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1 dead, at least 21 others injured by gunfire at Chiefs Super Bowl parade in Kansas City: 'Tragedy'

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1 dead, at least 21 others injured by gunfire at Chiefs Super Bowl parade in Kansas City: 'Tragedy'​


PHOTO: People flee after shots were fired near the Kansas City Chiefs' Super Bowl LVIII victory parade, on Feb. 14, 2024, in Kansas City, Missouri.

One person has died and at least 21 others were injured by gunfire when a shooting broke out in Kansas City, Missouri, following the parade and rally for the Chiefs' Super Bowl win, officials said Wednesday. The shooting took place west of Union Station, outside near the garage, as Chiefs fans were leaving, according to Kansas City police. Paradegoer Arnold Sauther said when the rally ended, the Chiefs went into Union Station, and fans followed the players to get autographs. "Then, all of a sudden they all started running out, and you see all these policemen come running in there -- and you knew something happened in the station," Sauther told Kansas City ABC affiliate KMBC.

Gunshot victims were transported to several hospitals in the area, including eight with "immediately" life-threatening injuries and seven with life-threatening injuries, according to Interim Kansas City Fire Chief Ross Grundyson. Children’s Mercy Kansas City Hospital treated 12 total patients from the rally, including 11 children between the ages of 6 and 15, Senior Vice President and Chief Nursing Officer Stephanie Meyer told reporters Wednesday. Nine of the patients were gunshot victims and three were being treated for "incidental injuries," she said. All are expected to make a full recovery.

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What we know about the Kansas City Super Bowl parade shooting​


Kansas City Police Chief Stacey Graves said Thursday that the shooting that left 22 people with gunshot wounds and a woman dead started as a dispute between several people at the Kansas City Chiefs Super Bowl Victory Parade and Rally. Kansas City leaders and police continue working Thursday to sort through evidence in Wednesday's Kansas City Chiefs parade and rally shooting at Union Station that left one woman dead, and at least 22 others with gunshot wounds. Graves said three people were taken into custody after the incident that left the city reeling following what was supposed to be a day of celebration. Two of those suspects are juveniles. Graves said on Wednesday that officers immediately responded to the area and performed life-saving measures to aid victims.

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5 things to know for Feb. 15: Parade shooting, Middle East, NASA, Immigration, Trump trial​


Security experts are raising concerns about artificial intelligence and how it can be used to spread misinformation ahead of the 2024 presidential election. Congress, however, doesn’t appear ready to pass any major legislation on AI before Americans head to the polls in less than nine months.

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Kansas City shooting: A dispute led to gunfire after Super Bowl parade, police say​


The deceased victim was identified as Lisa Lopez-Galvan, 43, a local DJ. Police said the injured victims ranged in age from eight to 47 years old and that at least half are under 16. Three suspects were taken into custody shortly after the shootings. Two of them are aged under 18. "This appeared to be a dispute between several people that ended in gunfire," Kansas City Police Chief Stacey Graves told reporters on Thursday. Chief Graves said firearms had been recovered, but did not give further details on the type of guns used in the shooting. She said no arrests had yet been made or charges laid and that the investigation is ongoing. There was no link to terrorism, police said. Ms Lopez-Galvan, who was identified as the one victim killed in Wednesday's violence, hosted Taste of Tejano, a Tex-Mex music show, on community radio station KKFI.

The parade violence is not unprecedented - several shootings at sporting celebrations have occurred across North America in recent years. In 2021, two shootings left three people injured in Milwaukee after the local basketball team won their first NBA championship in 50 years. In 2020 two people were killed in Los Angeles after the Dodgers won baseball's World Series. Four people were shot and injured in Toronto in 2019 during a victory parade for the NBA Raptors championship win. In a statement after the shooting, the Kansas City Chiefs organisation said it was "truly saddened" by the violence. It added that its players, coaches and staff - as well as their families - were accounted for and safe.

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chiefs trey smith shares wwe belt with boy after parade shooting
Kansas City Chiefs offensive lineman Trey Smith shared a WWE title belt to help calm a young boy in the aftermath of the mass shooting at the team's Super Bowl celebration. Smith, who sported the belt during the celebration, noticed the frightened boy, who was with his father.

police: shooting at chiefs parade appears to stem from dispute
The Valentine's Day shooting outside Union Station occurred despite the presence of more than 800 police officers who were in the building and nearby, including on top of nearby structures,
 

Two juveniles charged in mass shooting at Chiefs' parade​


Two juveniles were charged with crimes connected to the mass shooting at the Kansa City Chiefs' Super Bowl rally, authorities said Friday, as the city tries to recover in the aftermath of the violence. A news release from the Jackson County Family Court said the juveniles were charged Thursday and are being detained in the county's Juvenile Detention Center "on gun-related and resisting arrest charges." The release said it is "anticipated that additional charges are expected in the future as the investigation by the Kansas City Police Department continues." Police initially detained three juveniles but released one who they determined wasn't involved in the shooting. Police are looking for others who might have been involved and are calling for witnesses, victims and people with cellphone video of the violence to call a dedicated hotline. Meanwhile, Kansas Citians are turning to religious gathers, vigils and counseling to try to cope with the horror of what happened. The Jackson County Prosecuting Attorney's Office set up in-person counseling for the traumatized. Twelve people attended Thursday, including two children, spokesperson Michael Mansur said Friday. The agency also established a hotline offering counseling, but Mansur didn't immediately have information on how many called the hotline.

