Gretchen Whitmer

Everyone accounted for in shooting at Mormon church in Michigan

Sept. 29 (UPI) — Authorities are no longer looking for victims in the shooting at a Michigan church that left four dead and eight injured.

The dead gunman, Thomas Jacob Sanford, a 40-year-old Marine who served in the Iraq War, described Mormons as “the antichrist” to a Burton City Council candidate about one week before the shooting.

During a news conference Monday, Grand Blanc Township Police Chief Bill Renye said authorities have accounted for anyone who attended services Sunday morning at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints about 50 miles north of Ann Arbor.

Sanford, 40, of Burton, Mich., drove a vehicle into the building at about 10:25 a.m. EDT Sunday and opened fire with an assault-type weapon, local police said. Sanford was shot dead in the church’s back parking lot by two police officers.

“We still are in the process of clearing out that church, but at this time, everyone is accounted for,” Renye told reporters.

The injured, who ranged from 6 to 78 years old, were taken to Henry Ford Genesys, and two of them are still in critical condition, according to Dr. Michael Danic, chief of staff at the hospital in Grand Blanc.

Five were treated for wounds, including the person who died, and three others were treated for smoke inhalation, with one still intubated, Danic said. A 6-year-old child was stabilized and released, Danic said.

Police said 10 were injured and two later died.

Danic said several of the hospital’s resident physicians were at the church during the service, describing them as “heroes.”

“Not only were they victims, they are also first responders,” Danic said. “And having your friends and family come in injured and take care of them is a really incredible experience.”

The FBI, which is the lead agency in the investigation, has interviewed more than 100 victims and witnesses, Reuben Coleman, acting special agent in charge of the FBI’s Detroit field office, said.

“The FBI is investigating this as an act of targeted violence, and we are continuing to work to determine a motive,” Coleman said at the news conference.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives dispatced a “world-renowned” specialized rapid response team to investigate, ATF acting special agent in charge James Deir said at the news conference. Team members arrived Sunday night.

“They have been used all over the world, and they come from places as far as California, Hawaii, and they’re here in Michigan now,” Deir said.

Improvised explosive devices were found but investigators are still trying to determine a motive.

“Our special agents, victim specialists, child advocates, forensic interviewers and local partners have interviewed over 100 victims and witnesses to date, and are continuing to interview individuals as we speak,” Coleman said.

The suspect is believed to have ignited the church with gasoline.

“This is not Grand Blanc. This does not define Grand Blanc and who we are,” Renye said during a news conference. “We are a community, and I am confident that together we’re going to build a stronger community due to this incident.”

Gov. Gretchen Whitmer also spoke at the news conference.

“We’ve seen gun violence in our schools, stores, parades, festivals and our houses of worship,” she said. “These are places that we go to feel connected, to feel safe, to be together.

“But today, this place has been shattered by bullets and broken glass. And this might be a familiar pain, but it hurts all the same every time.”

The church was destroyed and a “lifetime of memories is just gone,” Brandt Malone, who has been going to the church for several years, told CNN.

“The hardest thing for our community right now is feeling like that security blanket has been ripped away,” Malone said.

Sanford rammed his pickup truck into the church before shooting congregants with an assault rifle. The building was set on fire, with flames reaching up to 70 feet.

Sanford was a sergeant during Operation Iraqi Freedom, starting in the summer of 2007. He received several medals for his service, a Marine Corps spokesperson told CNN.

He was married and had at least one child. A GoldFundMe page in 2015 said the family needed donations to help pay for a son, who was born with a rare genetic disorder.

Kris Johns, a Burton city council candidate, told the Detroit Free Press and the Detroit News that he spoke with Sanford on the campaign trail a few days before the shooting.

Johns recalled Sanford had a tirade against the church and described Mormons, which is the informal name given for members as the Church of Jesus Christ, as “the antichrist.”

“It was very much standard anti-LDS talking points that you would find on YouTube, TikTok, Facebook,” Johns told the Detroit News.

The council candidate recalled to the Free Press “there was no mention of anything right or left, blue or red. He said he saw Trump 2024 sign on the suspect’s fence.

NBC News confirmed an image loaded to Facebook in 2019 showed him wearing a “TRUMP 2020” shirt.

Johns said the man noted struggles with drug addiction.

A survivor at the shooting said there was no security at the church.

“We heard a big bang and the doors flew open,” Paula, who didn’t give her last name, told WXYZ TV. “And then everybody rushed out. We went through the church and through the parking lot … when we got in the cars and flipped around, that’s when the shooter started shooting at the car.”

