Marine veteran Thomas 'Jake' Sanford identified in Michigan church massacre; FBI probes motive
Thomas Jacob "Jake" Sanford, 40, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran who served 2004–2008 and deployed to Iraq, has been identified as the attacker who drove a pickup into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter‑day Saints in Grand Blanc Township, Michigan, around 10:25 a.m. Sunday, then opened fire with an assault rifle and set the building ablaze, killing four people and wounding eight before he was shot and killed by police in the church parking lot. The FBI, which has sent about 100 agents and characterized the incident as an "act of targeted violence," is leading the investigation into Sanford’s motive — including reports of anti‑Mormon rhetoric and possible bomb‑making materials found at his residence — and has executed multiple search warrants while urging anyone with information to come forward.
🔍 Key Facts
- On Sunday morning at about 10:25 a.m. local time, an attacker struck the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter‑day Saints in Grand Blanc Township, Michigan, where roughly 100 people were inside.
- At least four people were killed and eight were wounded; earlier reports said about ten victims were transported to hospitals.
- The shooter was identified as 40‑year‑old Thomas Jacob "Jake" Sanford of Burton/Grand Blanc Township; he lived about seven miles from the church, was married with a 10‑year‑old son, and had lived in Utah around 2010.
- Sanford served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 2004–2008, attained the rank of sergeant, and deployed to Iraq in 2007–2008 (service records list assignment to a combat logistics/maintenance unit).
- According to investigators and eyewitnesses, the attacker drove a pickup (reported as a Chevy Silverado with two U.S. flags in the bed) through the church’s front doors, exited the vehicle, fired multiple rounds from an assault rifle at worshippers, and used gasoline/another accelerant to set the chapel on fire.
- Emergency calls came in around 10:25 a.m.; officers arrived within approximately 30 seconds to a minute and fatally shot the attacker roughly eight minutes after the first call — he died in or near the church parking lot around 10:33 a.m.
- The FBI is leading the probe, describing the incident as an "act of targeted violence," has deployed about 100 federal agents, is executing multiple search warrants (including at the suspect’s residences and family homes), and a bomb squad was reported to be investigating potential bomb‑making materials — authorities have asked the public to submit tips.
- Motive remains under investigation; federal and local officials say the FBI is probing possible anti‑Mormon targeting — White House officials relayed that the FBI believes the shooter "hated people of the Mormon faith," and neighbors and others reported prior anti‑Mormon statements and a past romantic connection to a Mormon woman.
- Local response included Michigan’s governor ordering flags lowered to half‑staff and Grand Blanc Community Schools closing; eyewitness and survivor accounts described congregants protecting children and, in one case, a survivor publicly saying she forgave the attacker.
📍 Contextual Background
- Grand Blanc Township is about 60 miles (97 kilometers) northwest of Detroit and is located just south of Flint, Michigan.
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints reported that it has nearly 47,000 members in Michigan and almost 7 million members in the United States.
- On 2025-09-29, the Grand Blanc Community Schools System closed all 13 campuses (pre-school through high school).
- The church attack was the second mass shooting in the United States in less than 24 hours; a separate Saturday-night attack in Southport, North Carolina involved a shooter firing from a boat into a crowd, killing three and wounding five.
📊 Analysis & Commentary (1)
"The Fox News opinion piece uses the recent Michigan church massacre (identification of Thomas 'Jake' Sanford and FBI probe) to argue that mass shootings are now routine and immediately politicized, condemning media sensationalism and partisan 'finger‑pointing'—with the author asserting a left‑leaning predominance in recent political violence and urging less notoriety for perpetrators."
📰 Sources (18)
- Frames the Michigan church attack alongside the Southport shooting to highlight a pattern of recent attacks by decorated veterans.
- Provides contextual references to other veteran-linked incidents this year (e.g., truck attacks cited on New Year’s Day) to illustrate a worrying pattern.
- Quotes experts and cites the University of Maryland statistic to quantify the phenomenon and underscore policy implications for veteran care.
- A survivor posted a personal letter saying she looked the gunman in the eyes after he killed her father and forgave him in that moment.
- Direct quotes from the survivor’s letter describing seeing 'pain' and 'lost' in the attacker and that 'He let me live.'
- Survivor corrected an initial description to the FBI (she thought the attacker had blue eyes) and said later she realized she was seeing her own eyes reflected.
- The suspect's father, Thomas Sanford Sr., publicly apologized to victims' families and described the situation as a 'nightmare.'
- Accounts from a former landlady, Sandra Winter, say the suspect dated and nearly married a Mormon woman while living in Utah around 2010 and considered joining the Mormon church to further the relationship.
- A local city‑council candidate, Kris Johns, reported a recent conversation in which the suspect expressed extreme anti‑Mormon rhetoric, calling Mormonism 'the anti‑Christ.'
- The article notes online images of a Trump campaign sign at the suspect's parents' home earlier, though Fox News observed the sign was not present when they visited.
- PBS reports that 'more than 100 federal officials' are involved in the investigation.
- Includes on‑scene quotes from Genesee County Sheriff Chris Swanson praising unarmed churchgoers who protected children.
- Notes a local council‑candidate’s account that the suspect, in a recent encounter, called the Mormon religion 'the Antichrist' during a tirade.
- State officials publicly stated that all victims have now been accounted for
- CBS quantifies injuries as eight people wounded and confirms total fatalities as four
- Shooter identified by name and age: Thomas Jacob 'Jake' Sanford, 40.
