Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Mass Shooting Victims List: What We Know

At least 17 are dead.
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17 people have been confirmed killed in the mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida on February 14. A former student has been charged with 17 counts of premeditated murder after he allegedly entered the school with a semi-automatic rifle, tripped the fire alarm, and began shooting other students.

At least 14 other victims were wounded in the shooting, with five sustaining life-threatening injuries. Other Stoneman High students are helping signal-boost information about those still reported missing, and paying tribute to the people who were killed. These are the victims who have been identified so far:

Alyssa Al Hadeff

Alyssa Al Hadeff was a 15-year-old freshman, according to the Miami Herald. She was confirmed to have died in the shooting by her cousin, Ariella Del Quaglio, in a Facebook post on Thursday.

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Scott Beigel

Scott Beigel was a 35-year-old geography teacher at Douglas High. He died while letting students into his classroom, as reported by a student, Kelsey Friend, on CNN.

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Martin Duque

Martin Duque was a 14-year-old freshman at Douglas High. He was confirmed to have been killed early on Thursday by his brother, Miguel Duque, who posted a photo of Martin on Instagram.

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Nicholas Dworet

Nicholas Dworet was a senior at Douglas High, and planned to attend the University of Indianapolis and join their swim team. The Indy Star reports His aquatics coach Andre Bailey said, "I'm telling you from the bottom of my heart, he just took his life in his hands and he chiseled and molded his life. This kid went from being listless and going through the motions to planning ahead and organizing his life." His classmates remember him as being the one to help every other member of the team and serving as "Swim Daddy."

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Aaron Feis

Aaron Feis was one of the high school’s football coaches. He was a former student of Douglas High, and protected students by putting himself in front of the gunman, according to the football program’s spokeswoman, Denise Lehtio.

“He died the same way he lived: he put himself second,” Lehtio said. “He was a very kind soul, a very nice man. He died a hero.”

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Jaime Guttenberg

According to the New York Daily News Jaime Guttenberg's brother, Jesse, was also at the school during the shooting. He survived. Her father, Fred Guttenberg, wrote a post about the incident on his Facebook:

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Chris Hixon

Chris Hixon was the athletic director and wrestling coach at the high school, and was confirmed dead by football coach Willis May, as reported by the Sun-Sentinal.

Luke Hoyer

Luke Hoyer died on the third floor of the school, according to his family, The Daily Beast reports.

Cara Loughran

Cara Loughran had previously been reported missing, but was confirmed to have died in the shooting via a family friend, Tara Bazinsky.

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Gina Montalto

Gina Montalto was a 14-year-old freshman, who had served on the school’s winter guard team. The team was scheduled to perform this weekend in Tampa, according to the Miami Herald.

Joaquin Oliver

Joaquin Oliver was a 17-year-old student, whose family had moved from Venezuela when he was 3 years old. He had become a citizen of the United States in January 2017, the Miami Herald notes.

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Alaina Petty

Alaina Petty was a 14-year-old student whose death was confirmed by family on social media, as reported by the Miami Herald

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Meadow Pollack

Meadow Pollack was a senior who was to attend Lynn University, according to the Miami Herald.

Alex Schachter

Alex Schachter was a member of the Douglas High marching band, as noted by the Miami Herald. He was confirmed dead by a post on Facebook by Congregation Beth Am in Longwood, Florida.

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Carmen Schentrup

Carmen Schentrup was a 2017 National Merit Scholar semifinalist, whose death was confirmed on Thursday morning by several friends, according to the Miami Herald.

Editor's note: This story is developing and we will update it as we know more.

Related: We Have to Stop Pretending We Can’t Do Anything About Gun Violence