Luby’s shooting, mass shooting that occurred in Killeen, Texas, U.S., on October 16, 1991, when a gunman opened fire in a Luby’s Cafeteria restaurant. Twenty-three people were killed and 20 were wounded; the gunman also killed himself. Until the Virginia Tech shooting in 2007, it was America’s deadliest mass shooting by a single person, but both have long since been eclipsed by other shootings, such as those at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, in 2016 and at a country music festival in Las Vegas, Nevada, in 2017.
Luby’s Cafeteria was a popular restaurant on U.S. Highway 190 at Killeen, right next to America’s biggest military base, Fort Hood. The lunchtime crowd was bigger than usual as a result of diners celebrating Boss’s Day. Around 150 customers and employees were present when, at 12:41 p.m., the restaurant’s plate-glass window crashed inwards as a 35-year-old from nearby Belton, George Hennard, rammed his pickup truck through it. A local veterinarian rushed to the driver’s window to offer help. He was the gunman’s first victim. The gunman then yelled, “This is what Belton did to me!” and opened fire. (Another source reports that Hennard shouted, “This is what Bell County has done to me.”) Patrons and staff screamed and dove for cover as he stalked the restaurant and shot victims, allowing one woman with a child to flee before killing another woman next to her. Hennard continued to shoot when four policemen arrived and fired at him. Finally, wounded and cornered by the police, he shot himself, leaving 23 dead or dying and another 20 injured.
In what has become a cliché, Hennard was later described by neighbours as a “loner.” No motive was ever established for the atrocity he committed, although it is known that he had recently been dismissed from the U.S. Merchant Marine. The Luby’s Cafeteria branch reopened in March 1992; it has since gone out of business. A stone stela with the names of the victims stands near the former site of the restaurant.
In 1995 Texas’s legislature passed a law allowing residents with gun permits to carry concealed weapons. It was sponsored by Suzanna Hupp, whose parents were killed at Luby’s and who was herself also there, and signed into law by George W. Bush, who was the governor of Texas.