Last Wednesday night, a gunman opened fire at a bowling alley and a restaurant in Maine's second most populous city, killing 18 people including a 14-year-old boy.
Robert Card, a suspect in the killings, was found dead late last Friday after authorities had issued arrest warrants for multiple counts of murder and launched a huge manhunt for him.
The shootings have prompted widespread outcry from young activists including David Hogg and Trevon Bosley, co-founder and board chair of the March for Our Lives organisation.
As members of the youth-led gun control movement born out of the US's deadliest high school mass shooting the 2018 shooting in which 17 people were killed in Parkland, Florida - Hogg and Bosley represent thousands of young Americans demanding change.
"What's happened is obviously heartbreaking, but at the same time, extremely frustrating," 23-year-old Hogg said. In 2018, Hogg survived the Parkland shooting and went on to co-lead the pro-gun control March for Our Lives rally.
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