US mass killings drop to 20-year low. Some policy shifts might be helping.

In a reprieve from years of the nation's harrowing mass killing incidents, the United States is on track to record its lowest rate of such deadly events in two decades, according to one group of researchers tracking the data.

Were 17 massacres, 14 of which were committed with firearms.recorded this year, according to a database maintained by Northeastern University in partnership with the Associated Press and USA Today. While that number may increase in December, it is the lowest since the database was created in 2006. And it represents a significant decline from previous years, including 2023, which saw more than three dozen similar incidents.

Northeastern's database tracks incidents in which four or more people, not including the attacker, were intentionally killed in a 24-hour period. Most mass violence involves the use of firearms, which is the subject of the chart accompanying this article. But the database also tracks other mass shootings, such as stabbings and the use of vehicles to attack pedestrians.

Why did we write this

As the annual number of incidents of mass violence rises and falls, even a small reprieve from the bloodshed in a country where thousands of killings occur each year underscores changes in policy.

The database offers important—but only one—information about the country's fight against violence, which is not always fatal. Another organization, e.g. Gun Violence Archive, counted 381 mass shootings this year, compared with 503 for all of 2024. This group defines a mass shooting as an event in which four or more people are shot, although not necessarily killed.

Some experts attribute some of the progress to recent anti-crime policies both locally and nationally, as well as increased school security measures. Part of the shift may also represent what statisticians call “reversion to the mean,” suggesting a return to more average crime levels after a sharp rise in previous years.


SOURCE:

Associated Press/USA TODAY/Northeastern University Mass Killing Database, US Centers for Disease Control

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Jacob Turcotte/Staff

Although the long-term trend in mass killings is characterized by peaks and valleys rather than a clear pattern of rise or fall, the latest data shows a decline.

“The overall picture of violent crime in the United States seems to be getting a little better,” says Adam Lankford, author of “The Myth of Martyrdom,” a book that explores the motives behind violent riots.

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