Reports of naked man with a gun was Franklin student playing ‘Paranoia,’ police warn minors to be mindful

By Montse Ricossa

Click here for updates on this story

    FRANKLIN, Wisconsin (WDJT) — Police departments across Wisconsin are warning students to be mindful of the community as many play the nationwide game “Senior Assassin,” or “Paranoia.”

It’s where students are assigned a “target” and have one week to shoot them with a water gun. Nicolet High School Senior Abraham Olson described it as “March Madness but with squirt guns.”

However, the popular game has caused some disruptions across our hometowns. Franklin police responded to two incidents Monday morning, May 4, that were connected to the game called “Paranoia” being played by students at Franklin High School, according to the department.

The first was around 6:40 a.m. for a report of a naked man with a gun in the middle of the street, which led to what was described as a “high-risk traffic stop” that disrupted the morning commute.

“We were very concerned, especially with the morning commute, especially with children on buses and at bus stops in that area,” shared Franklin Police Officer Gary Wallace.

He was one of about a dozen officials who responded to the neighborhood, preparing for the worst. “We ran out of the station, concerned we were responding to a really serious issue. It was in the back of our minds, and even spoken, that this may be a case of the ‘Paranoia’ game,” he shared.

Officers determined the individual and a passenger were participating in the game. The student was arrested and cited for disorderly conduct. The reason for being naked? It’s a loophole, as there’s a rule accepted between students that if you’re without clothes (like when showering), then you cannot be eliminated.

“A lot of people in the community are frustrated about the resources that were being tied up this morning. So we asked again the participants, please keep in mind the effect of what you’re doing has on the community.” — Officer Gary Wallace

A second situation in Franklin involved several shirtless people arguing outside a residence and making threats.

Police departments including Monroe, Columbus, and Twin Lakes put out statements surrounding the game, with warnings for students.

In Germantown on April 16, police responded to a call of armed suspects, matching descriptions for what turned out to be 16 and 18-year-olds playing the “Senior Assassin” game.

“You guys have got to be kidding me — wearing masks and hiding outside an apartment complex playing a stupid game?” said one of the officers. Another officer pointed out that from down the road, where they were looking for the armed suspects, it was hard to tell that the “weapons” were actually water guns. The students can be seen in body camera video apologizing to the officers, asking if they’d get detention. The four students were eventually allowed to go home, after calls to their parents.

Officer Wallace reminds kids to be mindful of how they’re perceived: “You need to be respectful. You need to be aware of the disturbance that you’re creating. Have fun, but be mindful of everyone else around you, too.”

While there are warnings to be safe, Officer Wallace acknowledged the game could be fun if played correctly. That was echoed by Nicolet High School senior Abraham Olson and his mom, Julie Olson.

“I’d say it gets pretty serious. Some people are hiding out in their houses all day long or getting their parents to drive them around places, decoy cars, leaving their phones at home,” said Abraham. About 200 of his classmates play the game, which is set up on an app, assigning everyone their “targets.”

For the Olsons though, it’s a way for the family to get involved and have fun. Julie explained that she and her husband have a “decoy car” so her son could make it to work, as the only “safe zones” are school, home, work, and places of worship.

While Julie acknowledged there may be disruptions in neighborhoods with kids running around, “You have to take it for what it is. It’s seniors celebrating their last days of being kids and having this fun game.”

Franklin police said they must respond to such calls with full precautions, regardless of context, noting similar incidents across the country have had serious outcomes. The department is asking parents and community members to talk to young people about potential consequences.

Franklin High School put out a statement on May 4 that read in part:

“This activity is strictly prohibited on school property. Students and families should be aware that participation that leads to police involvement could carry legal consequences which impact a student’s eligibility for school athletics and activities under the Athletics & Activities Co-Curricular Code of Conduct.

We strongly encourage families to speak with their students about making safe, respectful, and responsible choices. As always, student safety is our top priority, and we appreciate your partnership in reinforcing these expectations. If you have concerns about unsafe behavior in the community, please contact the Franklin Police Department directly. Thank you for your continued partnership in supporting our students.”

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Advocate is first to adopt Ridglan Farms beagle after 1,500 relocated from facility

By Meredith Hackler

Click here for updates on this story

    MADISON, Wisconsin (WDJT) — Evie McClenny and her dog Ernie are starting a new life together. Evie adopted Ernie after getting involved in the effort to relocate the Ridglan dogs a month ago. Evie came all the way from Omaha, Nebraska, to advocate for the beagles.

