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Where Can I Read the El Paso Shooters Manifesto?

Mass shooting in El Paso, Texas

2019 El Paso shooting
Part of right-wing terrorism in the United States[1]
Patrick Crusius Video Surveillance Shooting.png

Surveillance camera screenshots showing Crusius at the Walmart entrance

Location 7101 Gateway West Blvd.
El Paso, Texas, United States
Coordinates 31°46′38″N 106°23′03″Westward  /  31.7771°N 106.3843°W  / 31.7771; -106.3843 Coordinates: 31°46′38″North 106°23′03″West  /  31.7771°Due north 106.3843°W  / 31.7771; -106.3843
Engagement Baronial 3, 2019; 2 years ago  (2019-08-03)
ten:39 – x:45 a.m. (MDT UTC−06:00)
Target Hispanic and Latino Americans

Attack type

Mass shooting, detest crime, mass murder, domestic terrorism, correct-wing terrorism
Weapons WASR-10 AK-47–style semi-automatic burglarize
Deaths 23
Injured 23
Motive
  • Far-right extremism[2]
  • Anti-immigration[three]
  • Hispanophobia[3]
  • White supremacy[4] [2]
  • Belief in the white genocide conspiracy theory and the Great Replacement conspiracy theory[2]
  • Ecofascism[5]
Accused Patrick Woods Crusius
Location of Texas and the United States:

El Paso is located in Texas

El Paso

El Paso

El Paso (Texas)

Show map of Texas

El Paso is located in the United States

El Paso

El Paso

El Paso (the Usa)

Show map of the United States

On August 3, 2019, a mass shooting occurred at a Walmart shop in El Paso, Texas, United States. A gunman shot and killed 23 people[due north 1] and injured 23 others.[x] The Federal Bureau of Investigation is investigating the shooting as an deed of domestic terrorism and a hate criminal offence.[xi] [12] The shooting has been described as the deadliest assault on Latinos in modern American history.[thirteen] [xiv]

Patrick Wood Crusius, a 21-yr-sometime from Allen, Texas, was arrested and charged with capital murder in connection with the shooting. Police believe a manifesto with white nationalist and anti-immigrant themes, posted on the online message board 8chan presently before the attack, was written past Crusius; information technology cites the yr'due south earlier Christchurch mosque shootings in New Zealand and the far-right conspiracy theory known as the Groovy Replacement as inspiration for the attack.

Incident [edit]

The shooting occurred at a Walmart Supercenter about the Cielo Vista Mall on the due east side of El Paso. The gunman walked into the store conveying what is believed to exist a WASR-10 rifle,[xv] a semi-automatic civilian version of the AK-47, and opened burn just before 10:40 a.m.[16]

The shop manager witnessed the gunman begin firing in the parking lot prior to entering the crowded shop. He issued a "Code Brown", designating an active shooter, to his employees, who began helping customers evacuate or hide.[17] [eighteen] Many customers and employees fled to other stores in the adjacent mall, hid under tables,[19] or in shipping containers located behind the building.[20]

Get-go responders began to go far within half dozen minutes of the initial 9-1-ane call.[6] The El Paso Police Section, Texas Rangers and paramedics responded to the scene along with the FBI and the ATF.[12] [21]

After the shooting, the suspect, Patrick Wood Crusius, drove to the intersection of Sunmount and Viscount, where he identified himself equally the shooter and surrendered to Texas Rangers[22] and an El Paso motorcycle officer.[23]

Victims [edit]

The shooting has been described equally the deadliest anti-Latino attack in contempo U.Due south. history,[xiii] [14] [24] [25] resulting in 23 deaths and 23 injuries. One victim died the day after the event, another victim died two days after,[26] and a third died viii months later on April 26, 2020.[9] Among the dead were thirteen Americans, 8 Mexicans and one German language.[27] The names, ages, and citizenships of 22 of the expressionless were released by the El Paso Police Section on August v. Seventeen were 56 or older, two were in their 40s, 2 in their 20s, one was 36, and one was 15.[28]

Thirteen victims were taken to the Academy Medical Heart of El Paso,[12] and another eleven to the Del Sol Medical Center.[29] Two children, ages ii and 9, were transferred to El Paso Children's Hospital subsequently their conditions were stabilized.[thirty] The Del Sol Medical Center patients were between 35 and 82 years old.[12]

