Chapter 1: Who is the identified synagogue attacker in Michigan?
A synagogue attacker is ID'd. I'm Chris DiMeo, Fox News. The Michigan synagogue attacker has been identified as a Lebanese national. Three law enforcement sources tell Fox the shooting suspect who rammed his vehicle into Temple Israel Synagogue outside Detroit has been preliminarily identified as Ayman Mohamed Ghazali, a Lebanese national who lived near Dearborn.
DHS confirming this to Fox, revealing the 41-year-old first entered the U.S. in 2011 on an IR-1 immigrant visa as the spouse of a U.S. citizen, noting he applied for naturalization and was granted citizenship in 2016. Officials say the suspect was killed by security officers.
No children or staff were injured, but a security guard was hospitalized, injured by the vehicle, and at least 30 officers were hospitalized for smoke inhalation. After the building caught fire, the FBI is investigating this as a targeted act of violence against the Jewish community.
Chapter 2: What details are known about the Old Dominion University shooting?
Kristen Goodwin, Fox News. The FBI has taken over the investigation into the deadly shooting at Old Dominion University in Virginia. More from Fox's Granola Scott. FBI Norfolk's special agent in charge, Dominique Evans, said it's confirmed. What the ODU shooter, identified as Mohamed Jalloh, shouted is now guiding their investigation.
Prior to him conducting this act of terrorism, he shouted, stated, Allah Akbar. Evans said it appears Jallo had only one weapon, adding that ODU students subdued him and, in her words, rendered him no longer alive. One victim was killed. Two others are recovering. Grinnell Scott, Fox News. As the U.S. and Israel continue its war with Iran, mystery surrounds the new supreme leader.
Mojtaba Khamenei provided a written statement today saying in part, quote, we will exact reparations from the enemy and if it refuses, we will seize from its assets as much as we deem necessary. Fox's Nate Foy in Tel Aviv. America's listening to Fox News.
Chapter 3: How is the U.S. military responding to recent incidents in Iraq?
Join Fox in supporting our troops. From daily needs to global emergencies, help us be there for those who serve. Visit go.fox slash Red Cross to donate to service to the Armed Forces today. Rescue efforts are underway after an American military refueling plane went down over Iraq. U.S.
Central Command says the KC-135 aircraft was part of the operation against Iran, but the crash was not due to hostile fire or friendly fire. CENTCOM says two aircraft were involved. One landed safely and the other went down in western Iraq. CENTCOM described the latter as a loss. A U.S. official says the other plane involved was also a KC-135 tanker.
The tanker is the fourth publicly acknowledged aircraft to crash as part of the U.S. military's operations against Iran. Three American fighter jets were mistakenly downed by friendly Kuwaiti fire last week. All six crew members safely ejected.
Chapter 4: What legal actions are being taken against Texas's voucher program?
Tom Rigotti, Fox News. Muslim parents and three private schools are suing Texas leaders for excluding Islamic private schools from participating in the state's voucher program. The two federal lawsuits ask the court to block the voucher program from discriminating on the basis of religion.
This comes after Governor Greg Abbott signed a new law creating a statewide program that allows families to use public funds to pay for their children's private school.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton releasing an opinion in January stating his belief the state has the authority to block certain schools from participating in the program if they are, quote, illegally tied to terrorists or foreign adversaries.
Those lawsuits argue the Islamic schools blocked from joining the program meet the voucher program's eligibility requirements and have no actual connection to terrorism or unlawful activity. Angelo Bavaro, Fox News. Cuba's governor says that it will release 51 people from the island's jails in an unexpected move.
The Ministry of Foreign Affairs says the release in the upcoming days stems from a spirit of goodwill and close relations with the Vatican. The government didn't identify who it would release, except to say that all have served a significant part of their sentence and have maintained good conduct in prison.
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Chapter 5: What recent developments are there regarding Cuba's prison releases?
I'm Chris DeMaio. This is Fox News. This is Ainsley Earhart. Thank you for joining me for the 52-episode podcast series, The Life of Jesus. A listening experience that will provide hope, comfort, and understanding of the greatest story ever told.
Chapter 6: What closing remarks are made in this newscast episode?
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