Luke Skywalker
Super Moderator
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Police and firefighters on the scene of the shooting at a Las Vegas Walmart, on Sunday, June 8. Two gunmen shot and killed two police officers eating lunch and then killed a third person at the Walmart. The gunmen then killed themselves.
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department vehicles are parked outside a Las Vegas Cici's Pizza restaurant. Two police officers were shot while they were having lunch Sunday.
Officers Alyn Beck, left, and Igor Soldo were shot while eating lunch. Both were husbands and fathers.
A Las Vegas Metropolitan Police officer monitors the scene.
Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department personnel gather outside the Walmart where one person was shot and killed.
Police cars and personnel gather at the scene.
Police and fire vehicles line the street near the scene.
Police officers move to enter the Walmart.
- Peter Bergen: Shooters in Las Vegas murders had extremist, anti-government views
- It's far from the first instance of extreme right-wing terrorism in the U.S.
- Since 9/11, more have died in far-right violence than Islamic terrorism, Bergen says
- Bergen: Authorities should pay more attention to the threat posed by homegrown extremists
Editor's note: Peter Bergen is CNN's national security analyst, a director at the New America Foundation and the author of "Manhunt: The Ten-Year Search for bin Laden -- From 9/11 to Abbottabad." David Sterman is a research assistant at the New America Foundation. This is an updated version of an article originally published in April.
(CNN) -- On Sunday, Jerad and Amanda Miller, a married couple, allegedly killed two police officers in an ambush at a Las Vegas pizza restaurant and then murdered another person in an adjacent Walmart. During the attack, the couple reportedly stated that their attack was part of a "