The Detroit Evening Report
Detroit Police shot a teenager who was running away from them after they arrested another teen near Campus Martius downtown. Chief Todd Bettison says officers approached a group of young men and arrested one who was holding a suspicious-looking backpack. He says they searched the backpack and found a gun in it. An 18-year-old started walking away from the group and officers chased him. Bettison says the officer who shot the fleeing teen feared for his safety. This happened a few hours before the annual fireworks over the Detroit River. Police said the teen was shot several times and is in serious condition. Police also arrested minors who violated the city's 8 p.m. curfew and held them until a parent or legal guardian came to get them. (Batcheller/Raiyn) - Pat Batcheller [http://wdet.org/author/pbatcheller]contributed to this report ADDITIONAL HEADLINES FROM TUESDAY, JUNE 24, 2026 SCOTUS RULES AGAINST MICHIGAN FAMILY The Supreme Court ruled today against a Michigan family who said their rights were violated when their county sold their house for less than half its open-market value to cover a tax bill of just over $2,000. Isabella County maintained that auction sale prices are always lower than open real estate transactions. It said requiring foreclosure prices to match the open market would essentially end those sales. PROJECT DOCUMENTING NATIVE BOARDING SCHOOLS REACHES CLOSE A project that gathered testimonies from more than 360 survivors of Native American Boarding schools has finished its first phase. The Tulsa-based National Native American Boarding School Healing Coalition [https://boardingschoolhealing.org] collected video oral histories from Indigenous survivors across 19 states. The stories will be preserved in the Library of Congress. The project aimed to document the systemic abuse endured in boarding schools and how survivors found healing. It identified eight boarding schools that operated in Michigan. Three are still open. HURON VALLEY WARDEN ON LEAVE FOLLOWING INMATE DEATHS Jeremy Howard, the warden at Michigan’s only women’s prison has gone on personal leave after three deaths at the Huron Valley Correctional Facility. The Michigan Department of Corrections told the Detroit Free Press [https://www.freep.com/story/news/local/michigan/2026/06/23/warden-jeremy-howard-michigan-womens-prison-personal-leave-michelle-floyd/90655246007/?gnt-cfr=1&gca-cat=p&gca-uir=true&gca-epti=z117061p119250c119250e1193xxv117061d--55--b--55--&gca-ft=50&gca-ds=sophi] today the leave is “personal and unrelated to current events." The deaths of Khaira Howard, Rebecca Fackler and Ashley Hoath are still under investigation. A former corrections officer at the facility was sentenced last week for criminal sexual conduct involving an inmate. The warden at the Cooper Street Correctional Facility in Jackson has been temporarily assigned to lead the Women’s Huron Valley Correctional Facility. PWHL ANNOUNCES OUTSIDE INVESTORS The Professional Women’s Hockey League announced the Illitch Company is one of its first two outside investors. Toronto-based Kilmer Sports Ventures is the other. Mark and Kimbra Walter founded and funded the league in 2023 with hundreds of millions of their own dollars. Mark Walter is the owner of the LA Lakers, the Dodgers, and the LA Spark. The PWHL has not yet turned a profit but just two and a half years later has doubled its size to 12 teams – including Detroit’s scheduled to play at LCA in the fall.
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