Authorities say the two people killed after gunfire erupted at a birthday party in a Houston suburb were high school students.
Harris County Sheriff Adrian Garcia did not identify the victims killed late Saturday evening in the residential neighbourhood of Cypress. Police earlier said shots rang out between 11:30 p.m. and midnight.
More than 100 people, mostly 17- to 19-year-olds, had gathered at the home for a girl's 18th birthday party. Although authorities initially said as many as 22 were hurt, Garcia says 19 were injured, with many suffering gunshot wounds. Others suffered injuries such as fractures and twisted ankles in the panic to escape.
Garcia says it was a "birthday party gone wild." He chastised the party organizers, who advertised it on social media, saying "you have no control on who to expect at your door."
Authorities have said they are seeking two gunmen.
Sheriff's spokesman Thomas Gillilan said earlier Sunday deputies were confronted with "mass chaos" when they responded to the call in the residential neighbourhood about 40 kilometres northwest of Houston, adding that "kids were literally everywhere." He said witnesses reported partygoers jumping from the second floor in their scramble to flee.
Mariah Boulden told the Houston Chronicle it was her birthday party. She said her brother and others were patting down people as they entered her home. Two men refused to be searched and walked away, she told the newspaper, then apparently hopped a neighbour's fence and entered through a back gate.
"They wasn't supposed to be here whoever they was," Boulden said.
Brown said word about the party was spread through Instagram, a photo-sharing app and website. She said she first heard gunshots in the house and they continued outside as people ran into the streets seeking cover. She told the AP she saw one gunman when she ran outside to escape.
Pools of blood were visible outside the two-storey brick home Sunday, and the garage door was bent after people had pushed it upward while trying to escape.
Karen Briones was visiting relatives in the neighbourhood when the shooting occurred.
"Girls were crying and screaming, banging on people's doors asking them for help and to call" the police emergency dispatcher, she told the Houston newspaper.
The sheriff's statement said those hurt were taken to at least five area medical centres or hospitals, some by paramedics and some in private vehicles. Gilliland said some people were shot in the foot, ankle and hip.
Bruno Figueroa lives a few houses down the street and said he heard five to 10 shots. He looked out his window and saw a crowd of at least 30 people running down his street.
"Kids were running everywhere," he said.
Figueroa said people suddenly began ducking into back yards and behind vehicles in driveways, apparently trying to hide from a car that was slowly coming down the street. Figueroa said that from his upstairs window he could hear the people who were hiding nearby.
"They were crying, yelling, 'My brother got shot,' 'Why did they do this?'" he said.
Figueroa said as soon as the slow-moving car rounded a corner and then sped away, the people who had been hiding gathered back in the street.
Sheriff's Office spokeswoman Christina Garza told the Chronicle that at least one parent was in the house. Gilliland said investigators were trying to determine if alcohol had been served at the party.
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