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Ten people have died following a shooting at a ballroom dance studio in the Californian city of Monterey Park, near Los Angeles, police said.
Police say another 10 people are injured and the suspect remains at large.
The shooting happened at about 22:20 local time on Saturday (06:20 GMT on Sunday).
Thousands of people had earlier gathered in the city for the Monterey Park Lunar New Year festival.
The Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department said they were seeking a male suspect who fled the scene, but did not provide any other details about him.
Captain Andrew Meyer said that emergency services arrived on the scene and found patrons "pouring out of the location screaming".
Officers then confirmed 10 people had died.
At least 10 others have been injured and are in local hospitals, where their conditions vary from stable to critical.
It is one of the worst shootings in California's modern history - the deadliest was in 1984, when a gunman killed 21 people at a McDonald's restaurant in San Ysidro, near San Diego.
Investigators said there was no clear motive and it was too early to say whether the incident was a hate crime.
Monterey Park has a population of about 60,000 people and is home to a large Asian community.
Videos on social media showed a large police presence in the the city, which is located about eight miles (13km) east of Los Angeles.
The shooting occurred on the 100 block of West Garvey Avenue, where several business premises are located, including the Star Ballroom Dance Studio.
An eyewitness told the Los Angeles Times that three people ran into his restaurant and told him to lock the door as there was a man with a machine gun in the area.
"It appears to have happened at a dance studio nearby where a gunman came in with what an eyewitness described as a machine gun, some automatic gun that fired multiple rounds at mostly Asian-Americans," Jeong Park, a reporter with the paper, told the BBC.
An eyewitness told him that someone fled in a car minutes later.
Others attending the festival said they heard sounds that they thought were fireworks, which struck them as unusual because the festival does not include fireworks.
"And then I knew for a fact it was not fireworks when I heard the helicopter up above. Because we never have helicopters around here," one man, Gabriel, told Reuters.
Second incident nearby
Captain Meyer added that police were aware of a second incident in Monterey Park, a suburb north of Monterey Park, but did not elaborate further.
"We have investigators on scene trying to determine if there's a connection between these two incidents," he said.
No one was injured at the second location in Alhambra but police remain at the scene, CBS News reported.
US President Joe Biden had been briefed about the shooting and had ordered the FBI to give "full support" to local authorities, White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre said.
Californian Democratic congresswoman Judy Chu, who represents Monterey Park, said her "heart was broken" for the victims, their families, and the people of her hometown.
The mayor of Alhambra, Sasha Renée Pérez, wrote on Twitter that it was "especially painful" the tragedy happened on a Lunar New Year weekend.
"Residents should be celebrating with family, friends and loved ones - not fearing gun violence," she wrote.
California's governor Gavin Newsom described the shooting as a "horrific and heartless" act of gun violence and expressed his sympathies.
The annual Lunar New Year festival is a weekend-long event that has previously drawn crowds of more than 100,000 visitors.
Sunday's Lunar New Year festival events had been cancelled following Saturday's "tragic incident", the City of Monterey Park said in a statement.
It stressed that the shooting did not happen at the festival.
Saturday night's festivities were scheduled to end at 21:00 local time (05:00 GMT on Sunday).
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