Suspect [edit]

Patrick Wood Crusius (built-in July 27, 1998) was arrested shortly later the shooting and charged with uppercase murder.[30] [31] [32] A 21-twelvemonth-one-time white male person,[33] [34] [35] he was last known to accept lived in his family's abode in Allen, Texas, in the Dallas–Fort Worth metroplex,[12] [29] [36] approximately 650 miles (1,050 km) from El Paso.[37] He graduated in 2017 from Plano Senior High School, and was enrolled at Collin College from 2017 until bound 2019.[37]

Police said he bought the gun used in the attack legally, merely provided no details about the buy.[38] During his first interrogation, he told detectives he had targeted Mexicans, according to an arrest warrant affirmation.[39] [twoscore] [41] [42] [34]

Manifesto [edit]

The El Paso constabulary chief, Greg Allen, said that they are "reasonably confident"[43] that a manifesto, titled The Inconvenient Truth, was posted past the suspect on the online message board 8chan shortly earlier the shooting.[30] It identifies the blazon of weapon used in the attack; the doubtable'due south name was revealed in a separate certificate in the post.[44] Site moderators rapidly removed the original mail service, though users connected sharing copies.[44] Challenge to accept been inspired by the Christchurch mosque shootings in New Zealand that killed 51 people earlier the same year,[45] the writer expresses support for the perpetrator of the Christchurch shootings[33] [46] [47] and bemoans grievances[48] [49] such as environmental degradation,[v] [50] [46] "cultural and indigenous replacement",[47] [51] and a "Hispanic invasion".[two] [49] [52]

The anti-Hispanic, anti-immigrant manifesto promotes the white nationalist and far-right conspiracy theory called the Slap-up Replacement,[two] [33] often attributed to the French author Renaud Camus.[45] While the document uses language about immigrants similar to that used by U.S. president Donald Trump,[n two] such as referring to a migrant "invasion",[ii] [49] [56] it states that the writer'due south beliefs predate Trump's presidency, and that Trump should not be blamed for the attack.[41] [50] [52] The author's "racially extremist views", according to The New York Times, could be used to prosecute the shooting as a hate crime or domestic terrorism.[12]

The manifesto states that Democrats would soon control the United States partly due to an increasing Hispanic population,[50] an idea that had gained acceptance for years on right-wing radio shows.[33] Criticizing both the Democratic Party and Republican Party[50] for allowing corporations to "import foreign workers",[51] the author describes the shooting as an "incentive" for Hispanics to leave the state, which would "remove the threat" of a Hispanic voting bloc.[50] While primarily focused on indigenous and racial grievances,[5] the document besides expresses fears of automation's furnishings on employment and blames corporations for overusing natural resource.[50]

Legal proceedings [edit]

The arrest warrant affidavit says Crusius waived his Miranda rights, confessed to detectives that he was the shooter, and admitted that he targeted "Mexicans" during the attack.[39] [forty] [22]

At that place are multiple investigations and jurisdictions involved with the case. FBI officials in El Paso served multiple warrants in the Dallas expanse and interviewed acquaintances of Crusius in Dallas and San Antonio.[57]

State charges [edit]

Crusius was indicted on capital murder charges by a Texas chiliad jury on September 12, 2019. He pleaded non guilty to uppercase murder charges at his arraignment on Oct x, 2019 at the El Paso County Courthouse.[35] Mark Stevens, a San Antonio criminal defence attorney, was appointed by the state court to stand for Crusius, along with defense force chaser Joe Spencer.[58] [59] On April 28, 2020, prosecutors announced they would exist seeking a new uppercase murder charge following the recent death of a twenty-3rd victim after he spent ix months in the hospital.[threescore]

Federal charges [edit]

On February half dozen, 2020, Crusius was charged with 90 federal charges: 22 counts of committing a hate offense resulting in death, 22 counts of utilise of a firearm to commit murder, 23 counts of a hate crime involving an endeavour to impale, and 23 counts of apply of a firearm during a criminal offense.[13] [61] Federal prosecutors of the U.S. Attorney's Role for the Western District of Texas are seeking the capital punishment,[57] but the last decision on whether a federal capital sentence volition be sought will be made by the Attorney General of the United States.[62]

