Ten years ago, a husband and wife opened fire at a San Bernardino Christmas party, killing 14 in what became one of the deadliest U.S. terror attacks since 9/11.
The police response became a textbook model for response to such shootings, contrasting starkly with law enforcement’s delayed response in the 2022 Uvalde massacre.
A decade later, survivors and relatives of victims continue to grapple with the loss while national debates rage on immigration and terrorism.
Mandy Pifer, a therapist, was with a client in Los Angeles on Dec. 2, 2015, when she received a text about a mass shooting in San Bernardino. Her fiance, Shannon Johnson, was a restaurant inspector there.
She didn’t panic until, driving home, she heard on the radio that the victims were employees of the desert city’s envir

Los Angeles Times Politics

Local News in D.C.
People Top Story
Daily Voice
CBS News
Cover Media
Local News in New York
CBS Sacramento Dixon News
Denver7 News
The Conversation