After Years of Anger Directed at CDC, Shooting Manifests Worst Fears

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The day after a lone gunman opened fire on the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta, killing a police officer and shattering windows across the agency’s campus, employees were reeling from shock, fear and rage.

“We’re mad this has happened,” Dr. Debra Houry, the CDC’s chief medical officer, said in a large group call Saturday morning with Susan Monarez, the agency’s newly confirmed director, who tried to reassure them. Another employee on the call, a recording of which was obtained by The New York Times, asked Monarez: “Are you able to speak to the misinformation, the disinformation that caused this issue? And what your plan forward is to ensure this doesn’t happen again?”

The investigation into the shooting and the gunman’s potential motives was still in early stages Saturday. But law enforcement officials said that the suspect identified in the shooting had become fixated with the coronavirus vaccine, believing that it was the cause of his physical ailments.

Inside the CDC, the shooting was viewed as part of a pattern in which health workers have been targets of political, verbal and physical assaults on them and their workplaces.

Dr. Demetre Daskalakis, the director of the CDC’s respiratory diseases division, told Monarez on the call that employees wanted to see a plan for their safety and an acknowledgment that the attack was not just “a shooting that just happened across the street with some stray bullets.”

Daskalakis was not in his office when its windows were pierced by one of the gunman’s bullets.

Many Americans, and even some top federal health officials in the Trump administration, have blamed the CDC for lockdowns, school closings and vaccine mandates, even when some of those decisions were made by state and local governments, or businesses.

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“I am heartbroken, angry and somehow not surprised,” said Dr. Anne Zink, a former president of the Association of State and Territorial Health Officials who served as Alaska’s chief medical officer until last year.

Threats against her have increased even though she is no longer a government official, she said.

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The Times spoke with or texted a dozen CDC scientists Saturday, who discussed the shooting on the condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation. They described being terrified as bullets shattered the glass windows, and some recounted the chilling sight of casings littered in front of the CDC.

In interviews, the employees conveyed sadness about the police officer who had died trying to keep them safe, and a feeling of betrayal and devastation at being demonized while working to improve Americans’ health.

The sound of rapid gunfire started around 4:50 p.m. Friday. One scientist who evaluates COVID vaccines had just stepped out of her building to walk to her car. As she headed to pick up her infant daughter from day care, she heard shots over her right shoulder, she said. She turned around, ran back inside and called security to confirm what was happening.

“CDC SHELTER IN PLACE. GUNMAN AT EMORY POINT,” she wrote to friends and colleagues in a group chat at 4:57 p.m. (The agency sent its alert to employees at 5:13 p.m.)

The employee and three others barricaded themselves in an office, moving two loaded bookshelves against the door. She put a sticky note over the motion sensor for the light switch and laid flat on the floor for hours, before a SWAT team arrived to clear the floor.

She finally made it home to her husband and two young children around midnight. In a text message sent at 3:11 a.m., she said she was still awake, too traumatized to sleep.

At least four buildings were damaged by bullets, Monarez said in a statement Friday night. Photos shared by workers revealed glass windows shattered by bullet holes. One showed as many as 18 bullet holes in a single building.

One of the buildings included a containment lab of the highest biosecurity level, but under tight security and with reinforced walls. It was not hit in the attack. The CDC studies some of the most dangerous pathogens in the world, including Ebola and Marburg viruses and the bacteria that cause anthrax.

Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who oversees the CDC, did not make a statement Friday. Late Saturday morning, more than 30 minutes after posting photos of himself fishing on social media, Kennedy posted condolences on his official X account and pledged to support CDC employees.

In an email sent later in the day to the entire Department of Health and Human Services, including the CDC, Kennedy wrote: “This is a reminder of the very human challenges public servants sometimes face — even in places dedicated to healing and progress. But it also reinforces the importance of the work you do every day.”

On the Saturday morning CDC call, an employee asked Monarez twice if she had spoken to Kennedy. Both times, Monarez replied that she had been in touch with the “office of the secretary.”

Kennedy has previously called the CDC a “cesspool of corruption” and a fascist enterprise. He has accused the agency’s scientists of ignoring vaccine harms to children, comparing it to the Catholic Church’s cover-up of child sex abuse. He has also disparaged the COVID-19 vaccine, calling it the “deadliest” vaccine ever made.

