From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
USA-related events during the year of 2013
Events in the year 2013 in the United States .
Incumbents
Federal government
Events
January
January 16 : The grounded Japan Airlines 787 at
Boston Logan Airport
January 20:
Barack Obama , the 44th
president of the United States , begins his second term.
January 20:
Joe Biden , the 47th
vice president of the United States , begins his second term.
January 1
New laws that go into effect on January 1:
The
Senate approves a deal to avert general tax hikes and spending cuts known as the "
fiscal cliff ".
[5]
[6]
[7]
January 2 – President
Barack Obama signs the
American Taxpayer Relief Act of 2012 , intended to prevent the "
fiscal cliff ".
[8]
January 3 –
Subaru issues a recall for nearly 634,000 vehicles in the U.S. due to a lighting problem.
[9]
January 4 –
Congress officially declares President Obama the winner of the
2012 presidential election .[
citation needed ]
January 6 – In
ice hockey , the
National Hockey League and the
National Hockey League Players' Association reach an agreement that ends
the 113-day lockout and averts the cancellation of the
2012–13 season .
[10]
January 7
For
$ 8.5 billion, ten banks settle to stop mortgage foreclosure process audits. The United States government regulators had been engaged in a loan-by-loan review of home loan practices during
The Great Recession .
Bank of America ,
Citigroup Inc,
JPMorgan Chase & Co,
Wells Fargo & Co,
MetLife Bank,
Aurora Bank FSB,
PNC Financial Services Group Inc,
Sovereign Bank NA,
SunTrust Banks Inc, and
U.S. Bancorp settle with regulators to pay out cash up to $125,000 to homeowners whose homes were being foreclosed when the paperwork problems emerged. Further,
Bank of America agrees to pay $11.6 billion to government mortgage finance company
Fannie Mae .
[11]
2013 BCS National Championship Game : Number one ranked
Notre Dame Fighting Irish plays number two ranked
Alabama Crimson Tide at
Sun Life Stadium in
Miami Gardens , Florida.
[12] Alabama defeats Notre Dame, 42–14.
[13]
January 9
January 10 –
85th Academy Awards : Nominations are announced at Samuel Goldwyn Theater. The
Best Picture nominees are
Amour ,
Argo ,
Beasts of the Southern Wild ,
Django Unchained ,
Life of Pi ,
Lincoln ,
Les Misérables ,
Silver Linings Playbook , and
Zero Dark Thirty .
[16]
January 12 –
Mallory Hagan ,
Miss New York 2012, wins the
86th
Miss America pageant.
[17]
January 14 –
Mike Pence is sworn in as the 50th
governor of Indiana , replacing
Mitch Daniels .
[18]
January 15
January 16 –
Boeing 787 aircraft are grounded worldwide over concerns about the safety of their
lithium-ion batteries .
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24]
[25]
January 18 –
Ray Nagin , who was the
Mayor of
New Orleans ,
Louisiana , when
Hurricane Katrina
killed 1,577 Louisianan people (most of whom drowned), is indicted on 21 different counts including
fraud ,
embezzlement ,
money laundering ,
bribery , and
tax evasion .
[26]
[27]
January 20 – President
Barack Obama begins his second term, being sworn in to office in the
Blue Room of the
White House .
[28]
[29]
[30] Vice President
Joe Biden begins his second term, being sworn into office at his official residence.
January 21 –
Second inaugural address : The public portion of President Obama's and Vice President Biden's second inaugural takes place in
Washington, D.C. , a day after they were officially sworn into office.
[31]
[32]
[33]
January 23 – Previously valued $2 billion video game company
THQ sells most of its assets for $72 million after last month filing for
Chapter 11 bankruptcy .
[34]
January 24
January 24 –
August 14 – The
North Korea crisis begins. There is extreme escalation of rhetoric by the new
North Korean
Kim Jong-un regime, and actions strongly implying imminent warfare against
South Korea and the United States with nuclear weapons.
