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Sweden just experienced the worst mass shooting in its history. Here's what we know

Sweden just experienced the worst mass shooting in its history. Here's what we know

CNN05-02-2025

A gunman opened fire at an adult education center in the Swedish city of Örebro on Tuesday, killing at least 10 people in what the country's prime minister called the 'worst mass shooting in Swedish history.'
Swedish police are still piecing together how the tragedy occurred. Here's what we know so far.
At 12:33 p.m. local time (6:33 a.m. ET) on Tuesday, police received reports of a shooting in Örebro, a city about 160 kilometers (100 miles) west of the capital, Stockholm.
The shooting occurred at Campus Risbergska, a school for adults who have not completed earlier stages of education. Such facilities are known as a Komvux in Sweden. Komvuxes provide vocational training, Swedish language classes and other courses for adults seeking the qualifications needed to gain employment. They are also essential services for Sweden's refugee and migrant populations.
Cellphone videos showed students taking shelter under desks while alarms screeched and red lights flashed.
'We heard bangs and loud screams. At first we didn't understand what it was, but then we realized it could be gunfire,' Andreas Sundling, a 28-year-old student at the campus, told CNN affiliate Expressen.
He said his classmates barricaded the doors and took cover for around an hour, before police entered the classroom and evacuated the students. 'There was blood all over the corridor,' Sundling said.
At least 10 people were killed and six were injured in the attack, police said. The attacker also died.
In an update Wednesday, Örebro regional authorities said six people were being treated at the local university hospital.
Three women and two men, all adults, were admitted for gunshot wounds and underwent surgery. Initially thought to have life-threatening injuries, the authorities said the five are now in a 'stable but serious' condition.
Another woman also received treatment for more minor injuries. No one else was admitted to the hospital overnight, authorities said.
By the time the attack began, many students had left the campus after taking a national exam on Tuesday, Lena Warenmark, a teacher, told Swedish public broadcaster SVT.
Mary Pegado, a 54-year-old teacher at the school, said she and her students had run to safety after someone burst into her classroom and told them to get out.
'I think of my students,' Pegado told Reuters. 'Many of them have fled from countries where things like this happen, and now they experience it here. It is horrible,' she said.
Not much, yet. Police said that the attacker was not known to them, that he was not connected to any gangs and that he was not believed to be acting based on ideological motives.
'At the moment, the police believe that the perpetrator was acting alone, but we cannot rule out more perpetrators connected to the incident,' police said Tuesday. They also did not say what type of weapon the perpetrator used.
Police said that the attacker also shot at officers after they arrived at the campus. In a press conference Wednesday, police said that when they found the attacker, he was already dead and that it appears that he shot himself. The attacker has not yet been identified by authorities.
School shootings are rare, but Sweden – long associated with high living standards and a strong social safety net – has seen a surge in violent crime in recent years, driven in part by gang warfare.
In 2023, Sweden had the highest rate of deadly gun violence per capita in the European Union, according to Reuters. In 2024, at least 40 people were shot dead in the country of only 10 million people – down from a peak of 63 people shot dead in 2022.
Although Sweden has high rates of gun ownership by EU standards, Swedes have to obtain a license before being allowed to own a weapon and the country places tight restrictions on eligibility.
Prime Minister Kristersson called for an investigation into how Tuesday's 'horrific' crime could have occurred.
'We've today seen brutal, deadly violence against completely innocent people – this is the worst mass shooting in Swedish history,' he said.
King Carl Gustaf and Queen Silvia joined Kristersson and other top officials to lay flowers at a makeshift vigil outside the school on Wednesday.
CNN's Sana Noor Haq contributed reporting.

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DAN GAINOR: 7 of the liberal media's craziest LA riots moment
DAN GAINOR: 7 of the liberal media's craziest LA riots moment

Fox News

time6 hours ago

  • Fox News

DAN GAINOR: 7 of the liberal media's craziest LA riots moment

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A protest over immigration broke out next to a Compton restaurant. The owner, an immigrant, offered help to both protesters and cops
A protest over immigration broke out next to a Compton restaurant. The owner, an immigrant, offered help to both protesters and cops

Yahoo

time8 hours ago

  • Yahoo

A protest over immigration broke out next to a Compton restaurant. The owner, an immigrant, offered help to both protesters and cops

Elizabeth Mendoza watched nervously as demonstrators protesting President Donald Trump's immigration raids and policies clashed with police outside of her Compton restaurant, Restaurante Y Pupuseria La Ceiba. 'It started with just a few people, then it started growing very quickly,' she told CNN in an interview translated from Spanish. Mendoza, herself an immigrant from El Salvador, has gained notoriety after videos of her and her staff sheltering protesters and helping law enforcement agents in her Los Angeles County restaurant spread across social media. In the late afternoon hours on Saturday, June 7, the protest began to ramp up significantly as demonstrators and officers clashed right in front of her business. At one point, Mendoza recalled seeing the police push the protesters away from her storefront and deploying chemical irritants. 'I don't know what happened with the tear gas they threw. 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'I also offered them milk. I ran out of milk.' Clashes between protesters and law enforcement have resulted in hundreds of arrests in Los Angeles, and Trump invoked a rarely used law to federalize the National Guard over the objection of Democratic California Gov. Gavin Newsom and local officials, which further inflamed the response. The Trump administration also mobilized 700 Marines to the Los Angeles area on Monday, though it is not yet clear when they will be deployed onto the streets to help with protests, according to a US Northern Command spokesperson. Mendoza said she never directed her staff to help the people suffering after the confrontation just outside the restaurant – they acted of their own accord. 'I was at the door, just letting everyone in,' she said. 'They just acted the way they felt they should have done to other people themselves.' Almost half of Los Angeles County's nearly 10 million residents are Latinos or Hispanics, according to US Census data. Over one-third of Angelenos are immigrants. Mendoza came to the United States without her family – 'without a father, without a mother, without siblings,' she told CNN, and first found work at a restaurant. She opened her own restaurant 15 years ago and has since found her place in the community. 'I was afraid something bad would happen and they would destroy my restaurant, which you hear about,' Mendoza said. 'So I decided to stay there, and looking at that whole situation, thank God, I sympathize with many protesters. I live in the area, and I can practically tell you that I know several of them, and they are good people and are my clients.' Multiple friends contacted Mendoza and urged her to close her restaurant for the day after seeing all of the chaos surrounding the protests in her neighborhood. Mendoza felt that she had to stay open to provide for her clients that had stayed with her 'through the good and the bad.' 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