Photos: A list of high-profile mass shootings in the US this year
- Associated Press
- Updated
Here are some notable U.S. mass shootings in the U.S. this year:
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Over the first four months and six days of this year, 115 people have died in 22 mass killings — an average of one mass killing a week.
Tirzah Patterson will dedicate this Mother's Day to the hardest part of a mother's job: trying to help her child make sense of tragedy.
As the city on Sunday marks one year since the racist massacre, many young Black people in Buffalo are grappling with a shaken sense of personal security.
Witnesses and police say the gunman walked through a neighborhood a short drive from downtown Farmington spraying bullets at cars, homes and passersby until police arrived at the scene and shot and killed him.
As the number of people who die in mass killings in the U.S. continues to rise, thousands more are left to handle the trauma of losing someone they love. One of the hardest days they confront each year is the anniversary of the killing.
Each of the three women killed last week when indiscriminate gunfire erupted in a residential neighborhood of Farmington, New Mexico, left a unique mark in the community that spanned generations.
Majorjon Kaylor, 31, is charged with four counts of first-degree murder in the Father's Day shooting in Kellogg.
Recent high-profile mass shootings by young people underscore the deadly mix of teenage bravado, immaturity and growing access to high-powered guns that can kill faster and more efficiently than ever.
Baltimore Police Department Acting Commissioner Richard Worley says there were a total of 30 victims in the shooting he says took place at a block party just after 12:30 a.m.
Families who lost loved ones in the 2018 Parkland, Florida, school massacre are being given the chance to tour the classroom building before it is demolished.
Texas gunman in Walmart shooting gets 90 consecutive life sentences and may still face death penalty
A white gunman who killed 23 people in a racist attack on Hispanic shoppers at a Walmart in a Texas border city was sentenced Friday to 90 consecutive life sentences but could still face more punishment, including the death penalty.
It also contained what appeared to be a suicide note the gunman wrote more than two years before the attack.
In Tennessee, a request for police to release a school shooter's private writings has morphed into a complex fight that pits the parents of traumatized students against a coalition of local news outlets, nonprofits, and a Republican lawmaker.
The gunman who stormed a synagogue in the heart of Pittsburgh's Jewish community and killed 11 worshippers will be sentenced to death for perpetrating the deadliest antisemitic attack in U.S. history.