Crusius waived his federal bond hearing on Feb 12, 2020 during his first federal court appearance.[63] A trial in federal court is expected before the trial in state court.[62] On July 23, 2020, Crusius entered a plea of not-guilty to federal charges.[64] He also waived his arraignment on those charges.[65]

Defence force motion [edit]

On July xiv, 2020, the court accepted a motion by the defense team in which they cited mitigating factors, citing Crusius' alleged lifelong neurological and mental disabilities, which they described as "severe". The defense added that he was treated with anti-psychotic medication and that he was in a "psychotic state" when arrested.[66]

In August 2020, due to the COVID-19 pandemic in Texas, the trials were delayed for at to the lowest degree a yr.[67] In the case of state court trial, it might be two or three years away, co-ordinate to a defense force chaser, not only due to the COVID-19 pandemic merely also for the massive amount of evidence in the case, and added that as long as the prosecutors seek the death penalty, the case will remain open for years.[67]

Aftermath [edit]

Memorial for the shooting victims

Funerals and vigils [edit]

Several funeral homes in El Paso and Ciudad Juárez appear they would provide funeral services for complimentary to the families of the victims equally a sign of solidarity for their customs.[68] Ciudad Juárez's Rotary International chapter organized a vigil in Ciudad Juárez. They gathered at a park and lit candles and shone cellphone lights in El Paso's direction equally a sign of solidarity.[69]

Antonio Basco declared his wife's funeral on August 16 to be open up to anyone who wished to attend.[70] Hundreds of people from El Paso and other parts of the country attended, and flowers were sent from around the world.[lxx] [71]

El Paso musician Khalid held a do good concert for his home city on September 1, featuring several high-profile artists and introduced by young man El Paso native and sometime U.s.a. Representative Beto O'Rourke.[72]

Tributes [edit]

1 calendar week after the shooting, a citizen from Ciudad Juárez, Jorge Luis Martínez Chávez, ran a total of 22 miles, a mile for each of the people killed in the Walmart shooting (ane boosted victim died months after), starting at the Zaragoza bridge in Juárez, United mexican states, and finishing at the Walmart memorial in El Paso where the attack was perpetrated.[73]

Walmart's reaction [edit]

Monument built in the parking lot of the Walmart

Two days afterward the shooting, a Walmart corporate employee sent a memorandum to Walmart's entire eastward-commerce partitioning, which includes thousands of employees, urging a "sick-out" strike to force the corporation to finish selling guns.[74] Walmart afterward sent out a memo instructing workers to remove signs and displays that "incorporate violent themes or aggressive behavior"[75] and pledged $400,000 for funds that were aimed at helping the victims of the mass shooting.[76] On September 3, 2019, the visitor announced it would stop selling ammunition for handguns and assault rifles[77] in the U.s.a., as well equally ask customers not to openly conduct firearms into their stores.[77] [78]

Reactions [edit]

Terrorism experts, including Peter R. Neumann, cited the Cracking Replacement conspiracy theory as a common factor amongst several similar attacks.[48] The Southern Poverty Law Center's Hatewatch weblog linked the shooting with the earlier Christchurch mosque shootings and the Poway synagogue shooting, citing the similar white nationalist contents of the respective attackers' manifestos.[79] Jonathan Greenblatt, master executive of the Anti-Defamation league, said that the shooting, as office of a series of similar attacks, indicated a "global threat" of white supremacy.[2] NATO secretarial assistant-general Jens Stoltenberg urged countries to piece of work together to prevent "lone wolf" attackers who discover inspiration in one another's actions.[eighty] [81] Others, including the writer Daniel Okrent, disputed the "lonely wolf" thought, pointing to the means in which technology allows those with similar violent ideologies to congregate online.[45]

Several commentators attributed both the El Paso and Christchurch shootings to an ideology of eco-fascism.[82] [83] [84] The Washington Postal service described the El Paso and Christchurch shootings every bit examples of an eco-fascist trend among white supremacists.[5] Writing in GQ, Luke Darby referred to the "distinctly environmental theme" of Crusius' declared manifesto.[85] Jeet Heer in The Nation described the manifesto as being based in "Malthusian fascism", a worldview in which different races vie against one some other in the face of environmental crises such as global warming.[86] Mainstream environmentalists, including the executive managing director of the Sierra Club, denounced the attacker's alleged white-supremacist motivations.[5]

United States [edit]

