2024 Duluth shootings | |
---|---|
Location | Duluth, Minnesota, U.S. |
Date | November 7, 2024 |
Attack type | Familicide, murder–suicide |
Deaths | 5 (including the perpetrator) |
Injured | 0 |
Victims | 4 |
Perpetrator | Anthony Nephew |
On November 7, 2024, 43-year-old Anthony "Tony" Nephew killed four of his relatives in two houses in Duluth, Minnesota. He first fatally shot his ex-girlfriend and their son in Cody, then killed his wife and their son at their Denfeld home before fatally shooting himself.
The shooting had undertones regarding Nephew's discontent with Donald Trump winning the 2024 United States presidential election; Nephew had threatened to kill his relatives during the previous summer if Trump were to win. Other issues regarding Nephew and his family and his mental health issues had been reported in the past few years, or mentioned by those who knew the Nephew family.
Anthony Nephew was a 1996 graduate of Denfeld High School.
Police had been called to Nephew's house in February 2021 as he was experiencing a mental breakdown. Nephew told officers that he had been having paranoid thoughts for the past month and agreed to seek treatment. [1]
On July 3, 2024, Nephew had threatened to stab his wife and kill himself, prompting her to call police. During the police's visit, Nephew indicated that he had been diagnosed with schizophrenia, told them that the Russians had control of his mind since he was six years old, and requested that the officer return and kill him and his family if Donald Trump won the 2024 presidential election. [2] This incident resulted in Nephew being hospitalized. In spite of this incident, Nephew applied for and received a gun permit on September 9. [1] [3]
Prior to the shootings, Nephew had posted left-wing and anti-Trump views on Facebook, writing in July: "My mental health and the world can no longer peacefully coexist, and a lot of the reason is religion." That same month, Nephew wrote: "Not that anyone cares, but as an Independent voter, I would really like to see both the political parties in our country pick better candidates. We can do better than a binary choice between fascism and not fascism." In another post, Nephew stated "Gilead here we come", referencing The Handmaid's Tale , a novel and television series in which women have been striped of their rights and are forced to reproduce for the ruling class. One of Nephew's last posts criticized the Minnesota Star Tribune for declining to make an endorsement in the 2024 presidential race. [4]
In a March 2021 op-ed for the Duluth News Tribune , Nephew wrote: "Mental health in this country is stigmatized, ignored, or treated as a burden for the individual to bear alone, with little help and less understanding." Nephew also stated in the op-ed: "For millions of Americans, a breakdown leads to suicide — or homicide before suicide." [5] [6]
On November 7, 2024, two days after Trump's victory in the 2024 election, Nephew went to the home of his ex-girlfriend, 47-year-old Erin Abramson, in the Cody neighborhood, where he fatally shot her and their son, 15-year-old Jacob Nephew. He then returned to his home in the Denfeld neighborhood, where he fatally shot his wife, 45-year-old Kathryn Nephew, and their 7-year-old son, Oliver. Nephew then died via suicide by gunshot. [7] [8] [9] Officers later found the bodies of Nephew and his victims while responding to a welfare check requested by a co-worker of Abramson after she failed to show up to work. [10] [11]
Although a motive has not been established, the Duluth chief of police noted Nephew's "pattern of mental health issues". [7] [8] [11] During a press conference held the day after the shootings, the chief stated: "I want to extend our heartfelt condolences to the family, friends and victims who were involved in this tragedy yesterday. We also want to send our condolences to both the Duluth community and Superior community as this is a senseless and tragic event." [12]
A GoFundMe fundraiser for Abramson and her teenage son had raised more than $2,000 as of November 12, 2024. [13] On November 13, around 500 people gathered for a candlelight vigil, walking nearly a mile between the houses the victims were killed in. [3]
Matricide is the act of killing one's own mother.
The Red Lake shootings were a spree killing that occurred on March 21, 2005, in two places on the Red Lake Indian Reservation in Red Lake, Minnesota, United States. That afternoon, 16-year-old Jeff Weise killed his grandfather and his grandfather's girlfriend at their home. After taking his grandfather's police weapons and bulletproof vest, Weise drove his grandfather's police vehicle to Red Lake Senior High School, where he had been a student some months before.