[40]
January 29
January 31 – A judge sentences
Russell Wasendorf , a founder of
Peregrine Financial Group , to 50 years in prison for stealing $215.5 million from investors over 20 years.
[44]
[45]
[46]
February
February 3 : Emergency lights provided some illumination during the
Super Bowl XLVII power outage.
February 7 –
9 :
February 2013 nor'easter – The snowfall in
Billerica, Massachusetts .
February 28 : Many wonder if
Treasury Secretary
Jack Lew 's signature will continue unaltered on United States currency.
[47]
February – The historic 1748
Terry Homestead building in
Bristol, Connecticut , is demolished.
[48]
February 1 –
Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton submits her resignation. She is replaced by
John Kerry after his confirmation by the
Congress .
[49]
February 3 – After a 34-minute delay in the game's second half caused by a
power outage , the
Baltimore Ravens defeat the
San Francisco 49ers in
Super Bowl XLVII by a score of 34–31.
[50]
[51]
[52]
February 4 – Seven people are killed and thirty others are injured after a bus is struck by two vehicles and flips over in
Yucaipa, California .
[53]
[54]
[55]
February 5
February 6
February 7 –
February 9 – The death toll from a
nor'easter across the
northeastern United States and southeastern
Canada is 18, with 40 inches of snow reported from
Hamden, Connecticut . More than 900,000 customers lost power at the height of the storm, while airports in the region cancelled over 5,300 flights.
[62]
February 10 –
14 – A
Carnival Triumph Cruise Liner docks in
Mobile, Alabama , after an
engine room fire caused the ship to lose power and propulsion at sea.
[63] The standard rated capacity of passengers is 3,143 and of crew is 1,100.
February 12
An assailant believed to be
Christopher Jordan Dorner kills a sheriff's deputy and injures another in and around
Big Bear Lake , California. He then barricades himself in a cabin, which catches on fire during a police assault. It is believed that Dorner dies in the fire, however this is later dismissed by law enforcement officials. Ultimately he is named as a suspect wanted in connection to a series of shootings that occurred throughout Southern California that killed four people and wounded three others.[
citation needed ] On
February 14 , it is announced by the San Bernardino Sheriff's Office that the body discovered in the cabin had been positively identified by medical examiners as that of Dorner.
[64]
President Barack Obama delivers his fourth
State of the Union Address .
[65]
February 14
February 20 – A federal grand jury in Georgia indicts four employees of
bankrupt Virginia-based
Peanut Corporation of America for the 2009
salmonella
outbreak that killed nine people and infected hundreds. The 75–count indictment describes contaminated or misbranded food by company owner Stewart Parnell, his brother and company vice president Michael Parnell, and two company managers. The charges are conspiracy, wire fraud, and obstruction of justice. This infection triggered the most extensive
food recall ever in United States history.
[68]
February 21
Retired police sergeant
Drew Peterson , whose fourth wife, Stacy Peterson, disappeared in 2007, is sentenced by the state of
Illinois to 38 years incarceration for the 2004 murder of his third wife, Kathleen Savio.
[69]
A watchdog group releases a report that details write-downs of
$ 19 billion on more than 168,000 properties by five United States banks. Under terms of a federal and state settlement of foreclosure-processing violations reached one year ago in March,
Bank of America lost the most and had
$ 13.5 billion in homeowner debts written off. The other banks are
Citigroup Inc,
JPMorgan Chase & Co,
Wells Fargo & Co, and
Ally Financial Inc.
[70]
February 23
The
Air Force grounds its entire
$ 400 billion fleet of 51
F-35 jets due to a major engine technical issue. During a routine inspection of the aircraft, maintenance personnel detected a cracked engine blade.
[71]
[72] On
February 28 , the Defense Department lifts the grounding after an investigation concludes that the cracks in that particular engine resulted from stressful testing, including excessive heat for a prolonged period during flight, and did not reflect a fleetwide problem.