After following the efforts online for a few months, Evie decided to fly to Wisconsin to be a part of the group of advocates who tried to take beagles from Ridglan Farms.

She said, “I believe in science, I do. I think there is a way to do it without having outcomes like this.”

McClenny took part in what the advocates are calling the “open-air rescue,” which led to several people being arrested. While she wasn’t arrested, she says things did get physical with law enforcement.

“Myself and hundreds and hundreds of people included got brutalized by private security, the police. I mean, I was pepper sprayed in point-blank range, teargassed, zip-tied,” McClenny said.

But that didn’t stop her. She came back last week to volunteer to help with the 1,500 dogs that were taken from Ridglan Farms. And while she was doing that, she met Ernie and knew he was her dog.

“I was like, no, I need to come, I need to come back out here and be a part of helping transporting the dogs,” added McClenny. “Luckily, Big Dog Rescue was amazing, and they knew a little bit of my story, and they were like, no, you deserve to take one home.”

When she met Ernie, there was an instant connection. Now, she’s excited to show him the world.

“He is just going to explore the world. Literally, three days ago was his first time he’s ever been outside.”

Evie says she thinks Ernie’s vocal cords have been cut because he hasn’t made a sound since she got him. She will know more once she takes him to her vet back home. In the meantime, she’s looking forward to advocating for the remaining 500 dogs still at Ridglan Farms. She hopes the amount of national attention that Ridglan Farms is getting will lead to changes in the law.

“I’m incredibly happy, excited, and relieved these dogs are finally out,” McClenny said. “I’m also furious that it took hundreds of everyday people from across the country to step in when the legal system didn’t. People showed up, put their lives on hold, and many, including myself, were brutalized by excessive force for simply trying to save these dogs. Yes, we helped save these beagles. But only because the legal system failed them.”

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Bear wanders through a Los Angeles neighborhood

By Julie Sharp

Click here for updates on this story

    LOS ANGELES (KCAL, KCBS) — A bear meandered through a neighborhood near the Hansen Dam in Pacoima on Monday morning, scaling fences and snooping in backyards before it was tranquilized by wildlife officials and transported back to the Angeles National Forest.

Aerial footage showed the bear in the area of Borden Avenue and Terra Bella Street, surprising neighbors, exciting dogs, and causing a brief lockdown of the Sara Coughlin Elementary School campus.

At one point, the bear was seen eating from dog bowls in the backyard of one home, then continued along its way.

Law enforcement and California Department of Fish and Wildlife representatives monitored the approximate 275-pound bear as it strolled through the neighborhood. Officials say it’s between 3 and 4 years old, and is likely the same bear spotted in the Hansen Dam area just a day earlier, climbing trees and resting nearby.

Efforts to get the bear back home were underway after it was struck with a tranquilizer, leaving it motionless on a fence.

The bear was safely lowered from the fence and moved to a trailer so it could be relocated.

“I think they come looking for food, but in a way, people panic, you know?” Pacoima resident Isidro Mendoza said.

Officials said the bear did not show any aggressive behavior, and it was ear-tagged before returning to its natural habitat.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Rio Mesa beats Dos Pueblos as both teams share Channel League softball title

Mike Klan

GOLETA, Calif. (KEYT) – Analia Lopez made sure Rio Mesa left Goleta with a share of the league crown.

The Cal State Fullerton-commit pitched a complete game with 11 strikeouts and at the plate she hit a go-ahead 2-run homer that sparked the Spartans offense in a 10-2 rout of Dos Pueblos.

Both teams end up 10-2 in the Channel League and co-champions.

Keira Barry homered for Rio Mesa in the fifth inning as they scored five times to lead 7-1.

DP also got a home run from Vereniki Maniadi in the seventh inning.

Both teams now get ready for the CIF-Southern Section playoffs next week. The postseason brackets are announced on Monday, May 11th at 9 a.m.

Click here to follow the original article.

Man described as “serial predator” by prosecutors to face 50 years in prison without parole

By Matthew Ablon

Click here for updates on this story

    DENTON, Texas (KTVT) — A Denton man who was described by Collin County prosecutors as a “serial predator” is set to spend the next 50 years in prison after he was convicted of sexually abusing a girl who lives with autism.

District Attorney Greg Willis announced the sentence for 52-year-old Marty Duwayne Griego on Tuesday. Griego was found guilty of continuous sexual abuse of a disabled individual, which carries no eligibility for parole.