The 1982 Wilkes-Barre shootings was a spree shooting which occurred in the United States on September 25, 1982, carried out by George Emil Banks, a former Camp Hill prison guard. Banks fatally shot 13 people in Wilkes-Barre and Jenkins Township, Pennsylvania. The victims included seven children – five being his own – their mothers, some of their relatives, and one bystander.
A familicide is a type of murder or murder-suicide in which an individual kills multiple close family members in quick succession, most often children, spouses, siblings, or parents. In half the cases, the killer lastly kills themselves in a murder-suicide. If only the parents are killed, the case may also be referred to as a parricide. Where all members of a family are killed, the crime may be referred to as family annihilation.
On December 5, 2007, 19-year-old Robert Hawkins shot and killed eight people and wounded five others in a Von Maur department store at Westroads Mall in Omaha, Nebraska, before committing suicide by shooting himself in the head. It was the deadliest mass murder in Nebraska since the rampage of Charles Starkweather in 1958.
The 2014 Montgomery County shootings were a killing spree that occurred in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania, United States, on December 15, 2014. The killings began at about 3:30 a.m. A woman was found dead in Lower Salford Township, two others were found dead in Lansdale, and three more were found in Souderton along with a wounded teenage boy. Police identified the suspected killer as 35-year-old Bradley William Stone of Pennsburg, Pennsylvania, and the victims were his ex-wife and her family members. Most of the victims were shot, although some were also stabbed with a knife. After an extensive manhunt, Stone was found dead on the day after the killings in the woods near his home. He reportedly committed suicide by overdosing on several drugs.
On June 1, 2016, two men were killed in a murder-suicide at a School of Engineering building on the campus of University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA). The gunman was identified as Mainak Sarkar, an Indian-born 38-year-old former UCLA Ph.D student. The victim was William Scott Klug, a professor who was Sarkar's thesis advisor while Sarkar was a student at UCLA. A woman, later identified as Sarkar's estranged wife, was found dead in Minnesota during the subsequent investigation into the shooting, and is suspected to have been killed by Sarkar several days before the UCLA shooting.
Livestreamed crime is a phenomenon in which people publicly livestream criminal acts on social media platforms such as Twitch or Facebook Live.
On July 15, 2017, Justine Damond, a 40-year-old Australian-American woman, was fatally shot by Minneapolis Police Department officer Mohamed Noor after she had called 9-1-1 to report the possible assault of a woman in an alley behind her house. Occurring weeks after a high-profile manslaughter trial acquittal in the 2016 police killing of Philando Castile, also in the Minneapolis–Saint Paul metropolitan area, the shooting exacerbated existing tensions and attracted national and international press.
In May and June 2018, a spree killer sought out and fatally shot six people in Scottsdale, Arizona, United States. The shooting spree began on May 30 and ended June 4, when the shooter killed himself as police closed in. The shooter was identified as 56-year-old Dwight Lamon Jones.
Peter Allen Stauber is an American politician, former professional hockey player, and retired law enforcement officer from Minnesota serving as the United States representative for Minnesota's 8th congressional district. A member of the Republican Party, Stauber has represented the district since 2019.
On October 26, 2020, Walter Wallace Jr., a 27-year-old African American man, was fatally shot by Philadelphia police officers Sean Matarazzo and Thomas Munz at 6100 Locust Street in the Cobbs Creek section of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. The two officers arrived in the area to respond to a domestic dispute. When they arrived, Wallace walked out of his house carrying a knife. The two officers backed away while telling him to drop the knife shortly before they each fired several rounds at Wallace, hitting him in the shoulder and chest. He later died from his wounds in the hospital. Wallace's family stated that Wallace was having a mental health crisis.
On April 7, 2021, six people were shot and killed at a house in Rock Hill, South Carolina by Phillip Adams, a former reserve cornerback in the National Football League. Adams, who lived in Rock Hill, killed four of his neighbors at their home, as well as two repairmen who were working on the house's HVAC unit. After leaving the scene, he went to his parents' house, where he was found by police. The police tried to negotiate with him, but he fatally shot himself, and was found dead the next day.