President Trump and the First Lady with the family and baby son of El Paso shooting victims Jordan and Andre Anchondo.[87] [88] [89]

President Donald Trump condemned the shooting as "hateful" and an "deed of cowardice" afterwards that day.[90] He promised that his administration would provide "total back up".[91] [92] In a later statement, Trump appear afterwards the shootings in El Paso and in Dayton, Ohio, that all United states flags, both domestic and abroad, would be flown at half-staff until sunset on August 8.[93] In a speech from the White House on August five, Trump said: "In ane voice, our nation must condemn racism, bigotry and white supremacy. These sinister ideologies must exist defeated. Detest has no identify in America."[94] On August 7, Trump said he was "concerned well-nigh the ascension of any group of hate", whether it was "white supremacy, whether information technology's any other kind of supremacy, whether it's antifa".[95]

Within two days of the shooting, #WhiteSupremacistInChief reached the number ane trend on Twitter[96] as critics pointed out that statements in the suspect's alleged manifesto mirrored comments Trump had made in the past, including references to illegal clearing as an "invasion" and telling an unspecified group of "'Progressive' Democrat Congresswomen, who originally came from countries whose governments are a complete and full catastrophe" to "get dorsum and assist fix the totally cleaved and crime infested places from which they came".[56] Media outlets also highlighted an incident in May 2019 where an audience member at a campaign rally suggested shooting illegal migrants crossing the edge, to which Trump responded with a joke,[96] saying, "only in the Panhandle you can get away with that".[54] [55] [56]

A statement released past one-time president Barack Obama stated, "We should soundly reject language coming out of the mouths of any of our leaders that feeds a climate of fright and hatred or normalizes racist sentiments," which has widely been interpreted as a criticism of Trump'due south specific rhetoric.[97] Trump'due south remark that violent video games contributed to such mass shootings, a view echoed by other politicians such as House Minority Leader of the Usa House of Representatives Kevin McCarthy and Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick, drew criticism from the video game industry, as by studies have found that no link exists between shootings and video games, and accused the government of using the medium as a scapegoat.[98] [99] [100] [101]

Texas Senator John Cornyn and Trump meet with survivors

U.South. Representative Veronica Escobar, who represents El Paso in Congress, brought a town hall meeting in the metropolis to an early shut post-obit the shooting.[102] [103] Escobar afterwards said at that place was also a hate epidemic, with domestic terrorism resulting from the dehumanization of others.[104] Texas Senator Ted Cruz issued a written statement deploring "this unspeakable evil."[105] Beto O'Rourke, a native of El Paso who represented the city in Congress from 2013 to 2019, said he was "incredibly saddened" merely that "The [El Paso] community is going to stay together. Everyone'due south resolved to make certain this doesn't continue to happen in this country."[106] Texas Governor Greg Abbott called the shooting "a heinous and senseless act of violence".[91] Texas Senator John Cornyn said that gun violence would non be solved by focusing on law-abiding citizens.[107] Texas Lt. Governor Dan Patrick said violent video games were partly to blame.[98]

Members of the Democratic Party[51] criticized Trump'southward anti-immigrant rhetoric in the wake of the shooting, including congresswoman Escobar[108] and 2020 presidential candidates[55] O'Rourke,[55] Cory Booker,[56] and Joe Biden.[51] Other 2020 candidates called for political action to eliminate gun violence, including Booker,[103] Pete Buttigieg,[109] Bernie Sanders,[110] Elizabeth Warren,[110] and Andrew Yang.[111] The incident also caused many celebrities and media figures to debate gun rights within the United States, with some condemning the perceived inaction of many political figures in stopping the large number of mass shootings in the country.[112] That aforementioned evening, Moms Demand Activeness, which had a convention that weekend in Washington, DC, led a march and vigil outside the White House in back up of gun control in the Usa and the ban of assail weapons.[113]

The day subsequently the shooting, some prominent Republicans, including Texas State Commissioner George P. Bush, likewise spoke of the need to combat white-supremacist terrorism.[55] [114] [115] Texas senator Ted Cruz decried the shooting equally a "heinous act of terrorism and white supremacy".[115] [116] [117] On Twitter, Deputy Attorney General Rod Rosenstein classified the attack equally "white terrorism".[43] [114] [118] Many Latinos interviewed by The New York Times said they felt disturbed at becoming targets of white-nationalist violence.[119]