[73]
[74]
[75] The total cost of all retrofits for problems found in flight testing is now
$ 1.7 billion.
[76]
A
crash during the final lap of the
NASCAR
DRIVE4COPD 300 auto race at
Daytona International Speedway in
Florida , sends debris flying into the stands, injuring 33 spectators.
[77]
February 24
February 25 – A study from Spain published in the
New England Journal of Medicine finds that following a
Mediterranean diet high in olive oil, nuts, fish and fresh fruits and vegetables reduces the risk of
heart disease . Patients were followed with either a Mediterranean or standard
low-fat diet for five years.
[80]
[81] The study is later
retracted .
February 26 – Pediatric
clinical trials of
Amgen 's
Sensipar , used to treat various
hyperparathyroidism problems which result in abnormal levels of
serum calcium , are halted in the United States after a 14-year-old patient dies.
[82]
February 27 –
Chuck Hagel is sworn in as
Secretary of Defense , replacing
Leon Panetta .[
citation needed ]
February 28
March
March 1 : The
CRS – 2 Falcon 9
March 18 :
Rembrandt 's
The Storm on the Sea of Galilee : stolen from the
Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in 1990.
March 1
March 5 – The
Dow Jones Industrial Average reaches a new record high close of 14,253.77, last set in October 2007, on the back of more positive indicators about the
US economy .
[91]
[92]
March 7 –
Senator
Rand Paul ends a 13-hour
filibuster to block voting on the nomination of
John O. Brennan as the
Director of the CIA , questioning
President
Barack Obama and
his administration's use of
drones , and the stated legal justification for hypothetical lethal use within the United States targeting against noncombatants.
Attorney General
Eric Holder states that
combat drones would not be used to target and
kill Americans not engaged in combat on American soil without
due process .
[93]
March 9
March 10 –
Daylight saving time goes
into effect .
[99]
March 11 – Former
Mayor of Detroit
Kwame Kilpatrick is convicted on corruption charges.
[100]
March 12
March 18
March 19
A suspect, Qari Abdul Saeed, is arrested in
Pakistan for the 2002 beheading of
The Wall Street Journal reporter
Daniel Pearl .
[108]
[109]
American musician Richard Hinds is sentenced to between five and ten years in prison for the
murder of Irish tourist Nicola Furlong in Japan.
[110]
[111]
In Ohio, T. J. Lane receives three
life sentences for the
child murders at
Chardon High School that he committed on February 27, 2012, as a 17-year-old. Lane curses and makes
obscene gestures at the victims' families during the sentencing.
[112]
The
Supreme Court holds in a
6–3 decision that the
first-sale doctrine applies to the domestic sale of foreign copies of copyrighted work lawfully made abroad. The first-sale doctrine (also known as the "exhaustion rule") is a core feature of both copyright and patent law. The doctrine holds that
intellectual property rights associated with a particular copy of a work are exhausted once there is an authorized sale or manufacture of that copy. Although the decision does not mention patent law, the case also has obvious implications for patents. The case may also have some implications for streaming of copyrighted content based on national origin. A Thailand man, Supap Kirtsaeng, had moved to the US and set up a side business of importing textbooks from Thailand and reselling them on
eBay in the US for a substantial profit. The imported books were not counterfeit but actual publisher-printed versions of textbooks. The publisher,
John Wiley & Sons sued for copyright infringement and argued that the first-sale doctrine did not apply to its authorized foreign sales.
[113]
March 23 – The
Senate approves its first
budget in four years by a margin of 50–49.
[114]
March 26 –
T-Mobile USA removes the contract requirement from its
mobile phone payment plans, becoming the first of the four major national
wireless carriers in the
U.S. to do so.
[115]
March 29
April
April 2
April 3
April 4 – A group of
Washington University School of Medicine scientists announce in a study published in the journal
Neuron that they have identified a number of
genetic markers that are associated with increased risk of
Alzheimer's disease .
