Opinion editor's note: Editorials represent the opinions of the Star Tribune Editorial Board, which operates independently from the newsroom.
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That most American of traditions — a July 4th parade in a close-knit community — this year yielded to what has recently become a regular occurrence in this country: a mass shooting.
A lone gunman allegedly took to a rooftop in downtown Highland Park, Ill., and sprayed paradegoers with a high-powered rifle, killing seven, injuring more than 30 and wounding any sense that this American scourge would subside. And in Philadelphia, two police officers were wounded when shots rang out during a fireworks celebration.
Minnesotans reeling from the national news woke up Tuesday to news of a closer-to-home holiday tragedy: that eight people had been wounded, several critically, in gunfire late Monday at Boom Island Park in Minneapolis.
There weren't any official Independence Day events at Boom Island or nearby downtown, but there were fireworks illegally fired from cars and sidewalks at people and buildings. One police officer was injured in the mayhem.
A 21-year-old suspect in the Highland Park shooting, Robert E. Crimo III, has been apprehended. Authorities said he had allegedly planned the shooting for weeks before firing more than 70 rounds from a legally purchased rifle "similar to an AR-15."
No suspects have been identified in the Boom Island Park shootings. One suspect was arrested in the downtown fireworks incidents, even though widely shared video on social media suggested far more were involved.