourning the victims. The shooting, he said, is a “another horrific reminder of how gun violence continues to tear our communities apart.”
“Students across the country are learning how to duck and cover instead of how to read and write. We cannot continue to accept this as normal,” added Biden, urging Republicans in Congress to work with Democrats “to pass common-sense gun safety legislation.”
At a campaign rally in New Hampshire on Wednesday afternoon, Democratic presidential nominee Kamala Harris called the shooting a “senseless tragedy on top of so many senseless tragedies” and said: “We have to end this epidemic of gun violence in our country once and for all.”
Students across the country are learning how to duck and cover instead of how to read and write. We cannot continue to accept this as normal.
PRESIDENT JOE BIDEN
Donald Trump, the GOP nominee, addressed the shooting in a post on Truth Socialwriting, “These cherished children were taken from us far too soon by a sick and deranged monster.”
At a scheduled news conference earlier in the day, Attorney General Merrick Garland said he was “devastated for the families” of those affected by the shooting, adding that the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives are working with state and local law enforcement officials.
Mass shootings, including in schools, are a uniquely American problem. So far in 2024, there have been more than 385 mass shootings, according to the Gun Violence Archivewhich defines a mass shooting as having four or more people shot or killed, not including the shooter.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
Politics
Canadians are folding on Vegas. Democrats see a royal flush.
President Donald Trump’s trade war has driven Canadians from Las Vegas. Democrats think it will help them protect their Nevada battleground seats in November.
Last year, as Trump levied tariffs on Canada, visits from Canadians — who account for up to half of Las Vegas’ foreign tourism — dropped off by 17 percent. That played a large role in a 7.5 percent year-over-year decline in total tourist visits, making 2025 the worst non-pandemic year for Las Vegas since the city started tracking data in 1970. Now, as peak tourism season arrives in a battleground state where Republicans’ control of the House could be won or lost, Democrats are pushing voters to see the tourism slump as a direct impact of Trump’s levies.
“Trump instituted his reckless tariffs. In response, Canadians have literally boycotted traveling to America,” said Rep. Susie Lee (D-Nev.), whose Las Vegas-area seat is Republicans’ top target in the state. “That has had a significant impact on our tourism.”
Trump narrowly carried Lee’s district in 2024 and nearly won two other Vegas-area districts held by Democrats. Republicans are less bullish than they were a year ago about flipping the seats, but they view Lee’s as their best chance.
The races are a rare example of the international politics of tariffs — beyond their direct economic impact — playing a major role in an election. Unlike the upper Midwest or the Great Plains, Nevada doesn’t have a large manufacturing or agricultural sector jolted by the tariffs. Instead, the product most affected is the state’s Canadian visitors — who, on any given year, make up between 25 and 50 percent of Las Vegas’ foreign tourism market.
Spokespeople for the Republican National Committee and the National Republican Congressional Committee criticized Nevada’s Democratic congresspeople for voting against last year’s reconciliation bill, which included a “no tax on tips” provision. “If they actually cared about affordability, they wouldn’t have spent years making Nevada harder and more expensive to live in,” NRCC spokesperson Christian Martinez said.
Kush Desai, spokesperson for the White House, noted the “vast majority of Las Vegas tourists are Americans,” adding that the Trump administration “is focused on unleashing the historic job, wage, and economic growth that the American people experienced during President Trump’s first term with the President’s proven agenda of tax cuts, deregulation, and energy abundance.”
Many Canadians, incensed by Trump’s tariffs and his “51st state” taunts, have boycotted U.S. products and tourist destinations in retaliation. It coincides with an overall dropoff in Canadians’ view of their southern neighbor: According to a POLITICO Poll in February, a majority of Canadians now think the U.S. is an unreliable ally.
Even some Nevada Republicans acknowledge the problem. “The Canadians aren’t coming the way they were. Wonder why that is, huh?” Rep. Mark Amodei (R-Nev.), who isn’t running for reelection in his northern Nevada seat, said with a chuckle. “The communications for the tariff stuff was suboptimal.”