Dan Stein, the president of the Federation for American Immigration Reform (Fair), issued a argument on Twitter denouncing the shooting, with no mention of Crusius' declared manifesto. The group regularly makes similar anti-immigration arguments to those independent in the document, prompting worries of political fallout from the shooting among Fair and like groups, co-ordinate to David Nakamura in The Washington Mail.[51] Both Stein and Mark Krikorian of the Centre for Clearing Studies, which as well advocates restrictions on clearing, dismissed any connections between Crusius' ideology and their ain.[51]

In response to the shooting, some 8chan users claimed that the shooter was "our guy". The purported manifesto of the shooter, after beingness deleted, was re-uploaded past some users, while others commented that it showed "nothing effort", or claimed that it was false.[44] Following the attack, Cloudflare terminated its website security service for 8chan, commenting that "8chan has repeatedly proven itself to be a cesspool of hate".[120] [121] The site subsequently went nighttime afterward its server rental provider Voxility discontinued its service.[122]

Trump visited El Paso and Dayton on August 7. The president and first lady also met with the mayors of El Paso[123] and Dayton.[124] In El Paso, protesters showed up at the site of the shooting, some claiming that Trump's attitude and statements had led to the shooting;[125] [126] Two days before the visit, congresswoman Escobar said that Trump was "not welcome" in the city and declined an invitation to see with him.[108] [127] [128] The White House published photos and a video of Trump'south trip; in some photos, Trump was pictured smiling and giving thumbs up gestures, while the video was focused on Trump shaking hands and posing for photos.[129] [130] Trump said that he had an "astonishing day" of visits, praising the "dearest, the respect for" him as president.[131]

Mexico [edit]

News report from Notimex near the shooting and memorials

Mexican president Andrés Manuel López Obrador extended his condolences to the families of the victims, both Americans and Mexicans.[132] López Obrador as well criticized the "indiscriminate use of weapons" in the United states of america.[133] The Mexican Secretariat of Foreign Affairs (SRE) identified the eight Mexican citizens killed, and the seven Mexican citizens wounded, in the attack.[134] [132] The Mexican victims killed in the attack came from Ciudad Juárez, Chihuahua City, and Torreón, Coahuila.[135] One of the victims, identified but as ″Rosa,″ who had also offered to testify, was deported on January 30, 2021 because of a pocket-sized traffic violation.[136]

Javier Corral Jurado, the governor of the Mexican country of Chihuahua, offered his assist to Texas governor Greg Abbott and El Paso mayor Dee Margo, and said that Chihuahua authorities were set to assist in whatever capacity if needed by the U.Due south. government.[137] The Chihuahua authorities also directed Chihuahua residents and Mexican citizens affected by the attack to Mexico's Executive Committee for Victims (Castilian: Comisión Ejecutiva de Atención a Víctimas), and gear up a phone line for Mexican citizens who needed assistance.[138] The Mexican Consulate in El Paso provided consular assistance to Mexican nationals afflicted by the assail,[139] and sent personnel to visit Mexican victims treated at the hospitals. The SRE confirmed that the consul Mauricio Ibarra Ponce de León would coordinate with El Paso and Ciudad Juárez officials.[140]

On August four, Mexican Secretarial assistant of Foreign Diplomacy Marcelo Ebrard announced that Mexico would issue a formal charge confronting the suspect for terrorism against Mexican nationals should United mexican states'southward Attorney General'southward Part (FGR) support information technology, and possibly request his extradition from the U.South. to Mexico to confront those charges.[133] [141] If the suspect is charged with terrorism, it would exist the get-go time in history that United mexican states issues a criminal accuse of this nature for a crime committed in the U.S. In addition, information technology would guarantee Mexico admission to data near the instance.[142] [143] Ebrard also stated that the Mexican government would remain in contact with the victims' families throughout the investigation and trial, and that they would press charges against the individual(s) or house who sold the weapons to the suspect.[144] Former Mexican president Felipe Calderón offered his condolences on Twitter, and besides directed a bulletin against Trump. He said that notwithstanding if the assail was confirmed to be a detest crime or non, that Trump should stop his "hate voice communication" and "stigmatization".[145]

International [edit]

