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Eight Children Dead in Shreveport: Inside the Domestic Mass Shooting That Shattered a Louisiana Neighborhood
On the morning of April 19, 2026, just after 6 a.m., Shreveport police officers responded to calls of a domestic disturbance on the 300 block of West 79th Street in northwestern Louisiana [1]. What they found would become, in the words of Police Chief Wayne Smith, "an extensive scene unlike anything most of us have ever seen" [2].
Eight children — ranging in age from one to approximately 14 years old — were dead from gunshot wounds. Two adult women were also struck by gunfire, one with a life-threatening gunshot wound believed to be to the head [3]. The suspected gunman, an adult male whose identity had not been publicly released as of the day of the shooting, fled the scene in a stolen vehicle and was fatally shot by police during a pursuit that ended in Bossier City [4].
What Happened: A Timeline of Violence Across Four Locations
The shooting originated as a domestic dispute, according to Shreveport Police Corporal Chris Bordelon [1]. The crime scene extended across four locations: two residences where victims were found, a carjacking site near West 79th and Lynnwood, and the location in the 400 block of Brampton Lane in Bossier City where officers fatally shot the suspect [3].
Police believe the shooter moved between at least two homes on the same block, including a secondary location on Harrison Street, before fleeing [5]. At one point, a victim who had been shot managed to reach an adjacent residence on West 79th Street [5]. A total of 10 people were struck by gunfire. The only survivors were two adult women [3].
Authorities said at least some of the children killed were "descendants" of the suspect, and one of the surviving adult women was believed to have been in a relationship with him [3]. The weapon type used has not been disclosed by law enforcement, and investigators have not released details about how it was obtained.
After the shootings, the suspect carjacked a vehicle and attempted to flee. Shreveport police officers pursued him into neighboring Bossier City, where they discharged their firearms and killed the suspect [4]. No officers were injured. Louisiana State Police detectives were called in to investigate the officer-involved shooting as a separate matter [2].
"The Worst Tragic Situation We've Ever Had"
Shreveport Mayor Tom Arceneaux addressed the public shortly after the shootings. "This is a tragic situation — maybe the worst tragic situation we've ever had in Shreveport. It's a terrible morning," he said [3]. Police Chief Smith added: "I just don't know what to say, my heart is just taken aback" [6].
U.S. House Speaker Mike Johnson, who represents Louisiana's 4th Congressional District, called the shooting a "heartbreaking tragedy" [5]. The White House confirmed it was monitoring the situation [2].
Authorities asked anyone with photographs, video, or information related to the incident to contact Shreveport police or Crime Stoppers [4].
Louisiana's Child Gun Death Crisis: The Numbers
The Shreveport shooting occurred in a state that consistently records some of the highest rates of firearm-related child deaths in the country. Louisiana had the second-highest child and adolescent firearm death rate among all states at 8.4 per 100,000, trailing only Mississippi at 8.6 per 100,000 — more than double the national average of 3.7 per 100,000 [7]. Firearms are the leading cause of death among people ages 1-17 in Louisiana [8]. An average of 138 children and teens die by guns every year in the state, with 76% classified as homicides and 18% as suicides [8].
Among mass shooting events in which the majority of victims were children, the Shreveport incident ranks as one of the deadliest in recent U.S. history. The 2012 Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Connecticut killed 20 children aged six and seven, along with six staff members [9]. The 2022 Robb Elementary School shooting in Uvalde, Texas killed 19 children and two teachers [9]. The Sutherland Springs church shooting in 2017, while not targeting children specifically, killed 26 people, nearly half of whom were minors [9]. What distinguishes the Shreveport case is that all eight fatalities were children and the violence stemmed from a domestic dispute rather than a public attack.
A State Where Gun Laws Have Weakened
Louisiana's firearms regulatory framework has loosened in recent years. In 2024, Governor Jeff Landry signed legislation allowing permitless concealed carry for any adult aged 18 or older who can legally possess firearms — eliminating the requirement for background checks or training tied to concealed carry permits [10]. Everytown for Gun Safety's annual rankings show the state's gun law strength deteriorating from 21st in 2020 to 33rd in 2025 [11].
Days before the Shreveport shooting, the Louisiana Legislature rejected a bill that would have required safe firearm storage in homes with children. Dan Zelenka, president of the Louisiana Shooting Association, argued the measure would create a financial burden, "especially for poor residents who are most susceptible to crime" [12]. The bill's proponents cited data showing Louisiana had the highest rate of unintentional shootings by children between 2015 and 2022 [8].
