Ten years ago, a husband and wife opened fire at a San Bernardino Christmas party, killing 14 in what became one of the deadliest U.S. terror attacks since 9/11.

The police response became a textbook model for response to such shootings, contrasting starkly with law enforcement’s delayed response in the 2022 Uvalde massacre.

A decade later, survivors and relatives of victims continue to grapple with the loss while national debates rage on immigration and terrorism.

Mandy Pifer, a therapist, was with a client in Los Angeles on Dec. 2, 2015, when she received a text about a mass shooting in San Bernardino. Her fiance, Shannon Johnson, was a restaurant inspector there.

She didn’t panic until, driving home, she heard on the radio that the victims were employees of the desert city’s envir

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