[123]
April 8 – The
Louisville Cardinals win the
2013 NCAA Men's Division I Basketball Tournament defeating the
Michigan Wolverines by a score of 82–76.
[124]
April 10 – The
United States Post Office is forced by the
United States Congress to continue mail service on Saturdays.
[125]
April 11 –
Maryland Governor
Martin O'Malley approves a stormwater management fee derisively known as the rain tax.
[126]
[127]
April 13
A disgraced former jurist, Eric Williams, and his wife, Kim Williams, are charged with three counts of homicide for the murders of two Texas prosecutors and one wife.
[128]
Disneyland announces that it would temporarily close three of its attractions at its California theme park due to multiple
OSHA -related violations.
[129]
April 14 – In
golf ,
Adam Scott becomes the first
Australian to
win the
Masters Tournament by defeating
Ángel Cabrera in a sudden-death final.
[130]
April 15 –
19 –
Two explosions near the finish line of the
Boston Marathon leave 3 people dead and 260 injured.
[131]
[132] Authorities found clear video images of two suspects carrying black backpacks and with their faces visible, each suspect separately at the scene of one of the two explosions.
[133]
[134]
[135] A campus police officer is
shot dead in his vehicle at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology in
Cambridge ,
Massachusetts .
[136]
[137] The
Boston Police Department chases two carjacking suspects in the MIT campus shooting to the nearby suburb of
Watertown where, after a gunfight that included explosives, one
MBTA officer is injured, one suspect is killed, and the other is still at large.
[138] The suspects are brothers. One suspect is identified as
Kyrgyzstan -born
Cambridge resident 19-year-old
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev .
[139] The deceased brother is identified as 26-year-old
Tamerlan Tsarnaev . A number of
YouTube videos, posted by the suspects, surface that seek
Muslim takeover of
Chechnya .
[140] A tip leads police to the backyard-stored boat at a home in the Boston suburb of
Watertown, Massachusetts , where Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is captured after an exchange of gunfire and a brief standoff.
[141] The Boston Bruins home game against the Ottawa Senators scheduled for that day is postponed.
April 16 –
27 –
2013 ricin attacks :
Mail to the
US Senate is suspended after letter sent to
U.S. Senator
Roger Wicker (
R -
MS ) tests positive for the
poisonous substance
ricin at an offsite Congressional mail facility. The letter was sent to the
FBI Laboratory in
Quantico, Virginia , for further testing.
[142]
[143] After release of a previous suspect without charge, an adversary of his, Everett Dutschke of
Mississippi , has been arrested for mailing letters containing
ricin to the
President of the United States , a senator, and a federal judge.
[144]
April 17 – 15 people are dead and 160 injured after the
Texas fertilizer plant explosion in
West, Texas .
[145]
April 19
April 20
April 23
April 25 – In
American football , the
2013 NFL Draft begins with
Kansas City Chiefs selecting
Eric Fisher in
New York City 's
Radio City Music Hall .
[151]
April 30
May
May 10 :
One World Trade Center tops out at 1,776 ft.
May 1 –
Boston Police state that three more individuals are arrested in connection with the
Boston Marathon bombing .
[154]
May 2 –
Rhode Island becomes the tenth state to legalize
same-sex marriage .
[155]
May 3 –
Iron Man 3 , directed by
Shane Black , is released by
Marvel Studios as the seventh film of the
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) the first in its "
Phase Two " slate and the direct sequel to 2008's
Iron Man and 2010's
Iron Man 2 . It becomes the fifth highest-grossing film of all time at the time of release (currently the 20th).
May 4 – In
horse racing ,
Dominican
Joel Rosario rides
Orb to win the
Kentucky Derby .
[156] Other noteworthy entrants were Kevin Krigger who was aboard
Goldencents , trying to become the first black jockey to win since
Jimmy Winkfield in 1902.
[157]
Rosie Napravnik 's fifth-place finish aboard Mylute made her the highest finishing female jockey in the race's history.
