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Daughter of Charleston church shooting victim reflects on her father's death

Daughter of Charleston church shooting victim reflects on her father's death

Yahoo18-06-2025
Ten years ago in Charleston, South Carolina, a white supremacist gunned down nine people at a Bible study inside Mother Emanuel AME Church, the oldest Black church in the South.
The church's pastor, Clementa Pinckney, was one of the people killed in the massacre. His daughter, Eliana Pinckney, graduated from Philadelphia's Temple University in May.
"It gets a little easy to forget sometimes that I'm 21 and that my dad died when I was 11," she told CBS News.
Then-President Barack Obama delivered Pinckney's father's eulogy.
"I can distinctly remember at 11, knowing the magnitude President Obama held," she said.
Two days later, at the shooter, Dylan Roof's, bond hearing, some family members of his victims publicly expressed forgiveness.
Felicia Sanders survived the shooting by playing dead, shielding her granddaughter underneath her. But her son, Tywanza Sanders, was gunned down.
"By the time I hollered for everybody to get down, the first couple people had already been shot," Sanders told CBS News. "…I saw my son got hit. My son died on one side of me and…my aunt died on the other side. He took the bullets that we ultimately was supposed to have."
"May God have mercy on you," Sanders told Roof in court back in 2015.
"I raised up, knowing that Jesus forgave us," Sanders told CBS News of her decision to say that in court. "Forgiveness wasn't for him. It was for me."
Myra Thompson, who led the Bible study, was among those killed. Her husband, Rev. Anthony Thompson, told CBS News he did not initially intend to speak at that court hearing.
"I forgive you and my family forgives you," Thompson said in the courtroom in 2015.
"What I want people to understand is this was a divine intervention," Thompson told CBS News. "OK, God called me to forgive this guy. That's when I began to heal. And then, within a few minutes, I'm light as a feather. He gave me a peace, and that's what that forgiveness did."
Said Pinckney: "I think forgiveness is a really hard thing and a hard concept. Instead of having a sense of hatred or animosity towards him, I honestly wish for growth for him and anyone surrounded by him. I think that hatred is such a powerful disease that unfortunately, seems to dictate the way our country is run."
Four years ago, Pinckney told CBS News as she was graduating from high school that she wanted to put more good into the world. Today, she's a professional actress. At Philadelphia's Arden Theatre, she's part of the ensemble in its production of "Rent."
"I'm really passionate about doing art that means things to people," she said. "That isn't the reason they came to the theater, but it's the thing they leave the theater thinking about."
With her social justice mindset, Pinckney hears her father's voice. She's giving life lessons in resilience and forgiveness, both on and off the stage.
"The fact that I still have a family that I can call and check in on ... is such a blessing," she said.
Teen questioned after family's quadruple murder
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Charleston church marks 10 years since deadly shooting
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What to expect, and what not to, at the UN meeting on an Israel-Palestinian two-state solution
What to expect, and what not to, at the UN meeting on an Israel-Palestinian two-state solution

Boston Globe

timean hour ago

  • Boston Globe

What to expect, and what not to, at the UN meeting on an Israel-Palestinian two-state solution

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Passenger says she was kicked off a flight for skimpy shorts — but airline says this is the real reason why
Passenger says she was kicked off a flight for skimpy shorts — but airline says this is the real reason why

Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Passenger says she was kicked off a flight for skimpy shorts — but airline says this is the real reason why