Willis said Griego had an ongoing relationship with the child’s family, which gave him access to the victim. The abuse, Willis said, lasted for a year, ending when the girl turned 15 years old. Willis said the crimes only came to light when Griego assaulted the girl in front of another child, who immediately made an outcry to authorities. That was when the Plano Police Department was notified.

According to Willis, the girl underwent a medical exam that turned up DNA evidence linking Griego to the abuse. A forensic interview interview followed at the Children’s Advocacy Center of Collin County, where Willis said she shared detailed accounts of repeated abuse in Plano, Carrollton and Corpus Christi.

While Griego was convicted in April of 2026, Willis said jurors also heard evidence that Griego had sexually abused another child along with sexually assaulting an adult. The adult, Willis said, reported the crime after Griego was arrested.

“A serial predator who preyed on a severely disabled child will never walk free again,” Willis said in a statement. “This 50-year, no-parole sentence delivers the justice our most vulnerable victims deserve.”

If Willis is still alive at the end of his prison term, he will be 102 years old upon release.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Minnesota county to start using AI dispatcher for non-emergency calls starting Memorial Day weekend

By Derek James

Click here for updates on this story

    Minnesota (WCCO) — Inside the Anoka County 911 dispatch center in Andover, Minnesota, calls are constantly coming in.

“Average for the year here is about 1,100 calls a day, and two-thirds of those are non-emergency calls,” said Kari Morrissey, director for Anoka County Emergency Communications.

A new AI dispatcher is stepping in to handle those non-emergency calls without replacing the people behind the phones.

Instead of a phone tree, Eric the AI dispatcher asks the same questions a dispatcher would, gathering key details in real time.

“It gets the name, phone number, general description of what’s going on, then we watch it too as well,” said dispatcher Jamie Teetzel.

But if you call the 10-digit non-emergency number with a real emergency, the AI assistant will forward the call to a live dispatcher. The quick transfer helps save critical time, and dispatchers say seconds matter.

“Time is everything in this job, just a second millisecond, anything counts,” said Teetzel.

And when call volume surges, that support can make a difference.

“We had four structure fires going on at once yesterday, then a grass wildlands fire. They were overwhelmed in here,” said Morrissey.

Still, dispatchers were cautious about using AI for assistance.

“I was a little skeptical at first, but I think with our non-emergency, low-priority calls, it’ll be helpful with the call load here,” said Teetzel.

In ongoing testing, it’s already helping reduce stress in a line of work that can take an emotional toll.

“We want to keep our people. This is a tough job. The mental health aspect of this job, it’s hard,” said Morrissey.

Anoka County plans to have Eric the AI dispatcher for non-emergency calls only in full service by Memorial Day weekend.

The technology will cost the county $60,000 a year.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

Swimmers make a big splash at Santa Barbara Athletic Round Table luncheon

Mike Klan

SANTA BARBARA, Calif. (KEYT) – Dos Pueblos High School senior Eli Carnaghe and Carpinteria High School junior Izzy Scott were honored as the Athletes of the Week at the Santa Barbara Athletic Round Table luncheon at Harry’s.

Carnaghe broke a 20-year DP school record with a winning time of 20.61 in the 50 freestyle at the Channel League Final. The blistering time was also a meet record.

The Santa Cruz-commit Carnaghe also won the 100 freestyle and was part of the Chargers winning 200 freestyle relay team.

Izzy Scott pulled double duty in a jaw-dropping one day performance in the water and on the track.

Scott won the Citrus Coast League 50 and 100 freestyle and was part of the Warriors winning 200 medley relay team that set a school record.

After she won those three swimming events at Nordhoff High School in Ojai, her parents drove her back to Carpinteria where Scott hit the track and defended her 300 hurdles league title.

Click here to follow the original article.

Minnesota bill that would regulate ownership, sale of semiautomatic weapons passes Senate

By Esme Murphy, Ubah Ali

Click here for updates on this story

    Minnesota (WCCO) — The Minnesota Senate has passed a comprehensive bill that includes a semiautomatic weapons ban and numerous funding packages to improve school safety and school mental health counseling.

The legislation was approved on Monday afternoon after hours of debate, passing along party lines with all 34 DFL senators voting in favor and 33 Republicans opposing it.

The bill was pushed by the parents of the Annunciation mass shooting victims following the incident last August. Advocates say it will protect people, especially kids.

Opponents say it infringes on rights. Mike Moyski, who lost his child, 10-year-old Harper Moyski, in the attack at Annunciation, responded to the argument.

