Total Pageviews

Reports from the Scene of Shooting at Sikh Temple

By JENNIFER PRESTON

A gunman walked into a Sikh temple in suburban Milwaukee on Sunday and killed six worshipers preparing for a morning service, law enforcement officials said. The gunman was also killed.

After multiple 911 calls at 10:25 a.m., the first police officer who arrived at the temple exchanged fire with the gunman in the parking lot, putting him down, police said. A 20-year-law enforcement veteran, the officer was shot multiple times and was in surgery at a nearby hospital, officials said. At least two other people were critically wounded in the shooting.

In a video from the scene, a distraught woman said she believed her brother-in-law was shot inside. She told a reporter from The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. “We never thought this would happen,” she said. “Our church is a safe place. We have been here for 34 years.”

Witnesses reported multiple gunmen, but law enforcement officials said on Sunday afternoon they believe there may have been only one gunman. But they did not rule out others may be involved as SWAT teams continued to search the 17,000-square foot temple, where they found terrified worshipers hiding in closets and bathrooms.

After the shooting began, frantic posts on Twitter asked people not to call loved ones on their cellphone if trapped inside the temple.

The Journal-Sentinel reports that a police SWAT team entered the building before noon and brought uninjured people out of the building on Howell Avenue and began removing injured people from the temple's prayer room.

Police later said that at least four people were killed inside the temple and three people in the parking lot, including the gunman.

Thirty ambulances and tactical teams responded to the scene and nearby hospitals were put on alert to be ready to treat mass casualties.

Kyle Maichle took multiple photos at the scene.

Th e Oak Creek Patch reports that a member of the temple said: “We are shocked. We are a peaceful people.”



Hacked Reuters Twitter Feed Used to Spread Disinformation About Syrian Rebels

By ROBERT MACKEY

Reuters reports that a hacker briefly seized control of the news agency's technology news Twitter feed, @ReutersTech, on Sunday and used the account to post a stream of fabricated reports about Syria and the Middle East under the new handle @ReutersME.

The stunt appeared to be the second step in a campaign by supporters of President Bashar al-Assad to use the news agency's Internet feeds to spread false information about the conflict in Syria. On Friday, Reuters was forced to temporarily shut down part of its Web site after the agency's blogging platform was hacked and fabricated reports of setbacks for Syrian rebels were posted on Reuters.com.

Before the Twitte r feed was taken offline, several bloggers managed to capture screenshots of the stream of fake news headlines posted on the social network. According a cache of the updates on Topsy, which tracks Twitter use, 22 messages were posted on the short-lived @ReutersME feed.

An anonymous Dutch blogger who edits the @worldwidenieuws Twitter feed managed to capture images of 19 of the updates in three separate screenshots (click on the images to see larger versions of the captures).

Several of the updates posted on the hacked Reuters account, which claimed that rebels in the city of Aleppo had been routed and were planning a tactical retreat, closely echoed details of the fabricated reports posted on the agency's blogs two days earlier. Other updates reiterated Syrian government claims that its forces are battling a foreign-led insurgency. The first update posted after the account was seized described the capture of a French spy in Aleppo; another read: “Turkey complains that one of its generals was captured in Aleppo, Erdogan heard shouting from his office.”

While most of the updates conveyed fictional reports of disarray in the rebel Free Syrian Army, several also tweaked the White House by pretending that a spokesman for the Obama administration had announced “financial and technical support given to Al Qa eda operatives in Syria.” The Syrian government has cast its opponents as radical Islamist terrorists since the first protesters took to the streets in March of last year.

The fictional reports of American support for Al Qaeda were accompanied by an update linking to the Web site InfoWars.com, which is run by a libertarian radio host in Texas who promotes the conspiracy theory that the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks were carried out by the Unites States government. Several of the fictional updates seemed to be based on that premise.

One part of the elaborate fiction was an update reporting the fake news that President Obama had signed an “executive order banning any further investigation of 9/11.”

Since the start of the uprising against the Assad government, Syrian state media has claimed to be fighting an rebels backed by an improbable alliance between Al Qaeda, the U.S. and Israel. What appears to have been the final update posted on the Twitter account before it was taken offline - ”
Reuters shareholders to hold meeting over Rothschild's ‘iron grip' over decision making process” - amplified a conspiracy theory by insinuating that the Reuters news agency itself was somehow a tool of Zionist plotters.



Hacked Reuters Twitter Feed Used to Spread Disinformation About Syrian Rebels

By ROBERT MACKEY

Reuters reports that a hacker briefly seized control of the news agency's technology news Twitter feed, @ReutersTech, on Sunday and used the account to post a stream of fabricated reports about Syria and the Middle East under the new handle @ReutersME.

The stunt appeared to be the second step in a campaign by supporters of President Bashar al-Assad to use the news agency's Internet feeds to spread false information about the conflict in Syria. On Friday, Reuters was forced to temporarily shut down part of its Web site after the agency's blogging platform was hacked and fabricated reports of setbacks for Syrian rebels were posted on Reuters.com.

Before the Twitte r feed was taken offline, several bloggers managed to capture screenshots of the stream of fake news headlines posted on the social network. According a cache of the updates on Topsy, which tracks Twitter use, 22 messages were posted on the short-lived @ReutersME feed.

An anonymous Dutch blogger who edits the @worldwidenieuws Twitter feed managed to capture images of 19 of the updates in three separate screenshots (click on the images to see larger versions of the captures).

Several of the updates posted on the hacked Reuters account, which claimed that rebels in the city of Aleppo had been routed and were planning a tactical retreat, closely echoed details of the fabricated reports posted on the agency's blogs two days earlier. Other updates reiterated Syrian government claims that its forces are battling a foreign-led insurgency. The first update posted after the account was seized described the capture of a French spy in Aleppo; another read: “Turkey complains that one of its generals was captured in Aleppo, Erdogan heard shouting from his office.”

While most of the updates conveyed fictional reports of disarray in the rebel Free Syrian Army, several also tweaked the White House by pretending that a spokesman for the Obama administration had announced “financial and technical support given to Al Qa eda operatives in Syria.” The Syrian government has cast its opponents as radical Islamist terrorists since the first protesters took to the streets in March of last year.

The fictional reports of American support for Al Qaeda were accompanied by an update linking to the Web site InfoWars.com, which is run by a libertarian radio host in Texas who promotes the conspiracy theory that the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks were carried out by the Unites States government. Several of the fictional updates seemed to be based on that premise.

One part of the elaborate fiction was an update reporting the fake news that President Obama had signed an “executive order banning any further investigation of 9/11.”

Since the start of the uprising against the Assad government, Syrian state media has claimed to be fighting an rebels backed by an improbable alliance between Al Qaeda, the U.S. and Israel. What appears to have been the final update posted on the Twitter account before it was taken offline - ”
Reuters shareholders to hold meeting over Rothschild's ‘iron grip' over decision making process” - amplified a conspiracy theory by insinuating that the Reuters news agency itself was somehow a tool of Zionist plotters.