The confrontation ended with her sister in handcuffs at Miami International Airport. A woman says she was denied boarding on a Spirit Airlines flight this week — and claims her shorts were the reason. In a CBS News Miami video (below), traveler Tanasia Grayer recounts a tense scene at Miami International Airport on July 16, where she was told by a gate agent she couldn't get on her Chicago-bound flight. 'We were getting ready to board the plane, and the lady at the front desk, she stopped me and said, 'You're not getting on a plane like that,'' Grayer says in the on-camera interview. 'So I looked at her and said, 'Like what?' She said, 'With those shorts.'' Grayer says she had been walking through the airport for 40 minutes without anyone flagging her outfit. In the clip, she's seen wearing a pink robe, which she says she added to avoid appearing too revealing. 'They said you can't have your bottom or your butt out… that's why this robe is on.' But things escalated quickly — and it wasn't just about her outfit. According to a Spirit Airlines statement cited by CBS News Miami, the flight ban wasn't about the clothing, but Grayer's alleged behavior during the confrontation. The statement reads in part: "We always want our Guests to feel welcome and have a great experience. Consistent with other U.S. airlines, our Contract of Carriage contains certain clothing standards for all Guests traveling with us. Our records show a Guest was not in compliance with our Contract of Carriage and refused to comply when provided an opportunity to do so. The Guest and their travel companion were eventually denied boarding after displaying disruptive behavior. Further questions should be directed to law enforcement." Grayer's sister, Jessica Kordelewski, who appears to be the woman shouting, 'This is crazy, this is insane!' in the background of the CBS video, was arrested by police shortly afterward. The sheriff's department told the outlet she was charged with disorderly conduct and trespassing after a warning. 'I'm going home,' Kordelewski said after she was released from jail. 'We are done with Miami. We ain't never coming here again,' added Grayer. Spirit's official contract of carriage, most recently updated in January 2025, states passengers may be denied boarding if they are 'barefoot or inadequately clothed,' or if their attire is considered 'lewd, obscene or offensive.' Specific examples include see-through clothing exposing the breasts, buttocks, or other private parts, as well as offensive body art. Grayer told CBS she and her sister ended up rebooking with a different airline and made it home safely — but she made sure not to wear the same outfit the second time around. On the YouTube post of CBS News Miami's YouTube clip, commenters shared opinions on the dustup. Commenters appeared to overwhelmingly side with the airline, blasting the passenger's outfit as inappropriate for air travel. 'Those are not shorts. Those are underwear,' one viewer wrote. Another joked, 'Why would you want your skin to touch a Spirit Airline seat? I would be in sweats.' Some questioned the choice to escalate the situation instead of just slipping into something more modest: 'She could have put on proper attire in 1 minute and would be allowed to fly. She decided to argue and her sister to fight.' Others pointed out the irony of the look: "A 'Versace' robe… but flying Spirit.' And perhaps the most biting sentiment came from a commenter who summed up what many were thinking: 'These young people are serious? She goes to the airport with shorts that look like underwear and a bathrobe!!??? I'm truly embarrassed that she is NOT embarrassed to be on the news with this story.' Watch the full CBS Miami segment here: Solve the daily Crossword

A clash over a promotion puts Hegseth at odds with his generals
A clash over a promotion puts Hegseth at odds with his generals

