FORT STEWART, Ga. — Fort Stewart officials announced the identity of a suspect during a news conference after five soldiers were wounded in a shooting in southeast Georgia on Wednesday. During the ...
A Fort Stewart U.S. Army sergeant identified as the man who wounded five soldiers in an Aug. 6 shooting at the Georgia base was a noncommissioned officer from Jacksonville who recently got into ...
Editor's note: This page summarizes news on the shooting at Fort Stewart for Wednesday, Aug. 6. For the latest news on the Fort Stewart shooting, visit USA TODAY's coverage for Thursday, Aug. 7.
Journalists' duty is not to echo authority but to help readers see what's really happening. What Hegseth proposes is an Orwellian Ministry of Truth, where propaganda is the only source of information.
Newly released records reveal the state the suspected Fort Stewart shooter was in at the time of a DUI arrest months before an attack on Aug. 6 that left five soldiers wounded at the Georgia military ...
A soldier at Fort Stewart allegedly shot and wounded five fellow soldiers with a privately owned handgun. Fort Stewart policy requires registration of privately owned weapons on base. The Army uses ...
A shooting that injured five soldiers at one of the country's largest military bases on Wednesday has resurfaced questions about a long-standing army policy that largely prevents service members from ...
Army Captain Jacob Suenkel pleaded guilty to stealing equipment from Fort Stewart. Suenkel stole skid-steer loaders, trailers, generators, a tractor and other equipment and sold them online. Suenkel ...
Zachary Cunning was reportedly arrested on warrants for second-degree cruelty to children and second-degree murder. Cunning was denied bond when he appeared before a Liberty County Magistrate on Sept.
The soldier accused of opening fire Wednesday at his Army base in Georgia, wounding five people, had endured relentless bullying over his stutter almost as soon as he joined the military, former ...