“It’s also a God-given right for a 9-year-old and a 10-year-old to live beyond that age. So let’s get serious when we’re talking about God-given rights. Especially when it comes to this topic,” Mike Moyski said.

Harper Moyski was one of two children fatally shot in the Aug. 27, 2025, incident. More than 20 other people were injured.

The debate over the bill on Monday was emotional for Minnesota senators.

“I have been dealing with this my whole life, seeing this as a child, a student and now as a parent and I still have the same worries for my son,” DFL Sen. Clare Oumou Verbeten said.

“How do you have that conversation with your kids? It’s not the way the world should be, but it’s the reality that we live in,” DFL Sen. Grant Hauschild said.

Supporters of the legislation stressed that those who own semiautomatic weapons would be grandfathered in, but would have to register them with the state.

“No, we are not taking anyone’s guns or weapons away,” DFL Sen. Zaynab Mohamed said.

Opponents added that the bill would do nothing to make school children safer.

“This simply does not make sense to me, Mr President. We need to pursue truth. The truth is, guns don’t kill people, bad people kill people,” GOP Sen. Steve Drazkowski said.

“It should be noted that when Democrats held the trifecta for two full years and chose not to pass this bill, the timing of this bill feels performative,” GOP Sen. Julia Coleman said.

GOP Sen. Michael Holstrom added, “Mr. President, I will not comply with this law. Most of Minnesota will not comply with this unconstitutional law.”

Following the passing of the bill in the Senate, Democratic Gov. Tim Walz said on social media, “It’s time for the House to act on guns.”

But there is no avenue right now that indicates the Minnesota House is going to act. The House has already voted down a much weaker proposal along party lines, 67 to 67. A tie vote meant the measure did not pass.

And the big factor is that there are only two weeks left in the legislative session.

WCCO asked a top Republican aide at the State Capitol in St. Paul on Monday if the proposal would come up for a vote in the House. They replied, “God, no.”

Political analyst David Schultz calls the vote groundbreaking and says it represents the strongest push yet, but one far from the finish line.

“This might be the best chance that this bill has in terms of getting passed,” Schultz told WCCO on Monday.

He later added, “Right now, it looks dead on arrival in a house that is deadlocked.”

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

88-year-old Michigan Army veteran wants to pay-it-forward after receiving life-changing donations

By Elle Meyers

Click here for updates on this story

    Michigan (WWJ) — Michigan Army veteran Ed Bambas was working at a grocery store when he received $2 million in donations from people across the internet to help him retire. Now he’s working with the same man who organized his fundraiser to help veterans across the country.

Bambas, 88, was working at the Meijer store in Brighton last winter after 40 years at General Motors. With the help of several people, he was able to retire thanks to donations made on a GoFundMe page organized by Sam Weidenhofer.

“It’s been a big change, obviously, a lot of pressures from the financial standpoint have been relieved. I look forward to not having to be someplace every day at eight in the morning,” said Bambas.

Weidenhofer, an Australian man who has made it his life’s mission to help others through fundraising, is now leading the charge to raise more funds for veterans.

“We’ve raised $300,000 in three days now, and you know, we are trying to get as much support around each veteran as possible. Our goal is to raise $10 million,” said Weidenhofer.

Each veteran in each state will get their own GoFundMe page, and Weidenhofer will post more information about each veteran’s story. Bambas said he’s helping to get the ball rolling.

“I’m contributing just as a starter. I’m giving each vet $1,000 for $50,000,” said Bambas. “It means a great deal to me to be able to help more people and stimulate people to help more of us. We’re on the earth for a short time, and we gotta, we gotta help each other.”

Weidenhofer said he hopes his effort inspires others, too.

“It’s bigger than these 50. It’s for all the veterans out there to show them respect and love and care for, for what they’ve done for their country,” he said.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.

University of Michigan professor defends pro-Palestinian commencement remarks: “Michigan is not a finishing school”

By Paula Wethington

Click here for updates on this story

    Michigan (WWJ) — Controversy has erupted over a history professor’s remarks during the University of Michigan spring commencement program Saturday in Ann Arbor.

Derek R. Peterson, a history professor and the outgoing Faculty Senate Chair, “made remarks regarding the Israel-Palestine conflict that were hurtful and insensitive to many members of our community,” U-M president Domenico Grasso said later in the day.

Grasso said that Peterson “deviated from the remarks he had shared before the ceremony.” Furthermore, the remarks made “were inappropriate and do not represent our institutional position.” The college president said in response that he will work in the coming weeks with university leadership to “review and refine future commencement programming.”

