public safety

  • New Caney Shooting on Nottingham Road Ends With Suspect in Custody, Sheriff Says

    New Caney Shooting on Nottingham Road Ends With Suspect in Custody, Sheriff Says

    Authorities in Montgomery County say a shooting incident in New Caney, Texas, that injured multiple people has been brought to an end, with the suspected shooter now in custody. Officials stated the danger to the public has been eliminated.

    The Montgomery County Sheriff’s Office reported that the episode unfolded on Saturday evening, May 23, 2026, along Nottingham Road. Law enforcement responded to what was described as an active shooter situation.

    After arriving in the area, deputies and other responding officers worked to stop the threat. The sheriff’s office said the suspect was “neutralized” and captured, indicating the individual was taken into custody and no longer posed an active danger.

    Investigators also confirmed that Nottingham Road was treated as a crime scene during the response and that it has since been fully secured. Officials said the situation is no longer ongoing.

    Multiple people were reported wounded in the incident. As the case moves forward, many residents will be watching for additional verified details from law enforcement, while also emphasizing the importance of swift emergency response and the right of ordinary people to protect themselves when violence breaks out.

  • South Austin Shooting Spree Prompts Lockdown as Two Suspects Are Held and One Remains Sought

    South Austin Shooting Spree Prompts Lockdown as Two Suspects Are Held and One Remains Sought

    South Austin faced a wide-ranging emergency response over the weekend after a roaming series of shootings unfolded across multiple locations. Authorities said the incidents appeared to be unprovoked and spread quickly enough to spark fear across several neighborhoods.

    Austin Police Chief Lisa Davis said investigators have linked the violence to at least 10 separate shooting sites. The attacks were described as seemingly random, with shots fired at people traveling in vehicles, turning ordinary trips on local roads into potential targets.

    Police reported that four people were hurt during the spree. As information came in from different scenes, law enforcement expanded its response and issued shelter-in-place instructions affecting more than one neighborhood, effectively placing large parts of South Austin under a temporary lockdown.

    Officials also said two local fire stations were among the locations that came under fire. The inclusion of emergency-service facilities underscored how indiscriminate the pattern appeared, and it forced a broader safety posture while authorities worked to determine the scope of what occurred.

    Chief Davis confirmed that two suspects have been arrested in connection with the shootings. Police said they are still searching for another person believed to be involved, and the manhunt remained active as the investigation continued. The scale of the response, including the shelter order, reflected the reality that public safety ultimately depends on rapid accountability for offenders and the ability of law-abiding residents to protect themselves when violence erupts without warning.

  • North Philadelphia Break-In Attempt Ends After Homeowner Shoots Intruder at Rear Window

    North Philadelphia Break-In Attempt Ends After Homeowner Shoots Intruder at Rear Window

    A fatal shooting in North Philadelphia on Sunday afternoon, May 3, 2026, followed what police describe as an attempted break-in at an occupied home. Authorities say the incident unfolded at the rear of the residence, where an adult woman was allegedly trying to force her way inside through a back window.

    Philadelphia Police officials reported that the homeowner confronted the attempted entry as it was happening. The resident, whom police believe may be licensed to carry a firearm, reportedly addressed the intruder before any entry was completed.

    According to investigators, the homeowner issued multiple verbal commands telling the woman to stop. Police say the warnings were ignored as the woman continued working to break through the rear window.

    The situation ended when the homeowner fired a shot, striking the woman. Police stated the homeowner’s actions are being treated as self-defense based on the reported circumstances surrounding the attempted forced entry and the ignored warnings.

    The woman died as a result of the gunshot, and the case remains tied to the claim that she was attempting to unlawfully enter an occupied property. The reported details underscore the principle that lawful residents have the right to defend themselves in their homes when confronted with an immediate, unlawful intrusion.

  • FBI Data: Knives Kill Three Times More People Than Rifles

    FBI Data: Knives Kill Three Times More People Than Rifles

    The line “knives kill three times more people than rifles” gets repeated a lot, usually as a quick comparison meant to sound decisive. To check whether it’s true, I’m going to stick to the FBI’s latest weapon breakdown in its national homicide reporting and, just as importantly, explain what the FBI means by “knives or cutting instruments” and “rifles,” because those definitions shape the comparison.

    First, a quick note on what “latest” means in FBI crime data right now. The FBI’s national crime statistics have been transitioning from the long-running Summary UCR program (including the well-known “Crime in the United States” tables) to NIBRS (the National Incident-Based Reporting System). In recent years, participation and coverage have changed as agencies onboarded to NIBRS, so year-to-year comparisons can be affected by reporting coverage—not just real-world changes. That doesn’t make the weapon counts useless, but it does mean any single-year claim should be presented with some caution and preferably with context.

    How the FBI defines the categories

    1) “Knives or cutting instruments”
    In the FBI homicide weapon tables, this category is broader than “kitchen knife” or “pocketknife.” It’s intended to capture killings committed with edged or cutting tools. It does not include every possible sharp object (because some incidents end up in other buckets), but it does represent a wide set of blade-type implements that can be used to stab or cut. This breadth tends to make the knife category relatively large compared to more narrowly defined firearm subcategories.

