
Lashon Luellen seen on Aug. 21, 2025 with a photo of her son Monte Edmond. Edmond was shot and killed on Oct. 26, 2024 in a shooting. He was 17 years old. (Angela Peterson via Reuters Connect)
One teen loved listening to podcasts about the ocean. Another played football and worked at a restaurant. A girl entering kindergarten dreamt of a fifth birthday party, one she never got to attend.
All of them died too soon.
Twenty-three students enrolled in Milwaukee Public Schools died by gunfire from June 2024 through June 2025 — enough to fill a classroom.
Each one left behind family, friends, teachers and others who miss them terribly. Their deaths rippled beyond their schools and neighborhoods to the entire city.
Many other children and teens enrolled at other schools have died by gunfire, too. But MPS is the state’s largest district, and its new superintendent has repeatedly called for urgency to address the community gun violence facing her students.
The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel set out to memorialize each life lost within the district. Reporters gathered information from the school board, police department, medical examiner’s office and circuit court. They interviewed friends and relatives, and reviewed online tributes and funeral programs.
Some families wanted to share memories. Others could not be reached.
Each student was more than how they died. Each one has a story.
Sherrone Thornton Jr., age 17, attended Vincent High School
When Daja Harris remembers her oldest son, Sherrone Thornton Jr., she smells the pancakes, eggs and sausage he liked to cook for his family at 6 a.m.
Sherrone often goofed around with his five younger siblings, like when he squirted them with his gel blaster water gun, his mom said. Sometimes he gathered his younger brothers and sisters so they could listen to the latest music he recorded.
Outside the house, Sherrone danced in public and greeted strangers from the car window. He held the door open for elders while wishing them a good day.
“He was just a kid that I was glad to call my son, and to raise,” Harris said.
Harris said her son, who went by “Junior” or “JR,” intended to graduate from Vincent High School.
He was already working at Walmart and using his paychecks to take his siblings shopping or pay for his friends’ haircuts. He planned to start his own clothing line, designing custom jeans and shoes, and move to Florida.
Sherrone also wanted to open a barbershop, after he practiced giving haircuts to his two younger brothers. He planned to charge different rates, $5 for kids, $15 for big kids and $20 for adults, and sell candy at the shop.
Sherrone died after a shooting in Washington Park on June 19, 2024. He was 17. Two teenagers have been charged with homicide.
Now, Harris has a memorial to her oldest son in her house. It showcases his bright smile, especially his dimples.
“He was like a bright star, in reality,” she said. “Now he is a star.”
— Cleo Krejci
Benjamin Mazaba, age 16, attended Audubon High School
Family, loyalty and art were the center of Benjamin Mazaba’s life.
The Audubon High School student aspired to be a tattoo artist. For one of his first pieces, he tattooed his mother’s name on himself.
Catherine Mazaba, Ben’s mother, believed her son’s focus on loyalty came from his difficult childhood. She and his father divorced, and money was hard to come by while she raised him on her own, she said.
“We had a lot of trauma and tragedy in our lives, his very short life,” Mazaba said. “Whatever was happening, we would always stay together.”
Ben was driven, smart, and did what “he wanted to do,” his mom said.
Sometimes that got him into trouble. He had run-ins with police, and mother and son often butted heads over his decisions.
But Mazaba said that attitude could also have taken her son far once he figured out how to focus it.
“It would have made him great at something someday,” she said.
Ben was shot and killed on July 27, 2024, on the city’s southwest side. His case remains unsolved.
RELATED: New study ties weak state gun laws to child deaths in Wisconsin
It was only days before the family’s annual camping trip, where immediate and extended relatives reunited at Devil’s Lake State Park.
The annual gathering has taken on a somber tone since his death. The family releases balloons and lights candles in honor of Ben during the trip, she said.
“That’s how we’re keeping his memory alive,” his mother said. “It was hard, but I have to keep doing it.”
— David Clarey
Travontae Greene, age 16, attended South Division High School
Travontae Greene’s family gathered at a Milwaukee park to celebrate his 16 years of life on Aug. 5, 2025.
They bought a cake and placed framed photos on a picnic table to commemorate his death exactly one year before.
Photos of the memorial posted on social media drew comments and remembrances from those who knew him.
“I love and miss you,” read one post. “It seems like yesterday, continue to rest until Jesus calls your name.”
