The children of Annunciation Catholic School in south Minneapolis were engaged in the most innocent and peaceful of rituals.
Dressed in their green uniforms, they were praying at the adjacent Annunciation Church at a children’s Mass to start the school year.
The Wednesday morning liturgy had barely begun when high-velocity rifle fire — as many as 30 to 100 rounds, according to witnesses — started ripping through the windows and striking the children, leaving two dead and others wounded.
The violence, perpetrated by a 23-year-old former student, police said, tore through the tight-knit community and far beyond. What Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey referred to as “horrific violence” brought a deadly end to a summer that began with the assassination of a state legislative leader.
The shock and grief from perhaps the worst outbreak of mass violence in Minneapolis since the 2012 killings at a sign-making company that left five people dead including the shooter was felt as far away as the Vatican. More than 600 people, including Gov. Tim Walz and Sen. Amy Klobuchar, attended a vigil at the Academy of Holy Angels later Wednesday to mourn the slain students.
Slain as they sat in their pews were an 8- and a 10-year-old. Seventeen others, 14 of them children, were wounded. Seven people, including one adult, remained in critical condition, according to Hennepin Healthcare.
The injured children were between the ages of 6 and 15, according to Minneapolis Police Chief Brian O’Hara. The three injured adults were in their 80s. All the injured victims are expected to survive, O’Hara said.
The shooter, armed with a rifle, shotgun and pistol, began firing outside of the church, according to O’Hara.