Passa ai contenuti principali

Charleston shootings: Dylann Roof photos found online

An image appearing to show Charleston church shooting suspect Dylann Roof burning a US flag - 11 May 2015
The series of images appear to show Dylann Roof burning the US flag and posing with guns
Images have surfaced online that appear to show the gunman that killed nine people at an African-American church in South Carolina posing with a gun.
The collection of photographs found on a website also show 21-year-old Dylann Roof burning the US flag and visiting a former slave plantation.
In one image he is shown staring down the camera while sitting on a chair in camouflage trousers holding a gun.
It is unclear who posted the images on the site, which was found on Saturday.

Flag criticism

The website also carries a racist manifesto, the provenance of which is also unknown. Internet records suggest the website's domain was registered in February but it is unclear who was behind it.
A law enforcement official, quoted by AP, said the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was looking into the website.
Data from the images show many of them were taken in April and May this year.
Many of the photographs show Mr Roof posing with the Confederate flag, a symbol used in the US south during the civil war when southern states tried to break away to prevent the abolition of slavery.
It is viewed by many as symbolising the white supremacy advocated by those states at the time.
null
Several of the photographs showed Mr Roof holding a Confederate flag
null
The 21-year-old was also seen posing with wax reproductions of slaves
null
Some showed him at sites that appeared to have historic ties to the slavery-era in the south
Former Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney has joined calls for South Carolina to take down the controversial flag flying outside its capitol building in Columbia.
It follows US President Barack Obama's remark that the flag belonged "in a museum".
A demonstration was due to take place there later on Saturday by activists calling for its removal.
On Friday, South Carolina's Republican state representative Doug Brannon told MSNBC that he planned to introduce legislation to remove the flag.
Elsewhere, Democratic presidential contender Hillary Clinton has made an impassioned appeal for tougher gun laws, saying that her heart was "bursting" for the families of the victims of the Charleston shooting.
Media captionHillary Clinton: I am not and will not be afraid to keep fighting for common sense reforms"
"We can have common sense gun reforms that keep weapons out of the hands of criminals and the violently unstable, while representing responsible gun owners," she told a gathering of mayors in San Francisco.
Mr Roof was arrested on Thursday and charged with the murders of nine African-Americans at the Emanuel African Methodist Church in downtown Charleston.
Police said he spent an hour sitting with parishioners inside the church before opening fire on them on Wednesday evening.

Return to church

Crowds gathered outside the historic church on Saturday to hear pastors from across the US lead prayers. Many travelled hundreds of miles from across the country to pay their respects.
"There was an overwhelming feeling that made me drive here," Monte Talmadge, a 62-year-old army veteran who drove nearly 300 miles (480km) to get to Charleston, told Reuters.
null
Church members entered the building for the first time since the shooting last week
null
Rev Franklin Ferguson was one of the pastors leading prayers outside
null
The memorial at the church is growing with bouquets of flowers, balloons and teddy bears
Also on Saturday, a group of congregation members met for the first time in the room where the killings took place. One of those who attended, Harold Washington, told the Associated Press it was an emotional meeting.
Several rallies were due on Saturday, with one in Charleston organised by the Black Lives Matter movement, which began after the 2013 acquittal of George Zimmerman over the killing of an unarmed African-American teenager, Trayvon Martin.
Up to 3,000 people are also expected to join hands in a march across the Ravanel Bridge, one of the city's main thoroughfares.
The church is due to reopen on Sunday for a service at 09:00 local time (13:00 GMT).
null

The victims

null
Left to right top: Cynthia Hurd, Clementa Pinckney, Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, Tywanza Sanders. Left to right bottom: Ethel Lance, Depayne Middleton-Doctor, Susie Jackson, Daniel Simmons Sr
  • Cynthia Hurd, 54
  • Rev Clementa Pinckney, 41
  • Rev Sharonda Coleman-Singleton, 45
  • Tywanza Sanders, 26
  • Ethel Lance, 70
  • Rev Depayne Middleton-Doctor, 49
  • Susie Jackson, 87
  • Rev Daniel Simmons Sr, 74
  • Myra Thompson, 59

Commenti

Post popolari in questo blog

Dengue, aumentano i casi in Italia: da dove arriva e perché sta crescendo il virus delle zanzare

Sono 500 i casi di Dengue confermati nel nostro Paese da gennaio 2024. Il maxi focolaio di Fano con oltre 100 contagi fa temere un'ulteriore diffusione.     Sangue in provetta L'aumento vertiginoso dei casi di  Dengue  – infezione trasmessa dalle zanzare del genere  Aedes , come la zanzara tigre – fa salire l'attenzione su una malattia che l'Oms aveva già inserito tra le  10 minacce per la salute globale  ancor prima dell'ondata epidemica attuale. I timori si alimentano anche in Italia, con il recente focolaio scoppiato a Fano, nelle Marche, che finora registras 102 casi accertati e altri dieci probabili.   Già il 2023 era stato un anno record, con oltre  6 milioni di contagi  e casi autoctoni registrati anche in zone, come l'Europa e l'Italia, in cui la malattia non è normalmente presente (ma è a volte diagnosticata nei viaggiatori provenienti da aree a rischio). Tuttavia, le cifre relative ai primi mesi del 2024 sono state capaci di sb...

Impiantato un cuore artificiale che funziona come i treni a levitazione magnetica maglev

  Un uomo ha vissuto per 8 giorni con un cuore artificiale che pompa sangue sfruttando la levitazione magnetica: è andato tutto bene e presto ripeteremo l'operazione su un altro paziente.     Il cuore artificiale totale (TAH) in titanio prodotto dall’azienda BiVACOR. Lo scorso luglio  è stato trapiantato per la prima volta   un cuore artificiale in titanio che funziona con la stessa tecnologia che fa correre sulle rotaie i  maglev , i treni superveloci a levitazione magnetica . Il TAH (acronimo che viene dall'inglese  total artificial heart ) è stato impiantato in Texas in un paziente statunitense di 58 anni in attesa di un cuore umano, e  l'ha tenuto in vita per otto giorni senza dare alcun effetto collaterale , finché il paziente stesso non è stato sottoposto a trapianto. Cuore sospeso.  Il cuore artificiale, grande quanto un pugno, non è sottoposto ad usura meccanica:  l'unica parte che si muove, infatti, è un piccolo rotore interno c...

Il legame (negativo) tra bevande zuccherate e malattie cardiovascolari

  Bere bevande zuccherate aumenta il rischio di soffrire di malattie cardiovascolari: meglio concedersi un dolcetto ogni tanto.     Bevande zuccherate? Se ci tieni alla salute del tuo cuore, meglio di no. È meglio bere una bevanda zuccherata o mangiare un dolcetto? Stando a quanto scoperto da uno studio  pubblicato su  Frontiers in Public Health , la seconda. Analizzando l'impatto del consumo di zucchero sul rischio di soffrire di malattie cardiovascolari, i ricercatori hanno infatti scoperto che  bere bibite zuccherate aumenta il rischio di venire colpiti da ictus, insufficienza cardiaca, fibrillazione atriale e aneurisma . «La cosa più sorprendente è stata scoprire che diverse fonti di zucchero aggiunto hanno un impatto differente sul rischio di malattie cardiovascolari», commenta  Suzanne Janzi , una degli autori, sottolineando l'importanza di considerare non solo  quanto  zucchero consumiamo, ma anche  di che tipo . Lo studio.  ...