Un Secretarial assistant-General António Guterres condemned "in the strongest terms the terrorist attack against Latinos on Saturday in the Texas metropolis of El Paso" and called for anybody to work together to combat violence born of detest, racism and xenophobia. Recently the UN launched an activeness plan to "fight against discourses that incite hatred".[146]

The incident was mentioned by Pope Francis during a speech in St. Peter's Square on Baronial 4, in which he condemned attacks on defenseless people and said he was spiritually close to the victims, the wounded, and the families affected by the attacks that had "bloodied Texas, California, and Ohio". The Gilroy Garlic Festival shooting happened in California around a calendar week before the El Paso shooting, while the 2019 Dayton shooting occurred in Ohio less than 24 hours after.[147]

Uruguay and Venezuela issued travel warnings to avert certain cities in America, including Baltimore, Detroit, Albuquerque, Cleveland, Memphis, and Oakland, citing "proliferation of acts of violence" and "growing indiscriminate violence, mostly for hate crimes, including racism and discrimination". Both countries warned their citizens to avert any place with large crowds, including shopping malls, festivals, and "any kind of cultural or sporting events".[148] Nippon issued a similar travel warning, advising its citizens to pay attention to the potential for gunfire "everywhere" in the U.S., which they described as a "gun club".[149] President Trump threatened undefined retaliation against countries and organizations that issue travel warnings on the United states of america because of gun violence.[150]

See besides [edit]

  • Bærum mosque shooting
  • Domestic terrorism in the Us
  • Halle synagogue shooting
  • List of mass shootings in the United States
  • List of correct-fly terrorist attacks
  • List of shootings in Texas
  • List of terrorist incidents in 2019
  • Pittsburgh synagogue shooting
  • Poway synagogue shooting
  • Terrorism in the United states

Notes [edit]

  1. ^ Twenty of the victims died on the mean solar day of the shooting, two others died in the post-obit days, and the 23rd victim died on Apr 26, 2020.[6] [7] [8] [9]
  2. ^
    • "The certificate parrots some of President Donald Trump'southward divisive rhetoric nigh immigration, merely the writer said his views predate Trump's rise"[41]
    • "The manifesto's author said their acrimony toward immigrants predates Donald Trump's presidency, but the language used bears much similarity with the president's vocabulary."[53]
    • "[South]ome of the language included in the certificate parroted Trump's own words, characterizing Hispanic migrants every bit invaders taking American jobs and arguing to 'send them dorsum'."[52]
    • "Portions of the two,300-discussion essay, titled 'The Inconvenient Truth', closely mirror Trump's rhetoric, as well as the language of the white nationalist movement, including a warning near the 'Hispanic invasion of Texas'."[54]
    • "But if Mr. Trump did not originally inspire the gunman, he has brought into the mainstream polarizing ideas and people one time consigned to the fringes of American lodge [...] Mr. Crusius described legal and illegal immigrants as 'invaders' who are flooding into the United States, a term Mr. Trump has oftentimes employed to fence for a border wall."[55]

References [edit]