What did Derek Peterson say? Short video clips of his remarks have been circulating on social media, during which the professor called out “pro-Palestinian student activists who have, over these past two years, opened our hearts to the injustice and inhumanity of Israel’s war in Gaza.”

Peterson provided a YouTube link to a longer clip of his speech. During the 5½ minute video link he posted, Peterson began his remarks with the fight to allow women to become students at the University of Michigan.

He challenged the graduates, when they sing the school’s fight song “The Victors,” to remember those first women students, and the first Jewish professors and Jewish students on campus.

He continued:

“Sing for the students of the Black Action Movement, whose members demanded a curriculum that would reflect the experience and identity of black people in this country.

“Sing for the pro-Palestinian student activities who have over these past two years opened our hearts to the injustice and inhumanity of Israel’s war in Gaza.

“The greatness of this institution does not only rest on the shoulders and on the accomplishments of our student athletes who deserve all the congratulations we can offer them.

“But the greatness of this university rests also on the courage and the conviction of student activists who have pushed this university down the path toward justice.

“It is to them that we can rightly sing ‘Hail! to the victors valiant. Hail! to the conquering heroes. Hail! to Michigan. The leaders and the best.”

University of Michigan leaders call speech “troubling and disappointing” Those publicly criticizing Peterson’s statements include two Republican-endorsed candidates for the Board of Regents election, Michael Schostak and Lena Epstein, who issued a joint statement saying, “Commencement ceremonies exist to unite the University community around academic achievement, personal growth, and the promise of what comes next. It should not become a stage for political activism that leaves students feeling excluded or uncomfortable during one of the most important milestones of their lives.”

“I am disgusted by this educational ‘leader’ who used his platform at spring commencement to attack Israel,” Schostak said while sharing the statement.

And Sarah Hubbard, a Republican who is currently serving as a U-M regent, said in a social media post, “While I wasn’t there yesterday to see it in person, what I have seen is incredibly troubling and disappointing. It is very difficult to execute meaningful consequences on tenured faculty but as a leader I can help set the tone and expectations for their conduct.”

Hubbard said she expects to discuss the circumstances both with the Board of Regents and the university administration.

“Make no mistake, we will not allow a 30-second soundbite to tear down the goodwill that so many on our campus have worked to build,” Grasso said. “Together, we have made Michigan a welcoming, safe and inclusive community – one that we can be proud of, reflects our values, and serves as a model for other institutions around the world. That work continues now and always.”

Professor responds: “The idea that graduations should be apolitical is ridiculous” CBS News Detroit reached out to Peterson for comment, and he provided the following statement:

“I have respect for Regent Hubbard and her colleagues: theirs is not an easy job, and we here at Michigan benefit from their leadership.

“I would however urge Regent Hubbard to review the comments I actually made at yesterday’s commencement. It should not be controversial to have one’s “heart opened to the inhumanity and injustice of Israel’s war in Gaza”, which is what I credited activists with doing. Having an open heart to other people’s suffering is a fundamental human virtue. It is a quality that I hope we teach our students, whatever their political posture might be.

“So I am mystified about what I have done to earn Regent Hubbard’s ire. I have – like many of us here in Michigan – been convicted by the evidence of human suffering in Gaza; and I credit my awareness of that to pro-Palestinian activists. That is why I gave the speech that I did. On a day meant to honor students for their accomplishments, I thought it important that we would honor the student activists who have, over the course of time, pushed the institution toward justice.

“The University has taken down the commencement video. But here is my talk, if you’d like to hear the whole of it. As you will see, it is a talk about the salience of student activism in this institution’s long history.

“Allow me to add, if I may:

“The idea that graduations should be apolitical is ridiculous. Michigan is not a finishing school for polite young men and women. Our students are not wilting flowers. They have just finished their degrees at the foremost public university in the country. They can handle controversy.

“They do not need sentimental, cloying nostalgia. They need encouragement to face a flawed and unjust world head on, using the tools we’ve given them: critical reasoning, careful research, sympathy for the oppressed.

“That is why I spoke as I did. If parents want sentimental graduation ceremonies, perhaps they should send their kids to a different institution. Here at UM we teach our students to face controversies, not run away from them. That’s what being the leaders and the best is about.”

The keynote speaker for spring commencement was former basketball star Jalen A. Rose of Detroit. Three students were also chosen to represent their class as speakers.

Please note: This story was provided to CNN Wire by an affiliate and does not contain original CNN reporting. This content carries a strict local market embargo. If you share the same market as the contributor of this article, you may not use it on any platform.