Travontae was a ninth-grade student at South Division High School. Prosecutors charged an 18-year-old in his death.
Attempts to reach Travontae’s family were unsuccessful.
— Cleo Krejci
Alijah S. Golden-Richmond, age 14, attended Bradley Tech High School
Alijah Golden-Richmond loved to dance and play football and basketball.
At a vigil last summer, his mother described him as a “house kid.” He’d go to the park and come right back home, she said.
The 14-year-old was looking forward to starting Bradley Tech High School, she said, but he never got the chance.
Alijah was fatally shot on Aug. 15, 2024.
That day, he had been with a group of teens who tried to break into a car. A woman chased after them, firing a gun and killing Alijah. The woman was convicted and sentenced to more than 30 years in prison.
In court documents detailing how Alijah’s death affected them, a man who attended the same church as the teen’s family said it’s shaken that community.
Alijah’s violent death created a “shadow of fear and doubt in a place that should be defined by hope and fellowship,” the letter reads.
His former principal wrote in a letter that the teenager’s dream was to help other youth succeed. He envisioned Alijah becoming a teacher or a coach.
Alijah’s aunt, Pastor Belinda Jones of Walking in the Spirit Ministries, led a prayer at the vigil for him.
“Tell these Black young men, your life is valuable,” she said. “You’re an endangered species, young men. Your life is valuable.”
— David Clarey
Javontae K. Davis, age 17, attended Metcalfe School and Bradley Tech High School
Javontae Davis was killed on Sept. 23, 2024.
The 17-year-old attended Metcalfe School and Bradley Tech High School.
Police said the teenager was inside a car when one of the occupants fired shots at another vehicle, resulting in someone in the other car returning fire. A 51-year-old man was arrested, but authorities determined he had fired in self-defense and did not issue charges.
Little is available online about Javontae, and attempts to reach those who knew him were unsuccessful.
His death is believed to have contributed to another fatal shooting.
About three hours after Javontae died, a friend of his shot another man. Just before he opened fire, the 21-year-old friend was heard on surveillance video making threats and saying how he had lost a brother.
He was arrested and now faces a homicide charge.
— David Clarey
Lamar O. Parish Jr., age 16, attended Washington High School
Photos of Lamar O. Parish Jr. shared online show the different chapters of his life:
A toddler wrapped in his father’s arms; a smiling kid playing with a ball on the sidewalk; a young teenager getting his hair cut; and a teen posing on the hood of a Mercedez-Benz with a red-and-white bomber jacket and matching high-top Jordans.
“I love you son,” reads a message posted along with one photo collage. The collection is dedicated to “Lamar ‘Lil Marty’ Parish.”
Lamar was shot and killed on Oct. 6, 2024. The 16-year-old attended Washington High School. Authorities determined the shooter had acted in self-defense, and no charges were filed.
A different collection of photos online shows Parish ascending to heaven, surrounded by family photos.
“Thinking about you daily,” one relative wrote. “We miss you deeply, nephew. Love always.”
— Cleo Krejci
Monte Edmond, age 17, attended Barack Obama School of Career and Technical Education
Lashon Luellen remembers the moment she started seeing her son, Monte Edmond, as his own person, not as a child reliant on her.
They were driving to Wisconsin Dells and having an in-depth conversation about science. Monte listened to the same podcasts as her, and he began talking at length about the ocean, his favorite topic.
“You remember those moments when you look at your child as human,” Luellen said. “As their own entity.”
Monte always was curious and intellectual, wanting to know how the world worked, she said. He loved basketball and the Milwaukee Bucks, celebrating with his mom when the team won the 2021 NBA championship.
For much of her son’s life, Luellen raised him on her own. As he got older, he aimed to enter the trades and own his own business.
“I was motivated to give him the best life,” she said.
Monte was killed on Oct. 26, 2024. He was a 17-year-old student at Barack Obama School of Career and Technical Education.
Authorities determined the shooter had acted in self-defense.
Luellen was told prosecutors did not believe they could overcome a self-defense claim and get a jury to convict. She isn’t satisfied with that decision.
“I’m not letting it go,” she said.
— David Clarey
Marquell Newburn, age 12, attended Wedgewood Park International School
Marquell Newburn spent time “helping others, listening to music, playing with his siblings, playing his PS5, and cooking,” his family wrote in his obituary.
