Shreveport Father With Prior Gun Felony Killed Seven Children And Nephew In Mass Shooting
A Shreveport father killed eight children and wounded two women in a mass shooting Sunday, police said. Police said the attacks began at multiple locations on a neighborhood block in Shreveport and continued into a vehicle pursuit that ended in Bossier City. Authorities described the episode as stemming from a domestic dispute and said eight victims were children.
Officials said about 10 people were shot, including two adult women and eight children aged roughly 1 to 14. Investigators later identified the suspected shooter as 32-year-old Shamar Elkins and said seven of the slain children were his. Police and family members said Elkins used an assault-style weapon despite a 2019 felony weapons conviction that legally barred him from possessing firearms for at least 10 years. Officials say it is unclear whether Elkins' death resulted from officer gunfire or a self-inflicted wound after the pursuit. Louisiana State Police have been asked to investigate the officer-involved shooting, and detectives have requested that the public submit photos or video.
Early coverage framed the event primarily as a domestic violence shooting focused on casualty counts, while later reporting added family relationships and the suspect's gun felony, changing the public framing. CBS and ABC were among outlets that highlighted the suspect's name, military service, and that seven of the dead were his children, prompting wider discussion about domestic violence and gun access. Local officials and neighbors described a "full-blown shootout" during the police pursuit, and the mayor called the killings perhaps the city's worst tragedy, sparking shock on social media. Some law enforcement commentators on national television described the killings as "execution-style," intensifying calls for policy debates on domestic violence prevention and firearm restrictions.
📌 Key Facts
- The mass shooting occurred in Shreveport, Louisiana, with the crime scene spanning three locations in the same neighborhood (two residences on one block and a third nearby).
- Police identified the suspect as Shamar Elkins, an adult male who served in the Louisiana Army National Guard from 2013 to 2020.
- Eight children were killed — investigators say seven were Elkins’ children and one was his nephew; officials reported victims’ ages roughly between about 1 and 14 (some reports later gave a narrower 3–11 range) and said the victims included three boys and five girls.
- Two adult women and one child were wounded and survived; police said one of the women was Elkins’ wife, Shaneiqua Elkins.
- Authorities say the attack began as a domestic dispute: Elkins shot a woman at one home (around 5 a.m.), then went to a second residence where he shot the children and another woman as some tried to flee.
- While fleeing, Elkins carjacked a vehicle about a half‑block from the scene and led officers on a pursuit into Bossier City, where he died in a confrontation with police; officials said it remained unclear whether his death was caused by police gunfire or a self‑inflicted wound.
- Police say Elkins used an assault‑style firearm despite a 2019 felony conviction for illegal use of weapons that should have barred him from possessing guns for at least 10 years.
- Louisiana State Police detectives have been asked to investigate the officer‑involved shooting; officials held multiple press briefings, said no officers were injured, and requested the public submit photos or video of the incident.
đź“° Source Timeline (18)
Follow how coverage of this story developed over time
- Police say the shooter, identified as Shamar Elkins, used an assault-style weapon despite a 2019 felony conviction for illegal use of weapons that should have barred him from possessing guns for at least 10 years.
- Family members identify the wife as Shaneiqua Elkins and say the couple were separating and due in court the next day after arguments over the separation.
- Relatives describe the wife's sister escaping with a child by jumping from the roof and calling police minutes after the attack began.
- Officials specify the ages and sex of the victims as three boys and five girls ranging from 3 to 11 years old, and note that Elkins' nephew was among the dead.
- Louisiana National Guard confirms Elkins served from 2013 to 2020 as a signal support system specialist and fire support specialist with no deployments, holding the rank of private.
- Police say it remains unclear whether Elkins died from police gunfire or a self-inflicted shot after a vehicle pursuit.
- Louisiana officials said at a Monday press conference that two women and one child survived the Sunday shooting.
- Authorities publicly confirmed the survival count alongside the already reported eight child fatalities.
- New York Times provides a structured, timeline-based reconstruction of the shootings, clarifying the sequence of attacks across the three locations.
- Article adds more detailed biographical and family context on several of the child victims and the adult women, including relationships and ages.
- Piece includes expanded description of prior contacts between the suspect and law enforcement and what neighbors and relatives report about warning signs and domestic tensions.
- NYT refines the timeline of the initial domestic incident, the subsequent attacks on children, and the police pursuit and final confrontation in Bossier City.
- Neighbors Jacob and Tiffany Castleman describe hearing sirens, a barrage of gunfire and what they call a 'full-blown shootout' behind their home during the police confrontation with suspect Shamar Elkins.
- Neighbor Liza Demming says her security camera captured the gunman running from the house and two shots, and she later saw a child's covered body on the roof.
- Daycare owner Lashuan Berry, who knew the family, characterizes Elkins as having 'no soul' and 'dead behind the eyes,' while another neighbor, Fred Montgomery, says the family life had appeared normal the night before.