Miami Herald

time11 hours ago

  • Miami Herald

A clash over a promotion puts Hegseth at odds with his generals

WASHINGTON - In the spring, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth decided not to promote a senior Army officer who had led troops over five tours in Afghanistan and Iraq because Hegseth suspected, without evidence, that the officer had leaked sensitive information to the news media, according to three people with knowledge of the matter. When Lt. Gen. Douglas A. Sims II was cleared of the allegations, Hegseth briefly agreed to promote him, only to change course again early this month, the officials said. This time, Hegseth maintained that the senior officer was too close to Gen. Mark Milley, a former chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff whom President Donald Trump has accused of disloyalty. Hegseth's sudden reversal prompted a rare intervention from Gen. Dan Caine, the current chair of the Joint Chiefs. He urged Hegseth to reconsider, said the officials, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal deliberations. Hegseth met with Sims one final time but refused to budge. 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The tension between top military officers and their civilian leaders has been persistent since the earliest days of Trump's second term, when senior administration officials ordered the removal of Milley's portrait from a Pentagon hallway. Caine, who pressed Hegseth on Sims' behalf, got the job of Joint Chiefs chair after Hegseth and Trump fired Gen. Charles Q. Brown Jr., his predecessor. Hegseth accused Brown, who is Black, of prioritizing diversity over the combat effectiveness of the force. Also removed during the first months of the new administration were the first woman to command the Navy, Adm. Lisa Franchetti; the first woman to command the Coast Guard, Adm. Linda Fagan; Hegseth's senior military assistant, Lt. Gen. Jennifer Short; and the U.S. military representative to the NATO military committee, Vice Adm. Shoshana Chatfield. All were dismissed as part of a campaign to root out diversity, equity and inclusion from the military and restore what Hegseth has described as a 'warrior ethos.' Hegseth also recently withdrew the nomination of Rear Adm. Michael 'Buzz' Donnelly to lead the Navy's 7th Fleet in Japan -- its largest overseas force -- amid reports in conservative media that seven years earlier the admiral had allowed a drag performance to take place on the aircraft carrier Ronald Reagan. The decision not to promote Sims, who is white, seems unrelated to any issues of race or gender. Rather, the general's career seems to have become tangled up in broader suspicions about leaks and a mistrust of senior military officers that have defined much of Hegseth's first six months on the job. Hegseth, a former Fox News host and an Iraq War veteran, came to the Pentagon with little managerial experience. Since his arrival, a series of firings and resignations in his inner circle have left him with only a skeleton staff of civilian aides to run his office. He has been without a permanent chief of staff since late April. Ricky Buria, a recently retired Marine colonel who has forged a close relationship with Hegseth, has been serving in the critical role. But White House officials, who have concerns about Buria's competence and qualifications, have blocked Hegseth from formally appointing him to the job, officials said. Buria, meanwhile, has clashed repeatedly with many of Hegseth's closest aides and some officers in the Pentagon. This spring, Eric Geressy, a retired sergeant major who served with Hegseth in Iraq and now advises him in the Pentagon, threatened to quit after an argument with Buria, according to people with knowledge of the situation. Around the same time, the White House directed Hegseth to cease using polygraph tests on his team, after one of his senior aides complained, a former Pentagon official said. The rift and the decision to stop the polygraph testing were reported earlier by The Washington Post. Geressy briefly went to his home in Florida before Hegseth persuaded him to return, officials said. Hegseth is also still contending with a review by the Pentagon's inspector general related to his disclosure on the Signal messaging app of the precise timing of U.S. fighter jets' airstrikes against the Iranian-backed Houthi militia in Yemen in March. The office has received evidence that the information that Hegseth put in the commercial chat app came from a classified Central Command document, according to two U.S. officials with knowledge of the review. The classified origins of the information were reported earlier by the Post. The infighting, investigations and personnel churn have strained Hegseth's ability to manage critical operations in the Pentagon. Hegseth found himself in the crosshairs this month after Democrats and Republicans in Congress blamed him for pausing critical shipments of interceptors and other arms to Ukraine without sufficiently consulting with the White House or the State Department. The suspension was particularly jarring because just days earlier Trump had said he was open to selling more weapons to Ukraine after meeting with President Volodymyr Zelenskyy on the sidelines of a NATO meeting in The Hague. It also left the impression that Hegseth and his top aides had failed to keep the president and senior White House officials in the loop. As aides to Hegseth traded blame, and then tried to play down the impact of the pause, Trump dramatically overruled the Pentagon, saying he was unhappy with President Vladimir Putin of Russia. In a further twist, Trump endorsed a plan for NATO countries to send Patriot antimissile systems to Ukraine and replace them by purchasing new arms from the United States. It was an approach conceived by NATO countries. Hegseth has delegated responsibility for working out details of the arms transfers to senior U.S. military officers in Europe. The frustration with Hegseth is seeping out. Sen. Thom Tillis, R-N.C., who cast the deciding vote to confirm Hegseth, this month called him ill-suited to lead the Pentagon. 'With the passing of time, I think it's clear he's out of his depth as a manager of a large, complex organization,' Tillis told CNN. For now, Hegseth's missteps do not seem to have hurt his standing with the person who matters most: Trump. Like Trump, Hegseth had a career in television before joining the administration and relishes the performative aspects of his job. As defense secretary, he regularly posts videos that show him exercising with troops. The photo ops -- known inside the Pentagon as 'troop touches' -- are a central part of almost all his public appearances, current and former aides said. Several officials have complained that the photos and videos -- including one that he posted from Omaha Beach in Normandy in which he joins Army Rangers carrying a soldier on a stretcher as part of D-Day remembrances -- are distractions that serve primarily to bolster his image. Anna Kelly, a White House spokesperson, said that Hegseth retained Trump's 'full confidence' and cited the 'critical role' he played 'in ensuring the flawless execution' of the strikes on Iranian nuclear facilities in June. Current and former military officials said that Trump largely bypassed Hegseth in the days leading up to the strikes and instead relied on Caine and Gen. Michael Erik Kurilla, the head of Central Command, for counsel. But officials with knowledge of the president's thinking said Trump especially admired his defense secretary's combative response at a news conference to reports questioning the effectiveness of the attack. Today Hegseth is managing the Pentagon with a smaller immediate staff than when he started in January. Several top aides were forced out or quit. In late April, three top aides were fired and escorted from the building. Hegseth has repeatedly accused them, without offering evidence, of leaking classified information to the media. The fired aides, who have not been charged with any wrongdoing, were recently told that an investigation into the allegations against them was in its final stages and would soon be shared with the Pentagon's senior leaders, officials said. In the wake of their dismissal and a series of negative stories about Hegseth's performance in the job, Karoline Leavitt, the White House press secretary, offered a window into how Hegseth views the department he now runs. 'This is what happens when the entire Pentagon is working against you and working against the monumental change you are trying to implement,' she said. That same spirit seems to animate the Pentagon today. Only a few months ago, Sims' promotion to four stars seemed to be a given. Of the last 21 officers to hold his current position, 19 were promoted to four-star rank. 'He's the type of person you would want your kids serving under -- extremely dedicated, selfless and loyal,' said Brynt Parmeter, who stepped down in June as the Pentagon's chief talent management officer and has known Sims for more than three decades. The Pentagon gave a more muted assessment. In a statement, Sean Parnell, the Pentagon's chief spokesperson, thanked Sims for his 'decades of service.' 'We wish him well in his future endeavors,' Parnell wrote. This article originally appeared in The New York Times. Copyright 2025

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