Some scientists said the attack was an extreme example of the violence many health workers have experienced since the pandemic began.

“The intersection of disinformation, conspiracy theories and political violence is getting scarier by the day,” said Dr. Celine Gounder, an infectious disease specialist at Bellevue Hospital Center. “I’m very worried about how this is now going beyond defunding of infectious diseases and public health to political violence against the people working in those fields,” she said.

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Nearly 9,000 employees and contractors work at the campus where the shooting took place, but it is unclear how many might have been absent because of off-site work and vacations, or because they had just left the office.

Dr. Fiona Havers, who resigned from her position as a senior CDC adviser on vaccine policy earlier this year, was on lockdown at Emory University Hospital while visiting a colleague. She heard the sirens, and stayed in close contact with her friends and former colleagues, including in a 900-person chat group where CDC employees shared terrifying details of the shooting.

“I am feeling very angry and very sad for my colleagues that are still at CDC,” said Havers, who quit after Kennedy fired all 17 members of a committee that makes recommendations on which shots Americans should take and when.

“This was a major attack on a federal facility,” she said.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

New-look Twins are getting it done in wake of deadline selloff

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In the wake of a trade deadline selloff that jettisoned 10 regulars, the Twins are managing to play some pretty good baseball with prospects, minor league vets and healthy veterans who survived the purge.

The Twins made Sunday’s series finale against Kansas City a bullpen day, and fielded a starting lineup that included only two players you’d call major league veterans, but beat the Royals, 5-3 in 11 innings, in the rubber match of a three-game series in front of 26,746 at Target Field.

The Twins have now won 2 of 3 series, and are 5-4 overall against the three teams ahead of them in the American League Central, since the trade deadline drastically altered the roster.

Rookie infielder Luke Keaschall, who earlier extended his hitting streak to start his mejor league career to 11 games, hit a two-run, two-out home run off reliever Carlos Estevez for the winning runs. Michael Tonkin (1-0) pitched scoreless 10th and 11th innings for the win.

With starting pitchers Pablo Lopez (shoulder) and Simeon Woods Richarson (illness) on the injured list, the Twins got a good collective start from Jose Urena, Kody Funderburk and Pierson Ohl, who turned a 2-1 lead over to Cole Sands with two out and none on in the seventh inning.

Sands allowed base hits to the first two batters he faced, the second a two-run home run by Vinnie Pasquantinto that made it 3-2.

But the Twins quickly got a break when Royals left fielder John Rave tried to make a sliding catch on a low liner from Austin Martin with one out in the eighth inning. Martin wound up on third, and scored on Ryan Jeffers’ two-out single to left to tie the game 3-3.

With the team’s best player, center fielder Byron Buxton, on the IL with rib cage inflammation, Jeffers and Trevor Larnach were two of three players in the lineup who made the team out of training camp. The third was Mickey Gasper, who made the active roster as a utility player but has spent most of the season at Class AAA St. Paul — and was making his first major league start at catcher.

The Twins took a 2-1 on Ryan Fitzgerald’s two-run home run off starter Ryan Bergert in the third inning.

With Gasper on base on a leadoff walk in the third, Fitzgerald, a minor league veteran playing in his fourth major league game, hit a line drive into the home run porch in right field to make it 2-1. It was the infielder’s first major league hit, and the 15th time a Twins player had homered for his first MLB hit.

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Lynx top Liberty again to expand first-place lead to 6.5 games

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No, it’s not mathematically secure. But Minnesota’s grip on home-court advantage throughout the WNBA playoffs is about as firm as it can be on Aug. 10 after the Lynx downed the Liberty 83-71 in Brooklyn in a nationally-televised matinee Sunday.

Minnesota (27-5) now leads the second-place Liberty (20-11) by 6.5 games with just 12 games to play in the regular season.

Natisha Hiedeman #2 of the Minnesota Lynx shoots the ball during the second half against the New York Liberty at Barclays Center on Aug. 10, 2025 in the Brooklyn borough of New York City. (Photo by Ishika Samant/Getty Images)

Minnesota trailed by two at the break, but exploded for 30 points in a third frame in which it went 12 for 18 from the field. Natisha Hiedeman and Dijonai Carrington combined for 17 points off the bench in the quarter.