The 12-year-old attended Wedgewood Park International School on Milwaukee’s south side.
His mother was taking his younger siblings trick-or-treating when she received a “devastating phone call that my 12-year-old got shot,” she wrote on an online fundraising page.
Her son was a “very helpful, strong-minded young man,” she wrote. “He loved helping his elderly. Marquell was a very funny kid as well. He got along with everyone he came across.”
Marquell died Oct. 26, 2024. A 15-year-old boy was convicted in the shooting, telling police he had accidentally fired the gun.
“I just miss him so much. He should be here,” Marquell’s mother, Rishon Tharp, said in court this summer.
It was the second time the family has experienced such a tragedy. Marquell’s younger sister, Ranyla, died in an accidental shooting in 2022. She was 2 years old.
— Cleo Krejci
Nelson Manuel Lopez-Correa, age 15, attended Hamilton High School
Nelson Manuel Lopez-Correa was on his way to school, waiting at a public bus stop on the city’s south side, when a man shot him.
“He was a very kind kid,” his father, Jose Lopez, told the Journal Sentinel.
Nelson had four sisters and a warm relationship with them, his father said. The teen was popular at Hamilton High School, with numerous friends. The sophomore was well-liked by teachers, too.
“He was really loved by a lot of people,” his father said.
Nelson enjoyed basketball and football. He planned to work at the airport when he turned 16, along with his best friend, his father added.
His death left the family numb and in disbelief.
Nelson’s mother, who spoke with other local media outlets, said she promised her son she would get justice for him.
The man charged with killing the teen is scheduled to go on trial in December.
Prosecutors say the suspect had followed an ex-girlfriend to the bus stop. She was walking with Nelson, and then the man opened fire.
Nelson was wounded and died three days later, on Oct. 31, 2024.
— David Clarey
Xavier Davis, age 16, attended Audubon High School
Xavier Davis is an angel now, his family says.
“When God calls an Angel home we have no say,” a relative wrote on an online fundraising page to support their family.
The 16-year-old went to Audubon High School.
In an online tribute, an aunt said they shared the same birthday. He knew she loved him, she wrote.
“I will always love you and miss you until we meet again handsome nephew,” she said. “Gone too soon to gun violence so young.”
Others who wrote tributes to Xavier remembered him for his nickname as a baby, Mr. Toes, and for his smiles and propensity to give out hugs.
Davis was killed on Nov. 12, 2024. He was shot while inside the bathroom of a fast-food restaurant. Authorities determined the shooter acted in self-defense, and no charges were filed.
— David Clarey
Dominique Watson, age 17, attended Milwaukee Area Technical College Emerging Scholars program
Dominique Watson looked out for others.
So much so that on Watson’s funeral service page, one cousin wrote about a time Watson went out of his way to defend her son when he found himself in the middle of a conflict.
“That’s just how he was,” she wrote, adding that Dominique always made her laugh. “As he aged, he became so mature and wise like he’d been here before.”
On Nov. 19, 2024, Watson was shot and killed. He was 17.
Done was the aging and, along with it, the caring and concern for his loved ones. No more making people laugh, or touching others with “warmth and kindness,” as his obituary page says.
Another teen is charged in his death, which prosecutors say occurred during an attempted gun sale.
Watson had been a student in the Milwaukee Area Technical College Emerging Scholars program, which helps students obtain MPS high school diplomas. Attempts to reach his family and friends were not successful.
— Jack Albright
Emanuel Johnson, age 15, attended Riverside University High School
When Emanuel Johnson was born on Aug. 23, 2009, about 45 seconds passed before he took his first gasp of air.
He was the smaller baby compared to his twin sister, and “came out black and blue” at first, remembers his father, Frederick Jackson.
“He was a short, chunky, playful, funny delight, basically,” Jackson said. “He always brought smiles in the room, until the day he died.”
Emanuel, who went by “Manny,” loved playing basketball, soccer and video games. Like other teenagers, he took mirror selfies, rode his bike and gamed on the couch with friends, photos show.
The teen wasn’t big on church, his father said. But he always believed in God and remembered the translation of his name: “God with us.”
Emanuel died at age 15 on Dec. 12, 2024. Three people have been charged in connection to his death, which was ruled a homicide.
