The Mercury News

After Uvalde, holiday weekend sees shootings across country

- By Michael Tarm and Corey Williams

CHICAGO >> Even as the nation reeled over the massacre of 19 children and two teachers at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, multiple mass shootings happened elsewhere over the Memorial Day weekend in areas both rural and urban. Single-death incidents still accounted for most gun fatalities.

Gunfire erupted in the predawn hours of Sunday at a festival in the town of Taft, Oklahoma, sending hundreds of revelers scattering and customers inside the nearby Boots Café diving for cover. Eight people ages 9 to 56 were shot, and one of them died.

Six children ages 13 to 15 were wounded Saturday night in a touristy quarter of Chattanoog­a, Tennessee. Two groups got into an altercatio­n, and two people in one of them pulled guns and started shooting.

And at a club and liquor store in Benton Harbor in southweste­rn Michigan, a 19-year-old man was killed and six other people were wounded after gunfire rang out among a crowd around 2:30 a.m. Monday. Police found multiple shell casings of various calibers.

Those and others met a common definition of a mass shooting, in which four or more people are shot. Such occurrence­s have become so regular, news of them is likely to fade fast.

There were at least two incidents in Chicago between late Friday and Monday that qualified as mass shootings, including one near a closed elementary school on the West Side in which the wounded included a 16-year-old girl.

Single-fatality shootings also rocked families and communitie­s.

In Arkansas a 7-year-old girl was killed Saturday in a busy area near the Little Rock Zoo, in what police described as “an isolated event involving acquaintan­ces.”

And on Chicago's South Side, the body of a young man slain at an outdoor birthday party lay on the sidewalk early Sunday, covered by a white sheet. His mother stood nearby, crying.

Overall, Chicago recorded 32 gunfire incidents over the weekend in which 47 people were shot and nine died.

In the wake of the Uvalde shooting, by an 18-year-old who legally purchased an AR-style rifle, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott and other Republican opponents of tougher gun laws quickly pointed at Chicago as an example of how such measures don't work, saying, “more people are shot every weekend (there) than there are in schools in Texas.”

High rates of gun violence in Chicago have made a series of Democratic government­s there, including that of current Mayor Lori Lightfoot, vulnerable to criticism — sometimes from within their own party.

But the assertions by Abbott and others are misleading and oversimpli­fy the situation in the country's third-largest city. Many guns used in the killing of Chicagoans were initially bought in other states with less stringent gun laws, like Indiana and Mississipp­i. Chicago officials also note that the city records fewer murders per capita than many other smaller U.S. cities.

Police chiefs there and in other cities canceled days off to boost the numbers of officers over the holiday, hoping it would act as a deterrent. Independen­t conflict mediators also hit the streets, using social media to identify simmering conflicts with the potential to explode into real-world violence.

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