Carrington finished with 15 points and six rebounds. Kayla McBride had 18 points on the strength of four triples, while Courtney Williams had 14 points, seven assists and five boards and Alanna Smith finished with eight points, nine rebounds, seven assists, four steals and three blocks while quarterbacking another stupendous defensive effort.

After scoring 24 points in the opening quarter, the Liberty tallied just 47 points combined over the final three frames.

Sabina Ionescu finished with just 10 points on 4 for 15 shooting as the Liberty shot 42% from the floor as a team.

“Our anchor is Lan,” McBride said.

The two teams will meet two more times — in Minnesota on Saturday and back in Brooklyn on Aug. 19. Should Minnesota win at least one of those bouts, it was also secure the tiebreaker, which would push its advantage over the Liberty to the brink of insurmountable.

Both teams are still without their star forwards, as Napheesa Collier (ankle) and Breanna Stewart (knee) continue to miss time. But the Lynx continue to find ways to win, even sans the presumptive MVP.

Minnesota is now 5-1 this season without Collier in the lineup.

“It keeps Phee humble,” Reeve joked of the team’s success sans its best player.

In all seriousness, Collier exudes excitement on social media, and has sent Reeve numerous messages expressing her pride in the performance of her teammates.

“I think what we’ve learned — it’s what we know, but it’s reinforced — is how gritty we are,” Reeve said. “Just throw some stuff at us. This team doesn’t break. You may beat us, but you’re not breaking us, and there’s a big difference there. They have such high belief in one another and high belief, really, in the group. … So we’re able to get through tough times.”

How much does the top seed matter? Well, look no further than the site of Sunday’s victory. It was the same floor were Minnesota lost the decisive Game 5 of the WNBA Finals last October. Had that game been at Target Center, perhaps the result would’ve been different.

Those little advantages can be the difference between euphoria and heartbreak, and the Lynx are doing everything in their power to stack the deck in their favor this time around.

Twins: No plans to give Byron Buxton extra rest as season winds down

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Byron Buxton appears close to returning from the injured list and the Twins have no plans to give the veteran center fielder more off days as the team winds down a season that won’t end in the postseason.

Sidelined since leaving a July 26 loss to Washington with inflammation in his left rib cage, Buxton will travel to New York for a three-game series against the Yankees and could be activated as early as Monday.

Before getting hurt, Buxton, 31, was on pace to get near his career-high of 140 games played in 2017. He has played in 85 games and been on the IL twice, the first time for a concussion suffered in a collision with then-teammate Carlos Correa.

“I think we’re just going to plan on playing Buck every day as he has been,” manager Rocco Baldelli said before the Twins series finale against Kansas City on Sunday. “When he needs a day, he gets a day. It’s pretty straightforward. I’m not overthinking it. I think we’re going to have Buck on the field every day that he is capable of playing.”

An all-star for the second time this season, Buxton leads the Twins in home runs (23), RBIs (59), triples (4), stolen bases (17) and — among players with at least 50 at-bats — OPS (.901)..

Keaschall and counting

Rookie infielder Luke Keaschall has reached base in all 12 of his major league games, and has an 11-game hit streak to start his major league career.

Playing second base in his fifth game since returning from a broken forearm, Keaschall singled sharply to left field to lead off the second inning to extend his streak.

Keaschall is now second in team history to only Glen Williams, who started his major league career with a 13-game hitting streak in 2005.

Welcome to the club

Ryan Fitzgerald, a longtime minor league vet who signed a minor league contract with the Twins, hit a two-run home run to right field in the third inning for his first major league hit.

Playing third base, Fitzgerald, 31, is the 15th player in Twins history to homer for his first major league hit. The last to do it was Caleb Hamilton on Sept. 25, 2022.

Briefly

Mickey Gasper became the first catcher other than Ryan Jeffers and Christian Vazquez to start a game behind the plate for the Twins since the start of the 2023 season. … Prior to Sunday’s game, the Twins and Minnesota Department of Public Safety’s Office of Traffic Safety recognized nearly 70 state law enforcement officers who collectively made 5,120 driving while impaired arrests — nearly 20% of state’s DWI arrests in 2024. The group included seven police officers from St. Paul, Maplewood, South St. Paul and Woodbury.

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