When co-host Lawrence Jones asked Leavitt on Fox & Friends on Monday what the motive was, she didn’t say if there was a personal connection to that church community.
Advertisement “From what I understand based on my conversation with the FBI director, all they know right now is that this was an individual who hated people of the Mormon faith,” Leavitt said.
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Karoline Leavitt on the suspected motive behind yesterday’s Grand Blanc, Michigan church shooting:
— Martin Walsh (@martinwalsh__) September 29, 2025
"This was an individual who hated people of the Mormon faith, and they are trying to understand more about this and how premeditated it was”pic.twitter.com/67VnqEMfdV
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Investigators issued a warning, predicting an increase in the death toll due to the unaccounted-for status of several individuals and the possibility of finding additional victims among the rubble.
Emergency crews suspended the search late Sunday night and are expected to resume clearing debris early Monday morning.This incident occurred one day after a gunman opened fire inside a Latter-day Saints church in Michigan, killing at least four people and injuring eight others, including children, before setting the building ablaze
Officials said they do not yet know how many parishioners remain unaccounted for. A source familiar with the investigation told CNN the number could be as high as seven, though that estimate may include survivors who have not yet been able to contact their families. Moments later, images captured the building engulfed in flames, its frame swallowed by thick smoke and fire.The fire reduced the church to its foundation, complicating recovery efforts
“We do believe there were people up there that were near that fire, and they were unable to get out of the church. So we do believe that we will have additional victims once we’re able to search that,” Grand Blanc Township Police Chief William Renye told reporters.Police said the gunman, identified as 40-year-old Tomas Jacob Sanford, drove his pickup truck through the church’s front doors around 10:25 a.m. before opening fire with an assault-style rifle. The vehicle had two large American flags in its bed and deer antlers mounted on the front bumper.
Officials said the suspect was neutralized roughly eight minutes after the attack began, the New York Post reported.