— Cleo Krejci
Makai Neal, age 15, attended James Madison Academic Campus
Irma Ortiz misses taking her son, Makai Neal, to football practice. She misses watching him play as quarterback. She misses hosting Makai’s teammates.
“My whole life was about Makai,” Ortiz said. “Now I feel lost.”
Makai, 15, died on Feb. 10, 2025. Prosecutors say he was shot and killed before being left in a burning car.
The funeral home told Ortiz she needed to sign a waiver to see Makai’s body before he was cremated. She hugged him through a quilt instead. His head felt small. Ortiz was told that his body could not have been identified if left in the car 10 minutes longer.
“That’s what hurts me the most,” Ortiz said. “That you took him and you burnt my baby.”
Makai was affectionate and sensitive, his family said. He listened to rap music, made TikToks with his sister and loved Puerto Rican rice.
Ortiz and her ex-husband were kept busy driving Makai to school, football practices, games and tournaments. He grew up in a “blended family,” Ortiz said, surrounded by older siblings and younger nephews and nieces who adored him.
Makai’s family said he had attended schools in Milwaukee and Racine. MPS records indicate he was enrolled at James Madison Academic Campus.
Makai dreamed of playing for the NFL. His backup plan was working with kids.
Framed football jerseys and enlarged photographs line Makai’s bedroom at Ortiz’s home. The bed is made. The closet, still full. His urn sits on a side table. Ortiz visits the room each morning and evening.
Since Makai died, she struggles with depression. She wears “Justice for Makai” T-shirts to court hearings for those charged in connection to her son’s death and feels angry.
She tells herself Makai would not want her to cry.
— Ariela Lopez
Jai’Nadia Little, age 4, attended Milwaukee Academy of Chinese Language
Roshunda Parker will never forget the “squeaky little voice” of her 4-year-old great-niece, Jai’Nadia Little, asking if they could bake together.
“Every time I knew that she was coming over, I knew it was going to be a time,” she said.
“We were going to be baking some cookies, we were going to be listening to music, dancing. She just was a joy.”
Jai’Nadia loved lots of things: art, music, dancing, singing. Brownie, her Auntie Roshunda’s dog. Coloring with crayons and going to family parties, like at Thanksgiving, Christmas and the Fourth of July.
Last fall, Parker dropped her great-niece off for her first day of K4 at the Milwaukee Academy of Chinese Language.
As the two were about to part, Parker called for her to wait and snapped a photo. It shows Jai’Nadia smiling with red beads in her braided hair, a red cardigan and matching shoes with pulled-up white socks.
“She had so much respect,” Parker said. “Even to hear her teachers talk about how she helped other kids in her classroom. At four years old, she was just that person. She was just an amazing, amazing, amazing little child.”
When her great-aunt asked what theme Jai’Nadia wanted for her fifth birthday on March 17, she had an answer: blue.
Her family planned the party, buying decorations and a matching blue princess dress.
But she was killed in an accidental shooting on Feb. 18, 2025, about a month before she would turn 5.
Her family used her photo from the first day of school in her obituary.
They buried her in her blue birthday dress.
— Cleo Krejci
J’Kari Perkins, age 18, attended Green Preparatory Academy
J’Kari Perkins, 18, was a goofy kid and liked cracking jokes, said his aunt, Jazelynn Goudy.
He didn’t love school but wanted to learn.
The third of four siblings, J’Kari grew up without his father. His mother, Diedre Nicole Perkins, died in November 2023 after battling lymphoma for years.
Her dream was for J’Kari and his younger sister to earn their diplomas, Goudy said.
J’Kari was two months away from graduating at Green Tree High School when he died on March 29, 2025. Prosecutors say J’Kari was killed in a robbery over a gun. Two teens are charged in his death.
“It was crushing,” Goudy said. “It’s unsettling that he’s gone. It’s just like this emptiness.”
Goudy said her nephew was very attached to his mother when he was young.
“He was just a cute kid,” she said. “He had long hair, long eyelashes, just an adorable baby.”
Growing up, J’Kari played for the Neighborhood Children’s Sports League’s Buccaneers football team, coached by his grandfather. Earning money excited him, whether he was cutting the lawn for his grandparents or making pizzas at Barbiere’s Italian Inn on Blue Mound Avenue.
His coworkers remember his room-brightening smile, his jokes and his attentiveness on the job. He was quiet, often listening to music through his headphones, coworker Denise Dunn said.
