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		FBI counts 61 'active shooter' incidents last year, up 52% from 2020
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		 [May 24, 2022] By 
		Steve Gorman 
 (Reuters) -The United States experienced 61 
		"active shooter" incidents last year, up sharply in the sheer number of 
		attacks, casualties and geographic distribution from 2021 and the 
		highest tally in over 20 years, the FBI reported on Monday.
 
 The 2021 total, spread over 30 states, was 52% higher than 2020 and 
		about double each of the three previous years, according to the FBI.
 
 The agency defines an active shooter as someone engaged in killing or 
		attempting to kill people in a public space in seemingly random fashion.
 
 Commercial businesses accounted for just over half of all such incidents 
		last year, which also was notable for an emerging trend of "roving 
		active shooters" opening fire in multiple locations, as was the case 
		with a gunman who attacked several Atlanta-area day spas, the FBI said.
 
 Last year's active-shooter carnage left 103 people dead and 140 wounded, 
		the report said. By contrast, the FBI counted 40 active-shooter attacks 
		in 19 states that killed 38 people and wounded 126 in 2020, a year that 
		coincided with the height of restrictions on social and economic life 
		due to the coronavirus pandemic.
 
		
		 
		Comparisons with recent years are heavily skewed by data from 2017, the 
		year a gunman opened fire on an outdoor music festival in Las Vegas from 
		a high-rise hotel window, killing 56 people and wounding hundreds more 
		in a single incident.
 The Las Vegas attack alone helped push 2017's annual casualty toll - 143 
		killed and 591 wounded - to record highs even though there were only 31 
		active shooting incidents that year, about half the number in 2021.
 
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			A woman looks at white crosses set up for the victims of the Route 
			91 Harvest music festival mass shooting in Las Vegas, Nevada, U.S., 
			October 7, 2017. REUTERS/Chris Wattie/File Photo 
            
			
			
			 
            As high as last year's death toll was, it ranks as 
			only the seventh deadliest year in active shooting incidents dating 
			back to 2000, the first year for which FBI figures are available. 
			Still, it marks the biggest number of such attacks on record, 
			exceeding only the 40 recorded in 2020.
 California, despite having some of the nation's toughest gun laws, 
			accounted for more active shooter incidents than any other state 
			last year, six out of 61, followed by Texas and Georgia with five 
			each, according to the report.
 
 The single deadliest incident of 2021 was the mass shooting at the 
			Kings Soopers Grocery Store in Boulder, Colorado, in which 10 
			victims perished. Eight were killed and seven wounded at a FedEx 
			facility in Indianapolis.
 
 The FBI noted that its active shooter report does not encompass all 
			gun violence or even all mass shootings.
 
 Excluded from the data were gang- or drug-related acts of violence, 
			incidents defined strictly as domestic disputes, isolated hostage 
			situations or crossfire from other criminal acts, the FBI said.
 
 (Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Stephen 
			Coates)
 
            
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