Kansas City - Shooting at Superbowl Parade - Feb 14, 2024

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A case management conference has been set for Aug. 26 with a pre-trial conference to follow on Sept. 5, 2025. Mays’ jury trial has been set to begin at 9 a.m. on Sept. 29, 2025.
Miller was indicted on May 6, after nearly 3 months in the hospital, on the same charges. Terry Young, the third alleged shooter, also faces the same charges and is set to stand before a jury at 9 a.m. on March 10, 2025, for his crimes.


A 16-year-old Kansas City boy [known as AM] charged in the Super Bowl parade shooting was released to home detention by a Jackson County judge on Thursday.

On Wednesday, Phillips ruled in a sealed motion that A.M. would not be tried as an adult.
 
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The medical costs incurred by the survivors of the shooting are hitting hard, and they won't end soon. The average medical spending for someone who is shot increases by nearly $30,000 in the first year, according to a Harvard Medical School study. Another study found that number goes up to $35,000 for children. Ten kids were shot at the parade.

Then there are life's ordinary bills -- rent, utilities, car repairs -- that don't stop just because someone survived a mass shooting, even if their injuries prevent them from working or sending kids to school.

The financial burden that comes with surviving is so common it has a name, according to Aswad Thomas of the nonprofit Alliance for Safety and Justice: victimization debt. Some pay it out-of-pocket. Some open a new credit card. Some find help from generous strangers. Others can't make ends meet.
 

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