J’Kari didn’t have set plans for after graduating. But he did have a clear objective: He was saving up the money he made at Barbiere’s to buy a car.
There was some irony to the pursuit. Goudy wondered why J’Kari, who could not drive, insisted on keeping a job miles away from his north side home.
“He wouldn’t find another job,” Goudy said. “He loved his colleagues. They loved him.”
“My nephew, when he has a goal, he will go straight forward,” she said.
— Ariela Lopez
Daquell Collins, age 6, attended Westside Academy
Daquell Collins smiled proudly during his kindergarten graduation.
“1st Grade Here I Come,” his graduation cap said, with a picture of Spiderman in the middle.
The 6-year-old was ready to learn more at Westside Academy. His family remembered him in online tributes as being a “bright, loving, and joyful” child. He loved McDonald’s. His favorite meal? A McChicken, four-pack of chicken nuggets, salty fries and a drink.
“He just was a good kid,” his father, Rashadd Vinson-Turney, told the Journal Sentinel at a vigil in April.
Daquell, known as “King,” was an inspiration to Aundayous Burks, a former partner of Daquell’s mother. The child made him want to be “a better man,” he said at the vigil.
Authorities say Daquell died after he found an unsecured gun in his home and accidentally shot himself. His mother and uncle were charged in connection with his death.
Burks advocated for the boy’s mother at the vigil. She is accused of buying the gun for Daquell’s uncle even though he could not legally have one, and was working at the time of the shooting.
“His mama loved him with all her heart,” Burks said.
Daquell died April 1, 2025, three days before his 7th birthday.
— David Clarey
Maurice Whiters, age 14, attended Bay View High School
Maurice Whiters never showed up to what would have been his 15th birthday party.
Colorful balloons hung on the wall, guests sipped slushies from plastic cups, and a pristine cake sat untouched as if waiting for the guest of honor to arrive to cut it.
More than 50 people gathered at a relative’s home to remember Maurice on his birthday, July 30, after he had been killed in a shooting two months earlier on May 2, 2025. The case remains unsolved.
Maurice was a smart child with a vibrant personality, said Stanley Whiters, 49, Maurice’s father. The Bay View High School freshman loved playing Fortnite and football.
Maurice’s helmet, scuffed from his years as a wide receiver, sat on the table as a tribute to what his father said was his ultimate dream: to play for the NFL.
Quintrell Smith, Maurice’s mother, previously told TMJ4 News Maurice also was interested in cutting hair, and Stanley Whiters said he talked about wanting to become a professional YouTuber.
“At 14, you don’t really know what you want to do,” Stanley Whiters said. “You’re still going through life.”
His father wants to start a nonprofit in Maurice’s name to help other kids in Milwaukee. Community support and role models can prevent young people from turning to gun violence, he said.
— Francesca Pica
Jalerian McDade, age 17, attended the Milwaukee Virtual School
Jalerian McDade always wanted a sister.
She got her wish after her mom gave birth to a girl last year.
Jalerian, 17, doted on her sister, even dressing the baby for her first Thanksgiving last fall, according to public Facebook posts.
Jalerian was naturally beautiful, loved to shop and cared deeply for her family, her mother wrote on social media.
“I love you girl so much,” her mother wrote in one post. “Why me? Why her? Why my baby? Why us? Why?”
Jalerian attended a virtual program through Milwaukee Public Schools. Prosecutors have charged her boyfriend in the fatal shooting.
She died on May 6, 2025.
— Mia Thurow
Damien M. Bean, age 17, attended Transition High School
Damien Bean Jr., known as “Junior,” was the do-it-all kid.
In an obituary written for his funeral, his loved ones shared how he loved to sing, dance and make TikToks. He enjoyed skating and swimming. He played both offensive and defensive line for the Milwaukee Steelers youth football team, even going undefeated en route to a championship in his first year.
He spent many days in the kitchen working to achieve his dream of being a professional chef, cooking anything from buffalo chicken and spinach artichoke dips, to crab boils, to homemade egg rolls creatively stuffed with anything on hand.
A senior at Transition High School, his goal was to run his own food truck that would serve and uplift his community.
Damien was 17 when he was fatally shot on May 14, 2025. The Milwaukee County District Attorney’s Office is reviewing charges against someone in his shooting.
