The Daily Press

US mass killings linked to extremism spiked over last decade

- By Lindsay Whitehurst

WASHINGTON (AP) — The number of U.S. mass killings linked to extremism over the past decade was at least three times higher than the total from any other 10-year period since the 1970s, according to a report by the Anti-Defamation League.

The report, provided to The Associated Press ahead of its public release Thursday, also found that all extremist killings identified in 2022 were linked to rightwing extremism, with an especially mass killings occurred high number linked every decade to white supremacy. from the 1970s to They include a racist the 2000s, but in the mass shooting 2010s that number at a supermarke­t in skyrockete­d to 21, Buffalo, New York, the report found. that left 10 Black The trend has since shoppers dead and a continued with five mass shooting that domestic extremist killed five people at mass killings in 2021 an LGBT nightclub and 2022, as many in Colorado Springs, as there were during Colorado. the first decade of the

“It is not an exaggerati­on new millennium. to say that The number of we live in an age of victims has risen as extremist mass killings,” well. Between 2010 the report from and 2020, 164 people the group’s Center on died in ideologica­l extremist-related Extremism says. mass

Between two and killings, according seven domestic extremism-related to the report. That’s much more than in any other decade except the 1990s, when the bombing of a federal building in Oklahoma City killed 168 people.

Extremist killings are those carried out by people with ties to extreme movements and ideologies.

Several factors combined to drive the numbers up between 2010 and 2020. There were shootings inspired by the rise of the Islamic State group as well as a handful targeting police officers after civilian shootings and others linked to the increasing promotion of violence by white supremacis­ts, said Mark Pitcavage, a senior research fellow at the ADL’s Center on Extremism.

The center tracks slayings linked to various forms of extremism in the United States and compiles them in an annual report. It tracked 25 extremism-related killings last year, a decrease from the 33 the year before.

Ninety-three percent of the killings in 2022 were committed with firearms. The report also noted that no police officers were killed by extremists last year, for the first time since 2011.

With the waning of the Islamic State group, the main threat in the near future will likely be white supremacis­t shooters, the report found. The increase in the number of mass killing attempts, meanwhile, is one of the most alarming trends in recent years, said Center on Extremism Vice President Oren Segal.

“We cannot stand idly by and accept this as the new norm,” Segal said.

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