Lives lost in the Capital Gazette shooting
"Face the Nation" reflects on the five lives lost in the Capital Gazette newsroom shooting. Despite the tragedy, the Annapolis, Maryland, newspaper was still able to publish the following day.
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"Face the Nation" reflects on the five lives lost in the Capital Gazette newsroom shooting. Despite the tragedy, the Annapolis, Maryland, newspaper was still able to publish the following day.
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The man who killed five people in a shooting rampage at a newspaper in Maryland in 2018 has been sentenced to more than five life sentences without the possibility of parole. CBSN Baltimore has the latest on sentencing for Jarrod Ramos.
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Jarrod Ramos admitted to killing five journalists in a mass shooting at the Capital Gazette in 2018
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CBS News has learned more about the five victims killed by a gunman in The Capital Gazette newsroom on Thursday. Chip Reid joins CBSN from Annapolis, Maryland with the latest details on the case, and the latest from the woman who suspect pled guilty to stalking.
Maryland newspaper shooting suspect Jarrod Ramos has not been cooperating with detectives, so police are using old court documents and Twitter posts to gather clues about what may have sparked his anger. CBS News justice and homeland security correspondent Jeff Pegues joins CBSN to discuss the investigation.
The victims of Thursday's mass shooting at the Capital Gazette in Annapolis were remembered at a vigil not far from where the suspect, Jarrod Ramos, was charged with five counts of first-degree murder. He appeared in court by video link from the nearby county jail where he is on suicide watch. CBS News' Chip Reid reports.
Journalists at The Capital Gazette took to social media to seek help and report on the fatal shooting in their newsroom.
The man suspected of opening fire at the Capital Gazette newspaper has not been cooperating with detectives. But his actions on Twitter, and in court, are giving police clues about what prompted the shooting. CBS News justice and homeland security correspondent Jeff Pegues reports.
Journalists at The Capital Gazette took to social media to seek help and report on the fatal shooting
The suspect in a deadly shooting at a newspaper office in Maryland is in custody but has not yet been identified. Authorities said five people were killed in the shooting. CBS News security analyst Paul Viollis joins CBSN with more.
Police said the suspect, Jarrod Ramos, apparently used a shotgun in Thursday's shooting in Maryland
Rob Hiaasen, an assistant editor and columnist at the Capital Gazette, was killed during a gunman's rampage
Police have arrested 38-year-old Jarrod Ramos in the shooting deaths of five employees at The Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland. CBS News' Chip Reid reports on Ramos' history of threats, and retired senior FBI profiler Mary Ellen O'Toole joins CBSN with analysis.
The man accused of killing five people at The Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland was expected to appear in court Friday. CBS News national correspondent Chip Reid joins CBSN with the latest on the investigation into Jarrod Ramos.
Five people were killed Thursday at the offices of The Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Maryland. The suspect, 38-year-old Jarrod Ramos, is in custody. He had threatened the newspaper in the past over their coverage of his guilty plea in a social media stalking case. "CBS This Morning" co-host Norah O'Donnell joins CBSN from Annapolis, Maryland, with the latest on the investigation.
Mary Ellen O'Toole says many factors likely contributed to Jarrod Ramos' alleged decision to go on a rampage
We're learning more information about the suspect who allegedly opened fire at the Capital Gazette, a local newspaper in Maryland. Jeff Pegues has the latest.
Five people were killed after a gunman opened fire at the Capital Gazette, a local newspaper in Maryland. One witness says he was in the office next door when it happened. Chip Reid has the latest.
Police and the newspaper say Gerald Fischman, Rob Hiaasen, John McNamara, Rebecca Smith and Wendi Winters lost their lives
The grieving and the reporting jumbled together for staffers after the fatal shooting, but they were determined to put out the next day's edition
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Five people were killed in a shooting at a newspaper office in Anne Arundel County, Maryland, police said. Several other people were "gravely injured," acting police chief William Krampf said at a press conference. CBS News justice and homeland security correspondent Jeff Pegues joins CBSN with the latest.
President Trump appeared to lay out his red line of action on Friday when he warned that if the Iranian government began "killing people like they have in the past, we would get involved."
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The subpoenas threatened a criminal indictment related to Jerome Powell's testimony before the Senate Banking Committee in June 2025, according to the Fed chair.
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In the civil rights era, the agency formed its Community Relations Service, a group of dozens of federal specialists who were informally referred to as "America's peacemaker."
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Oprah Winfrey is one of the best-known, most-admired and successful people on the planet. But for years she seemed powerless to conquer her fluctuating weight problem … until new medications, and a new attitude about her weight, gave her a breakthrough, which she describes in "Enough," a new book she has co-written with Dr. Ania Jastreboff. They talk with Jane Pauley about an individual's genetically-influenced weight range, and how to reset it. Winfrey also relates the long road she traveled since she began her TV career in Nashville, facing sexism, racism, and comments about her weight.
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President Trump appeared to lay out his red line of action on Friday when he warned that if the Iranian government began "killing people like they have in the past, we would get involved."
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