Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Man who shot two kindergartners names motive as ‘genocide, oppression of Palestinians’

Police report that the children are in critical condition and may need surgery.

School Classroom, Desk and Chairs
School classroom. Credit: Pixabay.

Law-enforcement officers revealed that a shooter who attacked children at a private Christian school in northern California left behind a note describing his anti-Israel beliefs as a reason for committing the crime.

Glenn Litton, 56, shot Roman Mendez, 6, and Elias Wolford, 5, with a handgun on Dec. 4 at Feather River Adventist School in Oroville, Calif. Litton died shortly thereafter in what has been described as most likely from a self-inflicted wound.

Police say the two boys are in critical condition and may need surgery.

On Thursday, law enforcement released a statement from Litton describing his motive.

“Countermeasure involving child executions has now been imposed at the Seventh Day Adventist school in California, United States by The International Alliance,” the note read. “I, Lieutenant Glenn Litton of the Alliance carried out countermeasure in necessitated response to America’s involvement with Genocide and Oppression of Palestinians along with attacks towards Yemen.”

Litton’s criminal record showed convictions and imprisonments going back to the 1990s on such charges as identity theft, fraud and forgery. Police said mental-health problems may be related to his actions and that for the crime, he used a “ghost gun” assembled from different parts.

Two Israelis were also detained in overnight raids.
The terrorists were eliminated in weekend airstrikes in the Gaza Strip.
Israel’s U.N. ambassador cited reports of torture, killings and disappearances, calling for a stronger international response.
RIAS documented 8,725 incidents in 2025, more than triple the number recorded in 2022.
The Israeli city ranked behind only Silicon Valley, New York and London in Startup Genome’s 2026 global survey.
“Now we are determined to bring our security cooperation to new heights, for the benefit of both peoples and for the benefit of stability in the region,” said Israel Katz.