- Pentagon-provided service records confirming U.S. Marines service from 2004–2008 with deployments to Iraq in 2007–2008.
- Tactical details: Sanford drove a vehicle through the front doors, fired multiple rounds from an assault rifle and apparently used gas to start a fire inside the church.
- Updated casualty tally phrased in this report: at least four killed and at least eight hospitalized (hospitalization count provided).
- Local witness account: neighbor Kris Johns described Sanford's prior statements about Latter-day Saints, a Utah move, tattoo dispute and post-deployment drug problems.
- FBI is sending about 100 agents to Grand Blanc Township to assist the investigation, per the article.
- Attack occurred at about 10:25 a.m. Sunday; the attacker arrived in a pickup with two U.S. flags in the bed.
- The attacker reportedly used gasoline to start a fire inside the chapel, producing prolonged fire and smoke.
- Police say officers were on scene within 30 seconds of the 911 call and fatally shot the attacker roughly eight minutes later.
- Marine service detail in public records noted: Sanford served 2004–2008, spent seven months in Iraq focused on vehicle operations and maintenance, and was discharged at the rank of sergeant.
- White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said the FBI believes the shooter 'hated people of the Mormon faith.'
- Leavitt said she spoke with FBI Director Kash Patel and that the FBI is executing multiple search warrants at the perpetrator's residences and family homes.
- Leavitt reiterated that the shooter was from the community and had served in the U.S. Marine Corps and that the family is cooperating with investigators.
- U.S. Marine Corps officials confirmed Sanford served from 2004–2008.
- He deployed for one tour in Iraq in 2007–2008 with a combat logistics regiment and attained the rank of sergeant.
- NPR reports authorities say Sanford used an accelerant to set fire to the church, which officials described as a total loss.
- Grand Blanc Community Schools closed all 13 campuses on Monday in the aftermath.
- Named eyewitness: Paul Kirby recounts being inside the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints temple when a "loud boom" shook the building and a gunman opened fire.
- Emotional, on-camera quote captured: "It was the scariest moment of my life," describing the attack's immediate impact on congregants.
- CBS provided a first-person interview clip (CBS Mornings) with the witness describing the scene and sound of the initial explosion/impact.
- Casualty update: CBS reports 4 people killed and 8 wounded (specific counts compared with earlier, varying tallies).
- Detailed attack sequence: suspect allegedly drove into the church, shot inside, and set the building on fire before officers killed him.
- Suspect identification and background: Thomas Jacob Sanford identified by CBS as a Marine veteran; investigators are still determining motive.
- The FBI is leading the investigation and has characterized the incident as an "act of targeted violence."
- Investigators report the suspect drove through the church's front doors around 10:25 a.m., exited the vehicle and fired several rounds from an assault rifle at worshippers.
- About 100 people were inside the church at the time; Henry Ford Genesys Hospital treated victims (one listed critical, seven in stable condition).
- Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer ordered U.S. and Michigan flags lowered to half‑staff; Grand Blanc Community Schools closed Monday.
- FBI has asked anyone with information to call 1‑800‑225‑5324 or submit a tip online.
- Casualty update: headline in the Fox News First newsletter states 'Michigan church attack leaves at least 4 dead'.
- Newsletter signals a linked background piece: 'What we know about the man accused of violent attack on Michigan church' (indicating suspect details are available in linked reporting).
- Fox reports detailed military service: Sanford served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 2004–2008, left with rank of sergeant, and last assigned to 2d Maintenance Battalion, Combat Logistics Regiment 25 at Camp Lejeune.
- Article states the attacker drove a Chevy Silverado through the church's front doors before exiting and firing on worshippers.
- Police quote/timing specifics: incident began around 10:30 a.m.; 'Ten gunshot victims have been transported to local hospitals' and two victims later died.
- Personal detail: local reporting and a 2015 GoFundMe noted Sanford had a wife and a son born with congenital hyperinsulinism (CHI).
- Confirmed biographical details: high‑school graduation year (2004), military service dates (U.S. Marines 2004–2008) and Iraq deployment (2007–2008).
- Personal background: rented a room in Jeremy Ranch, Utah around 2010; worked in snow removal and landscaping; practiced sculpture art with Sheetrock.
- Family details: married in 2016 to a high‑school classmate and has a 10‑year‑old son.
- Multiple neighbor and former classmate recollections and specific on‑the‑record quotes describing his demeanour and activities.
- Police identified the shooter as 40‑year‑old Thomas Jacob Sanford of Burton, Michigan.
- Sanford served in the U.S. Marines from 2004–2008 and was deployed Aug. 2007–Mar. 2008 during Operation Iraqi Freedom.
- 911 calls about the shooting came in around 10:25 a.m.; officers arrived in less than a minute and Sanford died in the church parking lot around 10:33 a.m. after exchanging gunfire with police.
- Michigan State Police and a bomb squad were investigating Sanford’s home; investigators said there may have been bomb‑making materials (investigation ongoing).
- Sanford lived about seven miles from the church on McCandlish Road in Grand Blanc Township.
- Compiles past notable worship‑site shootings (dates, locations, fatality counts) offering historical context for the Grand Blanc incident
- Location: Church of Jesus Christ of Latter‑day Saints, Grand Blanc Township, Michigan
- Time: reported just before 11 a.m. local time on Sunday (breaking incident)
- Casualties/status: police report 'multiple victims' and that the shooter was 'down'
- Operational detail: the church was reported to be actively on fire; police posted a public‑safety update on social media