Details are beginning to emerge about the victims of the shooting at a toddler’s birthday party in Stockton, California, that left four people dead and at least 11 injured over the weekend.
The dead included children, aged eight, nine and 14, and a 21-year-old man who were shot at a banquet hall in the Central Valley city where they had gathered with at least 100 other people to celebrate a two-year-old’s birthday.
Authorities have not yet publicly announced the identities of any of the victims. But family members of Amari Peterson, 14, and Susano Archuleta, 21, have both confirmed their loved ones were killed in the shooting.
The violence sent shockwaves through the city of 320,000 people, located about 80 miles (130km) east of San Francisco. Police are continuing to search for suspects and have said that it may have been a targeted incident. Detectives believe multiple shooters may have been involved and are working on suspect descriptions.
Investigators welcome any information, “even rumors”, said Heather Brent, a spokesperson for San Joaquin county sheriff’s office.
Christina Fugazi, Stockton’s mayor, has said the violence was gang-related, but investigators have not publicly confirmed whether that is the case.
Shots rang out on Saturday evening as partygoers were preparing to cut a cake and sent people fleeing.
“I just heard gunshots and then the shooter came in,” Patrick Peterson, the father of Amari, told ABC10. “I turned my back, and I looked at him and I just start seeing him shoot, shoot, shoot, shoot.”
Amari Peterson was shot just above the heart, his father said, and his sister was grazed by a bullet. “All I can see is my son crawling on the ground and me trying to resuscitate him,” the elder Peterson said.
The teen was a “bright, loved, and promising young soul” who played football and basketball, loved ones said in a GoFundMe. “He was NOT involved in any gang activity. The only mistake this sweet boy made was being in the wrong place at the wrong time. He was simply being a kid at a kids’ party.”
The family of Susano Archuleta, 21, confirmed he was killed on Saturday after being shot in the neck while attending the celebration for a friend’s daughter. His brother, Emmanuel Lopez, told the Los Angeles Times that Archuleta “died in my arms”.
Archuleta was “full of life and energy”, Lopez said.
Stockton’s mayor said the eight-year-old victim who was killed on Saturday attended a local school and had a parent who worked for the Stockton unified school district. Activist Jasmine Dellafosse was among those injured in the shooting.
“[Delafosse] has been a longtime anti-violence advocate in the city who has devoted her life to making Stockton safer for everyone. So she’s a little bit shocked,” the city’s former mayor, Michael Tubbs, told the Sacramento Bee. “She’s in deep mourning because she saw those babies, as she called them, murdered next to her, around her.”
The Stockton shooting was the country’s 17th mass killing this year, the lowest number recorded since 2006, according to a database maintained by the Associated Press and USA Today in partnership with Northeastern University. But experts say that the decline could represent a return to average levels of mass killings following an unusual spike in 2018 and 2019.
The Associated Press contributed