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2 adults charged with murder in Chiefs parade mass shooting​


Missouri prosecutors said Tuesday that two adults have been charged with murder in last week's mass shooting that killed one person and injured 22 others near the end of the Kansas City Chiefs' Super Bowl parade. Lyndell Mays, of Raytown, Missouri, and Dominic Miller, of Kansas City, Missouri, are both charged with second-degree murder, two counts of armed criminal action and unlawful use of a weapon. According to court documents, the two men were strangers who pulled out guns and began firing within seconds of starting an argument. Both men were shot, and they have been hospitalized since the shooting, Jackson County prosecutor Jean Peters Baker said during a news conference. They are each being held on a $1 million bond. Authorities did not release ages for either man, but court records show Mays is in his early 20s and Miller is 18 or 19.

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funeral held for women killed during chiefs parade shooting
Lisa Lopez-Galvan was one of about two dozen people who were shot when gunfire erupted Feb. 14 outside the city's Union Station. She was 43. She was remembered during the 90-minute service as a loving wife and mother whose smile could light up a room and who saw each day as a chance for excitement and laughter.


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Two men are charged in her death, and two juveniles face gun charges. Her family responded to the charges this week with a statement expressing thanks to police and prosecutors.
 

Three men face firearms charges in Chiefs parade shooting​


Three men from Kansas City, Missouri, face firearms charges, including gun trafficking, after an investigation into the mass shooting during the Kansas City Chiefs' Super Bowl parade and rally, federal prosecutors said Wednesday. The U.S. Attorney's Office in Kansas City said that Fedo Antonia Manning, 22, was charged in a 12-count complaint. Ronnel Dewayne Williams Jr., 21, and Chaelyn Hendrick Groves, 19, were charged in four-count complaints.The charges were filed Monday and unsealed Wednesday after the men were arrested, a news release from the U.S. Attorney's Office said. Court documents that were part of the complaint said 12 people brandished firearms and at least six people fired weapons at the rally attended by an estimated 1 million people on Feb. 14. One woman died and nearly two dozen other people were injured.

Federal prosecutors said that one weapon recovered at the rally scene was a loaded Anderson Manufacturing AM-15 .223-caliber pistol, found along a wall with a backpack next to two AR-15-style firearms and a backpack. The release said the firearm was in the "fire" position with 26 rounds in a magazine capable of holding 30 rounds -- meaning some rounds might have been fired from it. An affidavit stated that Manning bought the AM-15 from a gun store in Lee's Summit, Missouri, a Kansas City suburb, on Aug. 7, 2022. It accuses him of illegally trafficking dozens of firearms, including many AM-15s. Also recovered at the scene was a Stag Arms 300-caliber pistol that the complaint said was purchased by Williams during a gun show in November. Prosecutors say Williams bought the gun for Groves, who accompanied him to the show but was too young to legally purchase a gun for himself.

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third charged with murder in kansas city parade shooting
Terry Young, 20, of Kansas City, Missouri, was also charged with unlawful use of a weapon and two counts of armed criminal action. He is jailed on $1 million bond and doesn't yet have an attorney.



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The latest man charged and two others approached someone in the other group, and an argument broke out, according to a probable cause statement. When someone else pulled out a gun, the man charged pulled out his own weapon, the document stated. Surveillance video showed him appearing to shoot several times.
 

Teen sentenced to state facility for role in Chiefs rally shooting​

A 15-year-old who was among those charged with opening fire during the Kansas City Chiefs' Super Bowl rally has been sentenced to a state facility for youths. The host of a local radio program was killed, 25 were wounded, and 69 others sustained other injuries, such as broken bones and dislocated joints, as they fled, Kansas City police Det. Grant Spiking testified. Jackson County prosecutors have alleged that the shooting was set off during an altercation between two groups. Lyndell Mays, one of the three men facing a murder charge in the death of Lisa Lopez Galvan, is accused of being the first person to start firing. Two other teens have been charged in the shooting. Phillips ruled last month that one of them will not face prosecution as an adult, and the other one was detained on gun-related charges that don't rise to the level of being tried as an adult.

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