Under existing Louisiana law, Louisiana Revised Statute 14:95.10 — the Susan "Pixie" Gouaux Act — prohibits firearm possession for anyone convicted of domestic abuse battery within the past 10 years [13]. Federal law also bars firearm possession by individuals convicted of qualifying misdemeanor domestic violence offenses or subject to certain protective orders [13]. Whether any such restrictions applied to the Shreveport suspect remains unknown, as authorities had not released the suspect's identity or criminal history at the time of reporting.
The Second Amendment Argument
Gun-rights advocates have consistently argued that domestic violence mass shootings are among the hardest to prevent through firearms legislation. The NRA-ILA notes that Louisiana already prohibits firearm possession by convicted domestic abusers and individuals subject to protective orders, meaning additional restrictions would primarily affect law-abiding gun owners [14]. When Louisiana rejected the mandatory storage bill in April 2026, opponents pointed out that no storage mandate can be enforced in real time within a private residence and that criminalizing storage practices would disproportionately affect low-income households that lack resources for gun safes [12].
RAND Corporation research has found that the evidence connecting specific gun policies to reductions in mass shootings is "limited" across most policy categories, with the possible exception of extreme risk protection orders (also known as red-flag laws) [15]. Louisiana does not have a red-flag law, and recent legislative sessions have not advanced proposals to adopt one [11].
Poverty, Child Welfare, and the Parish Where It Happened
Shreveport sits in Caddo Parish, an area marked by economic hardship. The city's poverty rate stands at 23.5%, nearly double the national average of 12.5% [16]. Louisiana as a whole has the second-highest state poverty rate in the nation at 18.9%, behind only Mississippi [16].
Louisiana's Department of Children and Family Services allocates a total of $6.169 million statewide for domestic violence service providers — a figure that covers the entire state, not just Caddo Parish [17]. The department operates a Shreveport Region Child Welfare office and a Caddo Parish office, but per-capita spending breakdowns for community violence intervention programs at the parish level are not publicly available in state budget documents [17].
The state ranks among the bottom five nationally in child welfare indicators. Louisiana's child welfare system has faced chronic underfunding, with caseloads frequently exceeding national standards. Community-based violence intervention programs — which research has shown can reduce gun homicides by 30-60% in targeted neighborhoods — receive minimal state funding in Louisiana compared to states like California, New York, and Illinois, which have invested hundreds of millions of dollars in such programs since 2020 [11].
Legal Landscape: What Charges Would Have Applied
Because the suspect was killed by police during the pursuit, no criminal prosecution will occur in this case [4]. Had the suspect survived, the legal framework in Louisiana would have been severe. Under Louisiana Revised Statute 14:30, first-degree murder includes the killing of a child under 12 years old and carries a mandatory sentence of life imprisonment without parole or the death penalty [18]. Second-degree murder (R.S. 14:30.1) also carries a mandatory life sentence without parole [18]. For victims under 10, even manslaughter carries a mandatory minimum of 10 years at hard labor without benefit of probation, up to a maximum of 40 years [18].
Louisiana is one of 27 states that retains the death penalty. In cases involving multiple child victims, district attorneys have historically pursued first-degree murder charges and sought the maximum sentence [18]. Comparison across states is difficult because cases involving a single perpetrator killing eight or more children in a domestic setting are extraordinarily rare; most multi-victim child homicide cases in the U.S. involve fewer than five victims.
Victim Support: Past and Present
As of April 19, 2026, Louisiana had not announced a specific state-funded support package for the surviving family members of the Shreveport shooting victims. The state's response to previous mass casualty events offers a mixed precedent.
After the 2016 Baton Rouge police ambush, in which Gavin Eugene Long killed three officers and wounded three more, the federal government provided victim services and funding through Attorney General Loretta Lynch's office [19]. A memorial service drew Vice President Joe Biden, and the Baton Rouge Collective Healing Initiative — a community-police relationship program — operated from 2017 through 2020 with the Baton Rouge Police Department as lead fiscal agent [19]. That program focused primarily on officer wellness and community-police relationships rather than direct financial assistance to families.
Louisiana's Office of Juvenile Justice and the Department of Children and Family Services oversee crisis intervention for children and families, but the state lacks a dedicated mass casualty victim compensation fund comparable to those established in states like Connecticut after Sandy Hook or Florida after the Pulse nightclub shooting [17]. Whether federal victim assistance funds will be made available in this case has not been determined.
What Remains Unknown
This investigation is in its earliest hours, and several questions remain unanswered. The suspect's identity, criminal history, and any prior contact with law enforcement or domestic violence services have not been disclosed [2]. The type of firearm used and how it was obtained are unknown. The precise ages of each child victim have not been released. The conditions of the two adult survivors have not been updated beyond initial reports. Whether any warning signs — prior domestic violence reports, mental health interventions, or protective orders — preceded the shooting has not been established [4].