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Anti-trans, DEI provisions have Michigan lawmakers at odds over school budgets

June 27 (UPI) — The Michigan legislature is nearing its July 1 deadline to approve its budget bills but the state House and Senate are at odds over anti-transgender and diversity, equity and inclusion provisions.

Earlier this month, the Republican majority in the Michigan House of Representatives passed budget bills that would penalize schools, universities and community colleges for allowing transgender girls and women to participate in girls’ and women’s sports.

Democrats, with a slim majority in the Senate, passed a different version of a budget proposal late last month. It does not include any such provisions or references to DEI initiatives and girls’ and women’s sports.

Michigan’s school aid budget bill will establish how much state funding public schools and institutions of higher learning will receive in the fiscal year beginning on Oct. 1. Since the two chambers passed different versions of the bill, they must find a compromise to send a final version to Gov. Gretchen Whitmer‘s desk.

“Ultimately, education funding bills need to be passed,” Jonathan Hanson, lecturer in public policy at the Gerald R. Ford School of Public Policy at the University of Michigan, told UPI.

“They have to work out some kind of compromise. How do you meet in the middle with respect to some of this language? It’s not immediately obvious how to compromise on those things.”

The house budget proposes withholding 20% of a school district’s discretionary funding if it is in violation of prohibitions on transgender athletes participating in female sports, having curriculum that “includes race or gender stereotyping” or funding “DEI initiatives.”

The same prohibitions apply to public universities and community colleges. Institutions in violation of these provisions could have 5% of monthly operations installments withheld by the state budget director.

The proposals cite President Donald Trump‘s executive orders “Ending Illegal Discrimination and Restoring Merit-Based Opportunity” and “Ending Radical and Wasteful Government DEI Programs and Preferencing” as supporting federal regulations.

Less than 1% of adults in the United States identify as transgender. A smaller fraction of a percent of minors identify as transgender.

Twenty-seven states have passed laws banning or restricting transgender athletes from participating in the sports that are consistent with their gender identity.

In the 2024-2025 school year, about 175,000 Michigan high school athletes participated in sports, according to the Michigan High School Athletic Association. Two transgender students held waivers to participate and both participated only in fall sports.

“It brings up a lot of ‘whys,'” Jay Kaplan, staff attorney with the ACLU of Michigan’s LGBTQ+ Project, told UPI. “Why this inordinate amount of focus? Why does this seem to be a priority?”

Kaplan explained that the athletic association’s waiver system is already a mechanism meant to address concerns people may have regarding student-athlete participation.

“These budgetary provisions, they can be challenged as discriminatory,” Kaplan said. “Our message to these legislators is, ‘Do your job.’ What’s your plan for affordable housing? What’s your plan to bring more businesses to the state and improve the economy?”

The Republican sponsors of the proposals in the house, Rep. Tim Kelly and Rep. Gregory Markkanen, did not respond to requests for comment.

“Our local schools have been asking for the freedom to use state funding how they please, free of overregulation and burdensome government mandates,” Rep. Joseph Pavlov, R-District 64, said in a statement. “Now, thanks to the new budget plan House Republicans have put together, schools are getting exactly that in record amounts of funding. This will go a long way in turning around the decline in educational performance our state has seen for a long time now.”

Kaplan said the political makeup of the legislature and the governor’s office offers some assurance that provisions like the anti-trans house school budget proposal will fail in Michigan. Next year’s midterm elections will be crucial in determining if that level of assurance continues.

“We’re fortunate in Michigan,” Kaplan said. “We’ve done a lot of hard work. The LGBTQ community and allies, we’ve all worked together. Michigan has some very good policies for the LGBTQ. We have explicit civil rights for the LGBTQ. If anyone is singled out, we’re going to challenge it.”

Democrats have a 19 to 18 majority in the Senate with one seat — Senate District 35 — vacant. Whitmer, a Democrat, has the authority to call a special election for the vacant Senate seat, which she has not done.

Republicans took a 58 to 52 majority in the House in the 2024 election. Democrats held a majority in the House chamber since 2023.

Michigan will elect a new governor in 2026 as Whitmer will reach her term limit.

“What we’re seeing from the Republican side is the incorporation of national Republican policy coming from the White House regarding things like DEI initiatives and trans athletes,” Hanson said. “The fact that this is entering into state budget policies and money is tied to focusing on a minority group that is really small, it makes it seem like they’re focusing on things that aren’t really problems,”

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