-
Police Identify Suspected Dayton, Ohio, Shooter; 9 Dead, 27 Injured
Police have identified a 24-year-old white male from Bellbrook, Ohio, as the shooter who claimed nine lives and injured 27 others in Dayton on Sunday morning. -
El Paso Deaths Climb To 22 As Mayor Prepares For Trump Visit
The Texas border city jolted by a weekend massacre at a Walmart absorbed more grief Monday as the death toll climbed to 22. -
NYPD Judge Recommends That The Officer Involved In Eric Garner's Death Be Fired
NYPD Officer Daniel Pantaleo was found guilty Friday of using a banned chokehold but not guilty of intentionally restricting Garner's breathing in 2014. The department says he has now been suspended. -
Festival Shooting Claims The Lives of Two Children, One 25-Year-Old Man
The two children killed at the mass shooting at the Gilroy Garlic Festival were only 6 and 13. -
1 Person Killed, 11 Injured In Shooting At Community Festival In Brooklyn
The crowd at the celebration was dispersing when gunshots rang out from a playground area in the park where it was taking place, officials said. -
Gilroy Garlic Festival Shooting: Boy, 6, And Girl, 13, Among The Victims In California
Two children and a man in his 20s were killed when a gunman with a rifle opened fire Sunday at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Northern California. -
Arming Teachers Will "Make A Bad Situation Worse," Says Paul Reville
Criticism rises around annual event that trains teachers to use firearms. -
New Zealand Starts Gun Buyback Program In Response To Christchurch Mosque Shootings
In response to the March shootings that left 51 people dead, the nation's gun buyback program asks owners of now-banned weapons to turn them into police departments for cash. -
Florida Deciding Whether To Prosecute Woman Who Turned In Estranged Husband's Guns
Her husband was jailed overnight after police said he rammed his vehicle into hers. She was jailed for six days after she allegedly broke into his home, took his guns and gave them to law enforcement. -
New Alabama Law Permits Church To Hire Its Own Police Force
A mega-church says it needs its own police for security. Critics say the law will grant state authority to church officials and is unconstitutional, violating the separation of church and state.