Jan 24 (Reuters) – Back-to-back mass shootings in California have claimed the lives of people who loved to dance at a studio in Monterey Park and farm workers in the coastal community of Half Moon Bay.
MONTEREY PARK VICTIMS
Eleven people died after a 72-year-old gunman opened fire late Saturday during a celebration of the Lunar New Year at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio in Monterey Park, east of Los Angeles.
The Los Angeles County coroner’s office has confirmed the names of the victims. There were six women killed: My Nhan, 65; Lilian Li, 63; Xiujuan Yu, 57; Muoi Ung, 67; Hong Jian, 62; and Diana Tom, 70. The five men who were killed were identified as Yu Kao, 72; Chia Yau, 76; Valentino Alvero, 68; Wen Yu, 64; and Ming Ma, 72.
The Chinese consulate in Los Angeles said Chinese citizens were among the dead. Taiwan’s consulate in Los Angeles said two Taiwanese expatriates also were killed.
Tom’s family said she died on Sunday after being taken to hospital in critical condition following the shooting, according to a statement seen by ABC News. Tom was remembered as a “hard-working mother, wife and grandmother who loved to dance.”
“To those who knew her, she was someone who always went out of her way to give to others,” the statement said.
In a statement on Twitter, Alvero’s family said he was a devout Catholic who loved ballroom dancing and was the life of any party.
“Overnight, we became unwilling members of a community who has to mourn the loss of our loved ones due to gun violence. We are left frustrated, stuck with this vicious cycle,” the family said.
HALF MOON BAY VICTIMS
Seven people were killed and one person was in critical condition after a 67-year-old man on Monday attacked two mushroom farms near the resort town of Half Moon Bay, south of San Francisco, police said.
The victims – seven men and one woman – were all Asian or Hispanic adults, according to the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office.
Jose and Pedro Romero, brothers who migrated from Mexico two years ago and worked at Mountain Mushroom Farm, were among those shot on Monday, their cousin Jose Juarez told Reuters.
Jose died and his younger brother Pedro is hospitalized, Juarez said. Jose has a wife and children back in Mexico, he added.
“You look to improve your life and then you end up with this,” said Juarez, quiet and sullen as he took a break from cooking at a Mexican restaurant in a Half Moon Bay strip mall.
The family is now looking for financial help in order to repatriate Jose’s body to Mexico, he said.
Farm worker Marciano Martinez-Jimenez was one of three people shot dead at Concord Farms, his nephew Carlos Martinez-Maya told ABC7 news.
Martinez-Jimenez’s death was confirmed to Reuters by Antonio Perez, who works at a Latino grocery store in Half Moon Bay and was schoolmates with him in their village in the Mexican state of Oaxaca.
Perez was stunned when, upon arriving in Half Moon Bay in the late 1990s, he saw Martinez-Jimenez again at a party.
“I was so happy. We spoke about when we’d arrived here. And he said, ‘Come sit down with us,'” Perez recounted.
Martinez-Jimenez was hardworking, quiet and sought to avoid conflict, Perez said.
“Last Thursday or so, I saw him for the last time in the store,” Perez said. “He came to buy cheese.”
The San Mateo County Coroner’s Office declined to comment on the identities of the victims.
Reporting by Alexandra Ulmer, Rich McKay, Brad Brooks, Sharon Bernstein, Kanishka Singh, Brendan O’Brien and Engen Tham, Ben Blanchard and Andrew Hay; Editing by Colleen Jenkins, Nick Zieminski and Daniel Wallis
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