Timeline: US mass shootings in 2023

At least 70 people have been killed in mass shootings so far this year across the United States.

Protest against US gun laws
A debate over lax gun laws has raged for decades in the United States [File: Jonathan Ernst/Reuters]

At least 70 people have been killed in mass shootings across the United States so far this year, according to data collected by the Gun Violence Archive (GVA), amid a debate over lax gun laws that has raged for decades.

In the latest incident on Monday, seven people were killed and one critically injured in two related shootings at agricultural facilities in a coastal community in northern California.

The shooting came less than 48 hours after a gunman killed 11 people at a Lunar New Year celebration near Los Angeles, California, on Saturday night.

INTERACTIVE The deadliest mass shootings in the US infographic updated 2022

Mass shootings are incidents in which four or more people are shot – excluding the attacker – in a single incident, according to the GVA.

Here is a timeline of mass shootings that have taken place across the US this month so far:

January 23

Chicago, Illinois (two killed, three injured)
Half Moon Bay, California (seven killed, one injured)

January 22

Robinsonville (Tunica Resorts), Mississippi (four injured)
Baton Rouge, Louisiana (12 injured)
Shreveport, Louisiana (eight injured)

January 21

Monterey Park, California (11 killed, nine injured)

INTERACTIVE Gun violence Mass shootings across the US in 2022
(Al Jazeera)

January 17

Houston, Texas (four injured)

January 16

Fort Pierce, Florida (one killed, seven injured)
Goshen, California (six killed)
Sanford, Florida (one killed, five injured)

January 15

Rockford, Illinois (three killed, two injured)
Homestead, Florida (one killed, three injured)
Phoenix, Arizona (four injured)
Houston, Texas (one killed, four injured)

January 14

Saint Louis (Moline Acres), Missouri (four injured)

January 13

Cleveland, Ohio (four killed, one injured)

January 9

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (three killed, four injured)
Minneapolis, Minnesota (four injured)
Denver, Colorado (four injured)

January 8

Minneapolis, Minnesota (four injured)
Albany, Georgia (four injured)

January 7

Huntsville, Alabama (two killed, nine injured)
High Point, North Carolina (five killed)

January 6

Dallas, Texas (three killed, two injured)
San Francisco, California (one killed, three injured)

January 5

New Orleans, Louisiana (two killed, three injured)
Miami Gardens, Florida (10 injured)

January 4

Cedar City (Enoch), Utah (eight killed)
Baltimore, Maryland (one killed, four injured)
Dumfries, Virginia (one killed, four injured)

January 3

Washington, DC (one killed, three injured)
New Orleans, Louisiana (five injured)

January 1

Columbus, Ohio (one killed, four injured)
Ocala, Florida (two killed, four injured)
Chicago, Illinois (one killed, three injured)
Miami Gardens, Florida (nine injured)
Durham, North Carolina (five injured)
Allentown, Pennsylvania (four injured)

 

Source: Al Jazeera

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