“His generous spirit, big heart, and strong presence will be deeply missed by all who knew and loved him,” Bean’s funeral service program said. “His legacy of love, laughter, and service will live on in the lives he touched.”
Attempts to reach relatives and friends were not successful.
— Jack Albright
Zakiy Robertson, age 19, attended Assata High School
Zakiy Robertson had plans. He’d graduate from Assata High School, attend Milwaukee Area Technical College and become a barber. Maybe he’d even start designing his own clothing line.
His close-knit family was stunned and devastated when the 19-year-old was shot and killed May 21, 2025, said his aunt, Lakeshia Robertson, who considered Zakiy a son. One person has been charged in his death.
Zakiy had mentors at organizations across Milwaukee, was involved in many activities and was a role model to his siblings, nieces and nephews, his family said.
Robertson and Zakiy’s older cousin, Shantalea Gray, grew up together in areas where gun violence was common, losing several friends to violence. It changed how they parented their own children.
“We’re trying to break the generational curses, get them to better neighborhoods and introduce them to different things,” Robertson said.
They never thought Zakiy or any of the other children in their family would face the dangers they had.
“I really thought we were invincible until this happened,” Gray said.
Robertson remembered the day Zakiy graduated from elementary school. His mom called her at work, saying Zakiy didn’t want to walk out if Robertson wasn’t there.
Robertson finished her hospital shift and drove straight to the school. Zakiy smiled from ear to ear when he saw her in the crowd, she said.
In middle school, Zakiy and Robertson’s son played basketball and football together. Each year, they went trick-or-treating on Halloween, Zakiy’s favorite holiday.
Zakiy also had a hidden talent for singing. Robertson laughed as she recalled how her nephew sang R. Kelly’s “I Believe I Can Fly” at a school talent show.
“He was just a joy to be around,” Robertson said. “A real joy.”
— Mia Thurow
Nakwon Genous, age 18, attended Milwaukee Marshall High School
Nakwon Genous was shot and killed May 31, 2025, near 41st Street and Glendale Avenue. The shooting took place around 5 a.m. He died on the scene.
Genous, 18, was in the 10th grade at Milwaukee Marshall High School.
Attempts to reach his family and friends were not successful. An 18-year-old is facing charges in the shooting.
— Francesca Pica
Timothy Maurice Lewis Jordan, age 16, attended James Madison Academic Campus
Timothy Lewis Jordan is missed.
“It hurt me that they took you away from us,” an uncle wrote on Facebook.
His grandfather described him as a playful kid whom he often caught peeking out of his bedroom looking to play.
“Miss you grandson,” he wrote in a Facebook comment.
Timothy, a 16-year-old James Madison Academic Campus student, was shot and killed on June 6, 2025. Prosecutors have charged a 14-year-old boy in connection with the shooting at Stark Foods on West Hampton Avenue.
After his death, messages of support and mourning poured in on social media.
One photo shared online showed the family ready for a trip to a Disney theme park, with Timothy smiling next to his mother as they posed in matching shirts.
— Francesca Pica
Damelvion Green, age 15, attended Vincent High School
Four days after Damelvion Green died, his family and friends gathered for a balloon release.
“We’re trying our best as a family to send him home right,” one of his aunts wrote in a public Facebook post.
They were honoring the life of a 15-year old boy — a father’s only son, an aunt’s nephew.
Damelvion was shot and killed June 9, 2025, off West Hampton Avenue near North 46th Street.
He was a freshman at Vincent High School. His case remains unsolved.
Family members and friends of Green could not be reached by the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. His family still has an active GoFundMe to help cover funeral costs.
— Jack Albright
This article originally appeared on Milwaukee Journal Sentinel: 23 students from Milwaukee Public Schools died by gun violence in a year. Here are their stories.
Reporting by David Clarey, Cleo Krejci, Mia Thurow, Francesca Pica, Ariela Lopez and Jack Albright, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel / Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
USA TODAY Network via Reuters Connect

Wisconsin Democrats propose new gun safety measures on campus
A new bill would allow firearms to be banned campus-wide rather than building by building. Saying current rules don’t go far enough to assure safety...

Biden Announces First-Ever White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention
The Biden administration on Friday announced the creation of the first-ever White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention to help address the...
No Results Found
The page you requested could not be found. Try refining your search, or use the navigation above to locate the post.