[157]
May 5
May 6
Bank of America agrees to pay
$ 1.6 billion to insurer
MBIA to settle a long-running dispute between MBIA and two companies Bank of America had since acquired.
[160]
Singer
Lauryn Hill is sentenced to prison for three months after being convicted of tax evasion.
[161]
Three women missing (Michele Knight, Amanda Berry, Georgina DeJesus) for more than a decade are found alive in
Cleveland, Ohio , while a man, Ariel Castro, is charged with four counts of kidnapping and three counts of rape.
[162]
[163]
[164]
May 7
May 8 – Jodi Arias is convicted of the first-degree
murder of her boyfriend by a court in Arizona.
[168]
May 9 – It is revealed that in February, hackers stole
$ 45 million from worldwide bank
ATMs with large numbers of criminals using fraudulent debit cards.
[169]
May 10
May 12 – Gunmen open fire on people marching in a neighborhood Mother's Day parade in
New Orleans, Louisiana , wounding 19.
[172]
May 13
May 14
May 20 – A
tornado kills 24 people and wounds over 300 in
Moore, Oklahoma .[
citation needed ]
May 23
May 24 – Eight year old boy
Gabriel Fernandez dies after being fatally beaten and tortured by his mother Pearl Fernandez, and her boyfriend, Isauro Aguirre. The pair are later convicted of murder, with the case highlighting numerous failings by social services in
Los Angeles County .
May 25 – Two freight trains collide fifteen miles southwest of
Cape Girardeau, Missouri , causing a highway overpass to collapse; causing seven injuries.
[186]
May 26 –
31 – An
outbreak of tornadoes affects the
Great Plains , particularly
Oklahoma and
Kansas . Around 76 tornadoes were reported in the event including the widest tornado ever recorded near
El Reno, Oklahoma , at a very large 2.6 miles in width. A total of ten confirmed fatalities were reported with the outbreak.
[187]
May 26 –
Avengers Assemble debuts on
Disney XD .
[188]
June
June 5 : Rescue operations on the afternoon of the
collapse .
June 5 – An abandoned building in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania ,
collapses onto a thrift store, killing six people and injuring 14 others.
[189]
June 6 –
20 – The
2013 NBA Finals finishes the championship series of the
2012–13 NBA season and the conclusion of the
season's playoffs . The
Eastern Conference champion
Miami Heat defeated the
Western Conference champion
San Antonio Spurs to win their second straight title. The Finals began with Game 1 on June 6, and ended with Game 7 on June 20.
[190]
[191]
[192]
June 7 – A
spree shooting occurs at
Santa Monica College in California, with six deaths and more than four injuries. Shooter John Zawahri killed his father and brother and set their house on fire before going on a rampage, ending with him being shot dead by police.
[193]
June 9 – Published in the journal
Nature , using the
petascale
supercomputer
Blue Waters ,
University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign (UIUC), the
National Center for Supercomputing Applications ,
Physics Professor
Klaus Schulten , UIUC Postdoctoral Researcher Juan R. Perilla, and their colleagues, with the aid of previous research, and data from the
University of Pittsburgh and
Vanderbilt University , publish a structure of the
AIDS -causing
human immunodeficiency virus
capsid , potentially useful for
drug and
vaccine development.
[194]
June 12 –
24 – The
2013 Stanley Cup Finals finishes the
championship series of the
National Hockey League (NHL)
2012–13 season, and the conclusion of the
2013 Stanley Cup playoffs . The
Western Conference playoff champion
Chicago Blackhawks defeated the
Eastern Conference playoff champion
Boston Bruins in six games to capture their fifth Stanley Cup in team history.
[195]
June 13
June 13 -
June 16 –
Justin Rose wins the 113th edition of the
U.S. Open with a score of 281 (1 over par). He is the first English player to win the U.S. Open since
Tony Jacklin in 1970.
[200]
June 14 –
Man of Steel , directed by
Zack Snyder , is released in theatres as the first film in the
DC Extended Universe .
