Man dead after ramming car into Detroit synagogue with children inside

1 hour ago 2

Michael Koziol

Updated March 13, 2026 — 9:46am,first published 9:18am

Washington: A man is dead after ramming his truck into a synagogue in Michigan, and a fatal university shooting in Virginia is being treated as an act of terrorism, amid heightened fears and a string of attacks globally during the US and Israel’s war with Iran.

Children were at preschool inside the Temple Israel Synagogue in a Detroit suburb when the man crashed his vehicle through the doors and into the hallway. He was killed in a confrontation with security personnel.

Families are escorted away from the scene of the attack at Temple Israel Synagogue in the US state of Michigan.AP

One of the security agents was hit by the vehicle and hospitalised. No other people inside synagogue were hurt, Oakland County Sheriff Michael Bouchard said, but as many as 30 first responders were also taken to hospital due to smoke inhalation.

FBI special agent Jennifer Runyan said the bureau was treating the “deeply disturbing and tragic incident” as a targeted act of violence against the Jewish community.

The vehicle had ignited inside the synagogue, Bouchard said, producing “terrible, terrible smoke”. He did not confirm earlier reports of fuel or explosives inside the vehicle.

“Obviously, what happens around the world sometimes affects us,” he said. “It’s a hateful, terrible thing. But what drove this person into action, that has to be determined by the investigation.”

Police outside the Temple Israel Synagogue.AP

A local woman named Lisa told television network WDIV she knew people in the synagogue and was “scared to death” for her friends. “There’s a whole daycare program in there,” she said. “This is senseless. We have to be better than this. This is not OK.”

Rabbi Arianna Gordon, who was inside at the time of the attack, told NBC News all children at the synagogue daycare escaped safely and were with their parents. “It was definitely a scary afternoon,” she said.

It is the latest in a number of attacks on members of the Jewish community, amid a rising tide of antisemitism globally. US President Donald Trump said he had been briefed.

“It’s a terrible thing, but it goes on,” he said at a White House function. “We’re going to be [getting] right down to the bottom of it. It’s absolutely incredible that things like this happen.”

Police arrive outside Old Dominion University’s campus after reports of an active shooter.AP

Meanwhile, a shooting at a university campus in Virginia is being treated as an act of terrorism, with the shooter identified by US media outlets as a former National Guard soldier who was previously convicted of providing support to the Islamic State.

Mohamed Bailor Jalloh was subdued by students and is now dead after he opened fire in a classroom at Old Dominion University on Thursday morning (US time), killing one person and injuring two others.

FBI director Kash Patel said his agency was investigating the shooting as an act of terrorism through its Joint Terrorism Task Force.

Jalloh, 36, pleaded guilty in 2016 to attempting to provide material support to the Islamic State and was sentenced to 11 years in prison. He was released in December 2004.

It was not immediately clear how the assailant was killed. Kash praised a “group of brave students who stepped in and subdued him – actions that undoubtedly saved lives”.

The terrorism declaration comes amid heightened fears of so-called “sleeper cells” or lone-wolf actors carrying out attacks in the US following the Trump administration’s combat operations in Iran.

Amid the heightened security fears, the White House also pushed back against reports that Iran was planning a number of drone attacks on the US West Coast, particularly California.

America’s ABC News reported on an FBI alert about the possible drone attacks, though the alert was based on “unverified information” and contained no specifics.

White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt called for the story to be retracted, arguing it was an attempt to alarm the American people based on an unverified tip.

“TO BE CLEAR: No such threat from Iran to our homeland exists, and it never did,” Leavitt wrote on X.

The National Terrorism Advisory System, maintained by the Department of Homeland Security, is currently not being updated due to a partial government shutdown.

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Michael KoziolMichael Koziol is the North America correspondent for The Age and Sydney Morning Herald. He is a former Sydney editor, Sun-Herald deputy editor and a federal political reporter in Canberra.Connect via X or email.

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