The dropoff in Canadian visitors played a role in stagnating a Las Vegas hospitality sector reliant on wealthy international visitors spending in the city’s casinos and hotels. A string of Las Vegas restaurants closed in recent months, some citing a downturn in visitors. And while employment has increased recently in the entertainment and recreation sectors, hiring in food and accommodation has been stagnant, according to Andrew Woods, an economist at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas.
The decline has been severe enough that local industry is taking dramatic steps to try to lure back lost business amidst an ongoing boycott from Canada. A group of Las Vegas resorts is offering to treat Canadian dollars at par with U.S. dollars, effectively a 30 percent discount, and hosting free concerts featuring Canadian artists. And the city’s tourism office recently launched a $3.5 million marketing campaign targeting Canadian visitors.
But it’s hard to overcome national patriotic fury with an ad campaign.
“Despite the efforts of our major operators in Las Vegas, the headwinds are coming from these external forces and the policies of this administration, and that’s what’s creating the economic uncertainty that we’re facing right now in Las Vegas,” said Rep. Steven Horsford (D-Nev.), whose district Trump lost by less than 3 points.
Overall tourist visits ticked up in February and March from those months the year earlier, offering a silver lining to the service industry. But the previous year of declining numbers created a deep hole to dig out of, said Ted Pappageorge, secretary/treasurer of the state’s powerful Culinary Union, which represents 60,000 cooks, roomkeepers and other hospitality workers in the state. If the low numbers continue, the union — which endorsed Democrats in all four of Nevada’s congressional races — is considering putting together relief efforts for its struggling members like it did during Covid, which included food, utility and rent assistance.
“If there’s anything like the reduction in visitation that happened last year, if that happens this year, then we’ll be in relief effort territory for our members,” said Pappageorge, noting “thousands and thousands of hours” have been cut for his union’s members this year due to reductions and restaurant closures.
Marty O’Donnell — the GOP front-runner to face Lee, who has the backing of Trump and the NRCC — was once skeptical of tariffs, but now says he “fully support(s)” the president’s trade policy.
“I’m now a convert, because what I see Donald Trump doing with tariffs is not something I ever anticipated,” O’Donnell said in an interview. “He uses it as a negotiating tool in a way that I never anticipated, and I actually love what he’s doing.”
O’Donnell said tariffs aren’t at the top of voters’ list of concerns. “I don’t hear anybody complaining about tariffs,” he said. “I just don’t think it’s an issue. I think there are way, way more important issues.”
One Nevada Republican strategist assisting multiple campaigns this cycle, granted anonymity to speak candidly about GOP strategy, admitted that Canadians were upset by Trump’s threats to make the country the “51st state” last year. But he and other Republicans pointed to an uptick in visitors in February and March. The strategist also noted the fact that Nevada added jobs at a faster rate than any other state in April, even though it has the nation’s third-highest unemployment rate. Those recent economic wins take the air out of Democrats’ attack, the strategist said.
“There are some bright spots,” O’Donnell senior adviser Keith Schipper said. “We’re talking about tariffs less so now than even six months, eight months ago.”
Republicans also point to the popularity of Republican Gov. Joe Lombardo, who they hope can win reelection in a tough environment and pull down-ballot candidates over the finish line. In a February poll, he was still viewed positively by a majority of Nevada voters even as Trump’s job approval dipped to 41 percent.
Not all economic indicators are dire, said Woods, the UNLV economist. The high-end hospitality sector is doing well, and an uptick in convention and business travelers has more than replaced the loss of Canadian tourists in numbers. “Canadian visitors, though, tend to stay longer and make Vegas their prime destination compared to other international tourists, which is good for our economy,” he said.
The local tourism drop lands on top of other economic concerns that are impacting everyone. A new CNN/SSRS poll conducted in late April and early May found that 77 percent of U.S. voters say Trump’s policies have increased the cost of living in their own community. And a surge in energy prices driven by the war in Iran led to inflation reaching its highest point in three years.
But Las Vegas is still an industry town. And with the main industry suffering, Democrats are banking on their races going their way.
“There’s a lot of service industry folks here, and so those folks are in the social circles in town,” said John Oceguera, the former Democratic speaker of the Nevada Assembly. “Whether you’re at a little league baseball game or a school event or whatnot, people are talking about that.”
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