A white supremacist opened fire in a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, this past Saturday, where he shot and killed 22 people and injured an additional 26. At first, the death toll was reported at 20, but the El Paso Police Department confirmed on Twitter that additional people have died while being treated at local hospitals. Some patients remain in critical condition.
Here’s what we know about the victims. Information is uneven, as little has been reported about some individuals. It’s also worth noting that there have been discrepancies between the lists coming out of the U.S. and Mexico, including the spelling of some names and some nationalities.
1. Jordan Anchondo
Daily Kos previously reported on Jordan Anchondo, the 25-year-old mother of three who was killed while shielding her 2-month-old son during the shooting, as first reported by the Associated Press.
“From the baby’s injuries, they said that more than likely my sister was trying to shield him,” Anchondo’s sister Leta Jamrowski told the AP while waiting at the local hospital. “So when she got shot she was holding him and she fell on him, so that’s why he broke some of his bones. So he pretty much lived because she gave her life.”
At the time, Jamrowski told the AP she was still waiting to hear news about Andre Ancondo. He has since been reported among the victims.
2. Andre Anchondo
Jordan Anchondo’s husband, and father of their two-month-old son, also died during the shooting. The AP reports that a friend of Jordan’s told the news organization that the new dad had recently started a granite and stone business in El Paso.
“He had the character and the charisma,” said Koteiba “Koti” Azzam, Anchondo’s friend.
3. Arturo Benavides
Arturo Benavides, a bus driver and army veteran, as reported by CNN, also died during the attack, as confirmed by his wife in speaking to TIME. “He was an absolutely caring and strong-willed man,” his niece Jacklin Luna told CNN. “He was the person that would give any dime and shirt off his back, a meal and a home to anyone.” He was 60.
4. Mario de Alba
The AP reports that Mario de Alba is in serious condition after being shot in the back. The AP found a Facebook page seemingly belonging to de Alba, filled with sweet pictures of him with his 10-year-old daughter, a Christmas tree, and hanging out in the car. His sister told the AP he is an “excellent father.”
De Alba, who lives in Mexico, had come to the El Paso Walmart to do some back-to-school shopping for his family.
5. Jessica Coca Garcia
Norma Coca told KWCH, a local TV station in Wichita, Kansas, that her daughter (Jessica Coca Garcia) and son-in-law (Memo Garcia) were near the entrance of Walmart when they were shot and injured. They were at Walmart raising funds for a youth sports team.
6. Memo Garcia
Memo Garcia was shot twice in the leg and once in the back. He is in critical condition.
7. Angie Englisbee
The New York Times reports that Englisbee, who was 86, was at the check-out line during the shooting. The mother of seven had just gotten off the phone with one of her sons before being shot and killed.
8. Leo Campos
KFOX/NDBC reports that Campos (along with Hernandez) dropped their dog off at a local groomer before heading to Walmart, where they were both shot and killed.
9. Maribel Hernandez
Family told KFOX/NDBC that they didn’t realize anything was wrong until the groomer called because the dog was still there, waiting to be picked up.
10. Javier Amir Rodriguez
As reported by the AP, Rodriguez was getting ready to start his sophomore year of school at Horizon High School in El Paso. He was 15.
"Please understand, this violence, this hatred, will not define this community," Beto O'Rourke
said at Horizon High School’s vigil on Monday. "We will speak forever about Javier with pride and gratitude and love."
11. Ivan Manzano
The AP reports that Manzano was from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico. He leaves behind two children: a 5-year-old daughter and 9-year-old son. He ran an orthopedic implants business.
12. David Johnson
Johnson, like so many others, was shopping with his wife and their 9-year-old granddaughter for back-to-school supplies at the time of the shooting. He was 63.
His niece told KFOX in an interview that Johnson died protecting his wife and granddaughter.
13. Maria Flores
Flores was 77 and a U.S. citizen.
14. Raul Flores
Raul Flores was 77 and a U.S. citizen
15. Jorge Calvillo García
Garcia was 61 and from Torreon, Coahuila, Mexico. His nephew, Ral Ortega, told KFOX that his grandfather died shielding his granddaughter, Emily, from bullets.
16. Alexander Gerhard Hoffman
Hoffman was a 66-year-old German citizen.
17. Luis Alfonzo Juarez
Juarez, at 90, was the oldest victim in the El Paso shooting.
18. María Eugenia Legarreta Rothe
Legarreta Rothe was 58-years-old and a Mexican national from Chihuahua. Telediaro Juárez reports that she was in El Paso to pick up her daughter from the airport and had stopped at Walmart before meeting her.
19. Elsa Mendoza de la Mora
Mendoza de la Mora was 57 and a U.S. citizen. She was a teacher and director of an elementary school in Juárez, El Diario reports, and had family on both sides of the border. Her husband and son had been waiting in the car at the time of the shooting, Milenio reports.
20. Maribel Loya
Loya was 56 and a U.S. citizen.
21. Gloria Irma Márquez
Márquez was 61-years-old and a Mexican national from Ciudad Juárez. She was a mother of four and grandmother.
22. Margie Reckard
Reckard was 63 and a U.S. citizen.
23. Sarah Esther Regaldo Moriel
Regaldo Moriel was 66 and a Mexican national from Ciudad Juárez.
24. Adolfo Cerros Hernandez
Hernandez, Sarah’s husband, was from Aguascalientes, Mexico.
25. Teresa Sanchez
Sanchez was 82 and was a Mexican national.
26. Angelina Silva-Elisbee
Silva-Elisbee was 86 and a U.S. citizen.
27. Juan Velázquez
Velázquez was 77-years-old and a U.S. citizen. He and his wife, Nicolasa, had been at Walmart for their weekly shopping, as reported by newspaper Zacatecas En Imagen.