The Alabama State Board of Education voting on a resolution at its May 8 meeting in the Gordon Pearsons Building in Montgomery, Alabama. (Anna Barrett/Alabama Reflector) Republican voters in north Alabama will pick between the chair of an Alabama Moms for Liberty chapter and a candidate running a low-profile campaign to represent them on the State Board of Education. Voters in the district, which covers Limestone, Madison, DeKalb and Jackson counties, will have to choose between Emily Jones and William Matthews. According to the Alabama Secretary of State’s website, Jones had 20,354 (42.31%) votes and Matthews had 15,504 (32.23%) votes in official returns in the May 19th primary. The winner of the runoff will face Democratic nominee Shatika Armstrong. The winner of the election will succeed incumbent Wayne Reynolds, who is not seeking re-election. GET THE MORNING HEADLINES. SU...
A grad student stands by the sculpture 'Infinite Possibility' outside the Brown University's Engineering Research Center, restricted by crime scene tape, on Dec. 14, 2025, after a mass shooting there. People who carry out mass public shootings often display observable warning signs long before an attack, according to a new study. (Photo by Christopher Shea/Rhode Island Current) People who carry out mass public shootings often display observable warning signs long before an attack, but those signals are frequently fragmented across friends, family members, coworkers and institutions, making them difficult to piece together, according to a new study from the Regional Gun Violence Research Consortium at the Rockefeller Institute of Government, a nonpartisan public policy think tank. The report, which analyzed a sample of 171 mass public shootings in the United States between 1999 and 2024, such as those at workplaces, schools or shopping malls, found that these attacks are ...