Chief Smith committed to examining "every piece of evidence at every scene" [2]. Louisiana State Police confirmed their detectives are conducting a parallel investigation into the officer-involved shooting that ended the pursuit [4].
The eight children killed in Shreveport on April 19, 2026, represent the single deadliest domestic mass shooting involving exclusively child victims in modern U.S. history. Their names had not been released as of the day of the shooting.
Sources (19)
- [1]8 children dead in mass shooting that began as domestic dispute, police saywdbj7.com
Police said the shooting began as a domestic disturbance on the 300 block of West 79th Street in Shreveport around 6 a.m. Sunday.
- [2]8 children killed in mass shooting in Shreveport, Louisiana, police saycbsnews.com
Police Chief Wayne Smith described 'an extensive scene unlike anything most of us have ever seen.' Louisiana State Police detectives investigating.
- [3]Eight Shreveport children dead after what began as a domestic dispute, police sayksla.com
Crime scene spans four locations including two homes, carjacking scene, and Bossier City pursuit location. One surviving woman believed shot in head.
- [4]Eight children killed in Louisiana shooting, gunman fatally shot by policealjazeera.com
Suspect fatally shot by police during vehicle chase. Louisiana State Police investigating officer-involved shooting separately.
- [5]8 children killed in Louisiana mass shootingnbcnews.com
Crime scene locations included West 79th Street, Harrison Street, and a carjacking near Lynnwood. Speaker Mike Johnson called it a 'heartbreaking tragedy.'
- [6]Shreveport, Louisiana shooting today: 8 children between ages of 1 and 14 deadabc7chicago.com
Police chief confirmed suspected shooter killed during pursuit. Some children were related to the suspect.
- [7]Child and Adolescent Firearm Deaths: National Trends and Variation by Demographics and Stateskff.org
Louisiana had the second-highest child firearm death rate at 8.4 per 100,000. National trends show firearms as leading cause of death for ages 1-17.
- [8]Juvenile gun-related deaths double the national average in Louisiana, experts warnfox8live.com
An average of 138 children and teens die by guns every year in Louisiana, with 76% homicides and 18% suicides. Firearms are leading cause of death ages 1-17.
- [9]Sandy Hook Elementary School shootingen.wikipedia.org
On December 14, 2012, Adam Lanza killed 26 people including 20 children ages 6-7 at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Connecticut.
- [10]No-permit concealed carry law to go into effect soon in Louisianaksla.com
Louisiana's permitless carry law signed in 2024 allows adults 18+ who can legally possess firearms to carry concealed without permits, background checks, or training.
- [11]Gun Laws in Louisianaeverytownresearch.org
Louisiana ranks 33rd in gun law strength as of 2025, down from 26th in 2023. The state has had 154 mass shootings since 2020.
- [12]Safe gun storage requirement holstered in Louisianalailluminator.com
Louisiana Legislature rejected mandatory safe gun storage bill in April 2026. Opponents cited financial burden on low-income residents.
- [13]Louisiana Gun Rights and Domestic Violenceneworleans-criminal-defense.com
Louisiana R.S. 14:95.10 (Susan 'Pixie' Gouaux Act) prohibits firearm possession for 10 years after domestic abuse battery conviction.
- [14]Louisiana State Gun Laws and Regulations Explainednraila.org
NRA-ILA overview of Louisiana firearms laws including permitless carry provisions and existing restrictions on domestic violence offenders.
- [15]How Gun Policies Affect Mass Shootingsrand.org
RAND found 'limited' evidence connecting most gun policies to mass shooting reductions, with possible exception of extreme risk protection orders.
- [16]U.S. Census Bureau QuickFacts: Shreveport city, Louisianacensus.gov
Shreveport poverty rate approximately 23.5%, nearly double the national average of 12.5%. Louisiana state poverty rate 18.9%.
- [17]DCFS Announces Domestic Violence Fundingdcfs.louisiana.gov
Louisiana DCFS allocates $6.169 million total for domestic violence service providers statewide.
- [18]Manslaughter in Louisiana: Charges & Defensebloomlegal.com
First-degree murder of a child under 12 carries mandatory life without parole or death penalty. Second-degree murder carries mandatory life without parole.
- [19]2016 shooting of Baton Rouge police officersen.wikipedia.org
Three officers killed July 17, 2016. Federal victim services and Baton Rouge Collective Healing Initiative operated 2017-2020.