- A relative tells AP that Elkins and his wife had been arguing over their separation ahead of a Monday court appearance, offering more detail on the domestic dispute context.
- Police reiterate that Elkins first shot one woman in the face around 5 a.m., then went to another residence where he shot the eight children and a second woman, targeting victims as they tried to escape through a window.
- CBS segment explicitly notes that suspect Shamar Elkins served in the Louisiana Army National Guard from 2013 to 2020.
- The piece reiterates that officials characterize the shootings as beginning as a domestic dispute before becoming a mass shooting.
- Police publicly described the Shreveport killings as an 'execution-style' mass shooting.
- CBS segment reinforces that eight victims were children and that the shootings are being framed as a domestic dispute.
- Law-enforcement commentary on national TV underscores the case as a particularly extreme example of domestic mass violence.
- Police publicly identified the suspect as Shamar Elkins.
- Investigators said seven of the eight slain children were Elkins' own kids, clarifying prior general family-relationship descriptions.
- CBS framed the suspect's death explicitly as occurring in an exchange of gunfire with officers after the incident.
- NPR reiterates Shreveport police’s account that a gunman killed eight children and wounded two women in northwest Louisiana in a domestic disturbance.
- The newsletter notes that police believe the adult male suspect was the father of seven of the children killed and that one of the women shot was his wife and the mother of seven of the children.
- NPR confirms again that the suspect is dead, aligning with earlier reports of his death after a police pursuit.
- Confirms attack began at one home where a woman was shot, then moved to a second home where most children were killed.
- Adds witness account from neighbor Liza Demming, whose camera captured the suspect running and who saw a child's body on the roof.
- Provides detail that some children tried to escape out a back door, according to State Rep. Tammy Phelps.
- Clarifies that the Caddo Parish Coroner has not yet released victims' names as identifications are pending.
- Specifies that Louisiana State Police detectives were asked to investigate the officer-involved shooting in Bossier City and that no officers were injured.
- Notes this is the deadliest U.S. mass shooting since an eight-fatality incident in a Chicago suburb in January 2024, per an AP/USA Today/Northeastern database.
- CBS carried a live briefing where Louisiana officials publicly confirmed that eight victims were children and teens.
- Officials again emphasized that police view the incident as domestic in nature.
- Wall Street Journal confirms the suspect carjacked a vehicle while fleeing before being killed by officers.
- Article explicitly characterizes the incident as taking place during a domestic dispute, consistent with but independently corroborating earlier police framing.
- Provides a succinct official description that the man 'opened fire' before fleeing, reinforcing the basic sequence of events.
- Confirms that officials held a Sunday afternoon press conference on the case.
- Identifies specific briefing participants: Corporal Chris Bordelon, Mayor Tom Arceneaux and Police Chief Wayne Smith.
- Reiterates that police are describing the incident as a domestic disturbance in which 10 people were shot and eight children died.
- Police spokesperson Chris Bordelon said the victims ranged in age from about 1 to 14 and confirmed a total of 10 people were shot, including two adults.
- Bordelon said the suspect stole a car at gunpoint about a half block from the original scene before the fatal police shootout in Bossier Parish.
- Mayor Tom Arceneaux called it 'maybe the worst tragic situation we've ever had' and noted Shreveport has about 180,000 residents.
- Louisiana State Police specified that no officers were injured in the shootout and asked the public to submit photos or video to detectives.
- NPR confirms the age range of the slain children as between 1 and 14 years old.
- Police spokesman Cpl. Christopher Bordelon says some of the children were the suspect's descendants.
- NPR explicitly describes the episode as stemming from a domestic disturbance and identifies the suspect as an adult male.
- NPR reiterates that Louisiana State Police are investigating the officer-involved shooting after the car chase.
- Confirms eight victims were children and teens and that the suspected shooter is also dead.
- Specifies that the shootings occurred at multiple locations, including two residences on the same block and a third elsewhere in the neighborhood.
- Reaffirms Shreveport Police Chief Wayne Smith as the official briefing source at a news conference.
- Confirms the shooting occurred in Shreveport, Louisiana, rather than only generically in the state.
- Characterizes the incident explicitly as a domestic violence shooting, aligning with police framing in more detail.
- Adds New York Times as an additional corroborating national outlet covering the same event.
- Police say a total of 10 people were shot in the incident, with eight children killed.
- Shreveport Police Chief Wayne Smith said the crime scene extends across three locations in the city.
- The suspected shooter was fatally shot by police during a vehicle pursuit that continued into Bossier City.
- Victims range in age from about 1 to 14 years old, and some of the children were related to the suspect.
- Louisiana State Police detectives have been asked by Shreveport police to investigate the officer-involved shooting, and no officers were injured.