Did an illegal immigrant shoot up those people in Florida today?
No. This guy did. And his mom worked as a deputy in the Sheriff's office.
A DEI hire. Where was his father?

McNeil also described Ikner as a “longstanding member” of the county’s youth advisory council, a group that aims to improve the rapport between local law enforcement and young people in the community.
“He has been steeped in the Leon County Sheriff’s Office family, engaged in a number of training programs, so it’s not a surprise to us that he had access to weapons,” McNeil said. “This event is tragic in more ways than you people in the audience could ever [fathom] from a law enforcement perspective.”
Ikner was a student of political science at the university, according to FSU News, a university outlet that’s part of the USA TODAY Network.
The student paper quoted Ikner’s reaction to a protest held before President
Donald Trump’s inauguration over the Republican leader’s anticipated agenda.
“These people are usually pretty entertaining, usually not for good reasons,” Ikner said then. “
Lucas Luzietti, a politics student who shared a class with Ikner at a community college in Tallahassee, was horrified to see his old classroom antagonist was the suspected shooter. But he said he was not surprised.
According to the Florida native, Ikner touted right wing conspiracy theories and hateful ideas. Among them was a theory that President
Joe Biden illegally came into office, “Rosa Parks was in the wrong” and Black people were ruining his neighborhood.
“I remember thinking this man should not have access to firearms,” Luzietti told USA TODAY. But, “what are you supposed to do? His mother was a cop and Florida doesn’t have very strong red flag laws.”
The gunman in a fatal attack at Florida State University is the son of a local law enforcement deputy, police said Thursday.
golfweek.usatoday.com