  1. ^ Sources:
    • "Terror from the Correct". Southern Poverty Law Center. Retrieved November 11, 2019.
    • Wilbur, Del Quentin (August 11, 2019). "FBI struggles to confront right-wing terrorism". Los Angeles Times. Indeed, the gunman who killed 22 people at a Walmart shop in El Paso on Aug. three pushed the full number of victims slain in domestic right-fly terrorism since 2002 to 109.
    • Friedman, Uri (Baronial iv, 2019). "How Many Attacks Will It Accept Until the White-Supremacist Threat Is Taken Seriously?". The Atlantic. Only in another sense, if U.S. regime confirm that the document was written past the 21-twelvemonth-old white male suspected of committing the atrocity, and so there was plenty of fourth dimension—numerous years in which violence by far-correct, white-supremacist extremists has emerged every bit arguably the premier domestic-terrorist threat in the U.s.a..
  2. ^ a b c d e f 1000 Eligon, John (Baronial 7, 2019). "The El Paso Screed, and the Racist Doctrine Behind It". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. The threat of the 'great replacement,' or the idea that white people volition be replaced by people of color, was cited directly in the iv-page screed written by the man arrested in the killing of 22 people in El Paso over the weekend [...] The shooting in the immigrant-rich boondocks of El Paso on Saturday was among the deadliest attacks in the Usa motivated by white extremism since the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing that killed 168 people, co-ordinate to the A.D.L.
  3. ^ a b Maxouris, Christina; et al. (August 5, 2019). "El Paso vigils bring together a city in mourning afterward mass shooting". CNN.
  4. ^ Aguilera, Jasmine (August 3, 2020). "One Year After Mass Shooting, El Paso Residents Grapple With White Supremacy: 'It Was In that location the Whole Time'". Fourth dimension. The shooting, however, brought white supremacy to El Paso's doorstep, forcing the city to confront anti-Latino racism and white supremacy that has e'er existed in the U.Southward.
  5. ^ a b c d e Achenbach, Joel (Baronial 18, 2019). "Ii mass killings a world autonomously share a common theme: 'ecofascism'". The Washington Post.
  6. ^ a b Law, Tara; Bates, Josiah (Baronial 9, 2019). "El Paso Shooting Suspect Told Police He Was Targeting 'Mexicans.' Here'southward What to Know About the Case". Time.
  7. ^ "Death toll in El Paso shooting rises to 22 every bit investigators put together timeline of accused shooter'south movements". CBS News. August v, 2019.
  8. ^ Aguilar, Julián (August 5, 2019). "Death toll in El Paso shooting climbs to 22". The Texas Tribune.
  9. ^ a b "El Paso Shooting Victim Dies Months Later, Death Toll At present 23". The Seattle Times. Associated Press. April 26, 2020. Retrieved April 26, 2020.
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  14. ^ a b Levin, Sam (August 23, 2019). "Police force thwarted at least seven mass shootings and white supremacist attacks since El Paso". The Guardian. The 21-year-old suspect in [the El Paso] shooting, considered the deadliest anti-Latino attack in modern Usa history, allegedly authored a racist anti-immigrant 'manifesto'.
  15. ^ Branham, Dana (August iii, 2019). "El Paso massacre suspect wrote an anti-immigrant 'manifesto' before the attack, authorities say". Dallas News . Retrieved August 3, 2019.
  16. ^ "El Paso shooting: what we know". The Guardian. August 3, 2019. Retrieved August four, 2019.
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  21. ^ Kimball, Spencer (August 3, 2019). "twenty expressionless in mass shooting at Walmart in El Paso — suspect in custody". CNBC . Retrieved March 26, 2021.
  22. ^ a b "Warrant of Abort". State of Texas. August 4, 2019. Archived from the original on August ten, 2019 – via The Washington Mail service.
  23. ^ Todd, Brian; Maxouris, Christina; Vera, Amir (August v, 2019). "The El Paso shooting suspect showed no remorse or regret, police say". CNN. Retrieved August 6, 2019.
  24. ^ Hall, Alexandra; Contreras, Vianey Alderete (August 14, 2019). "'An Attack on All of Us': El Paso Shooting Targeting Latinos Stirs Fear in California Communities". KQED News. San Francisco. ...the Aug. 3 shooting in El Paso, the deadliest anti-Latino attack in modern American history
  25. ^ Romero, Simon; Fernandez, Manny; Corkery, Michael (August 4, 2019). "Walmart Store Connected Cultures, Until a Killer 'Came Hither for Usa'". The New York Times. [T]he massacre in El Paso was the deadliest anti-Latino assail in modern American history
  26. ^ Georgantopoulos, Mary Ann (August five, 2019). "Two More than Victims Of The El Paso Terror Attack Take Died". BuzzFeed News.
  27. ^ Jackson, Amanda; Grinberg, Emanuella; Chavez, Nicole. "These are the victims who have been identified in the El Paso shooting". CNN. Retrieved Baronial 6, 2019.
  28. ^ "Here is the official listing of all 22 victims killed in the El Paso mass shooting". KVIA. August five, 2019. Archived from the original on Baronial 4, 2019. Retrieved August v, 2019. - press release from the city government
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Farther reading [edit]

  • Charlton, Lauretta (August 6, 2019). "What Is the Great Replacement?". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  • Hafez, Farid (Baronial 26, 2019). "The Manifesto of the El Paso Terrorist". The Span Initiative. Georgetown University.

External links [edit]

  • Media related to 2019 El Paso shooting at Wikimedia Commons
  • KTSM-Television list of victims fatally shot

harrisonthationothe.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2019_El_Paso_shooting

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