    2) “Rifles”
    The FBI’s “rifle” category is also specific. It counts homicides where the weapon was identified as a rifle. It does not include:
    – Handguns
    – Shotguns
    – Firearms where the type is unknown
    – “Other guns” depending on how the incident was coded
    So “rifles” is a subset of firearm homicides, not a stand-in for “guns” overall. That’s a key reason why comparing “knives” to “rifles” can create a misleading impression if someone mentally substitutes “rifles” for “firearms.”

    3) What’s missing from the simple comparison
    The knife-versus-rifle soundbite ignores other large categories that can also be compared:
    – “Handguns” (typically the largest identified firearm category)
    – “Firearm, type not stated/unknown”
    – “Personal weapons” (hands, fists, feet, etc.)
    – “Blunt objects,” “poison,” and other mechanisms
    If the goal is to understand homicide risk or trends, the rifle category alone is not the right yardstick for “gun violence,” even though it can be relevant for narrower debates.

    Does the “three times more” claim hold up?

    When you look at the FBI’s recent national homicide weapon breakdowns, knives frequently do outnumber rifles in raw homicide counts, and in many years the knife total has been roughly on the order of a few multiples of the rifle total. In other words, the general direction of the claim—knives exceed rifles—often matches the FBI tables. But the exact “three times” figure is not a constant, and whether it’s accurate depends on which year’s FBI table you are using and on how much “unknown firearm type” is present in that year’s data.

    This is where the category definitions matter. A typical pattern in FBI weapon tables is:
    – A large number of homicides are attributed to handguns.
    – A meaningful number are attributed to firearms where the type is not specified.
    – Rifles make up a comparatively small share of firearm homicides.
    Against that backdrop, it is not surprising that a broad “knives/cutting instruments” bucket can be several times larger than the narrowly defined “rifle” bucket in a given year.

    What the comparison does—and does not—tell you

    What it tells you:
    – If the FBI weapon table for the year shows more knife homicides than rifle homicides, then the claim “knives kill more people than rifles” is supported for that dataset and year.
    – If the ratio is around three-to-one for that year’s counts, then the more specific “three times more” phrasing is also supported.

    What it does not tell you:
    – It does not mean knives are a larger cause of homicide than firearms. Rifles are only one firearm type; handguns and “unknown firearm type” are substantial categories.
    – It does not measure lethality per attack, only counts of homicide incidents by weapon category as recorded.
    – It does not settle policy arguments by itself, because it compares a broad cutting-implement bucket to a narrow firearm subset and omits the largest firearm categories.

    A more honest way to phrase it

    If you want a statement that stays faithful to how the FBI categorizes weapons, it’s better to say something like:
    – “In the FBI’s homicide weapon tables, the number of killings attributed to knives or cutting instruments is often higher than the number attributed specifically to rifles.”
    And if you want to discuss guns as a whole, the correct comparison is knives versus all firearms, or knives versus handguns, not knives versus rifles.

    Bottom line

    Using the FBI’s recent homicide weapon breakdowns, the claim can be directionally correct because knife homicides often exceed rifle homicides. But the “three times” ratio is year-dependent, and the comparison is easy to misinterpret because “rifles” excludes handguns and excludes incidents where the firearm type wasn’t recorded. To understand what the FBI data really says, you have to read the weapon categories as the FBI defines them—and resist swapping “rifles” in your head for “guns.”

  • Coweta County: Amazon Driver Shoots Dog After Being Attacked on Delivery Route

    Coweta County: Amazon Driver Shoots Dog After Being Attacked on Delivery Route

    Coweta County Animal Control is continuing its review after an Amazon delivery driver fatally shot a dog during a late-night delivery in Coweta County, Georgia.

    According to the Coweta County Sheriff’s Office, deputies responded at about 11:28 p.m. on April 15, 2026, after a report of a shooting involving a delivery driver. The driver told investigators he was attempting to complete a delivery when a dog broke free from its runner, charged him, and tried to bite him. The driver reported he feared for his safety and fired his handgun, killing the dog at the scene.

    Sheriff’s officials said initial on-scene evidence indicated the driver’s actions appeared consistent with self-defense. The incident remains under review by Coweta County Animal Control, which is tasked with determining whether any local ordinances were violated, including leash or containment requirements.

    The active animal control review is expected to focus on how the dog was secured, whether the runner system was properly used, and whether the property was in compliance with applicable containment rules at the time of the incident. Depending on findings, possible outcomes can include warnings, citations, or other enforcement actions under county animal-control ordinances.

    For residents and pet owners, the case is a reminder that secure containment is a public-safety issue that affects neighbors, visitors, and workers who must approach homes, including delivery personnel. For delivery safety, the incident also highlights the importance of identifying hazards before approaching a property and reporting addresses where dogs are not consistently secured.

    Separately, the case draws attention to workplace rules that may apply to delivery drivers. The report noted that Amazon policies generally prohibit drivers and delivery partners from carrying weapons while on duty, which can create additional employment consequences even when law enforcement determines no criminal charges are warranted.

    Coweta County Animal Control and the Sheriff’s Office have not announced any new countywide policy changes as of the latest update, but any enforcement steps or recommendations related to leash compliance and delivery-driver safety would typically follow the conclusion of the animal control review.