June 21 –
Pixar Animation Studios ' 14th feature film,
Monsters University , a prequel to 2001's
Monsters, Inc. , is released in theaters.
June 25 – In a
5–4 decision , the
Supreme Court strikes down Section 4 of the
Voting Rights Act of 1965 . Section 4 had required states with a history of discrimination to get permission from the federal government to change their election procedures in any way.[
citation needed ]
June 26
June 28
June 30 – 19 elite firefighters are killed trying to contain a
wildfire near
Yarnell , Arizona.
[203]
July
July 6 – Three Chinese nationals are killed when
Asiana Airlines Flight 214 , from
Seoul ,
South Korea 's
Incheon International Airport bound for
San Francisco ,
California , crashes upon attempting to land at
San Francisco International Airport .
[204]
July 7 – Ten people are killed when an
Alaskan Air Taxi crashes.
[205]
July 8 – A
prisoner hunger strike in California begins, with upwards of 29,000 inmates protesting solitary confinement practices.
[206]
July 10 – With still two years until its closest approach,
NASA 's
New Horizons team releases the spacecraft's first high resolution view of the
Pluto /
Charon dwarf planet system.
[207]
July 11 –
Sharknado airs for the first time on
Syfy .
[208]
July 12 – 648 counts are added to the previous 329 counts, for 977 total, against the
Cleveland kidnapper .[
citation needed ]
July 13 –
George Zimmerman , the man charged with the
killing of Trayvon Martin , is
acquitted of all charges after a
trial .
[209]
July 17 –
Rolling Stone Magazine editors approve a cover photo that some believe glamourizes
Boston Marathon bombing suspect
Dzhokhar Tsarnaev .
[210]
July 18 – The city of
Detroit, Michigan ,
files for
Chapter 9
bankruptcy protection against debts of
$ 18.5 billion.
[211]
July 26 – Kidnapper
Ariel Castro pleads guilty in exchange for life imprisonment.
[212]
August
September
September 2
September 3
September 8 –
9 – In
US Open tennis ,
Serena Williams wins the women's singles final,
[230] and
Rafael Nadal wins the men's singles final the following day.
[231]
September 9 –
16 – In
Colorado at least eight people are dead,
[232] 648 unaccounted for, and
$ 2 billion in property losses from
flooding .
[233]
[234]
[235]
September 14 – In the
Syrian civil war , the
United States and
Russia reach a deal on Syrian chemical weapons.
[236]
[237]
September 15 –
Nina Davuluri ,
Miss New York 2013, wins the
87th
Miss America pageant.[
citation needed ]
September 16 – A gunman
opens fire at Washington, D.C.'s
Naval Yard ; with twelve victims killed and eight injured. The perpetrator, Aaron Alexis, was killed by arriving police officers. It is the second worst shooting on a military base after the
2009 Fort Hood shooting .
[238]
[239]
[240]
September 18 –
Cygnus 1 (also known as Orbital Sciences COTS Demo Flight) launches the first planned flight of the
Orbital Sciences' uncrewed
cargo spacecraft
Cygnus , its first flight to the
International Space Station and the second launch of the company's
Antares launch vehicle. The flight is under contract to
NASA as Cygnus' demonstration mission in the
Commercial Orbital Transportation Services (COTS) program. The launch site is
MARS on the
Delmarva Peninsula in Virginia.
[241]
September 22 – The
65th Primetime Emmy Awards are held in
Los Angeles, California , with
Breaking Bad winning the
best drama and
Modern Family winning the
best comedy .
[242]
September 23 –
The Blacklist debuts on
NBC .
[243]
September 24 –
Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D. ,
The Goldbergs ,
Trophy Wife and
Lucky 7 premieres on
ABC .
[244]
October
October 8 : New US$100 bill
October 1 –
16 –
Debt-ceiling crisis : Following tensions between the largely
Democratic
Senate and the largely
Republican
House of Representatives regarding the
Affordable Care Act while voting on the mandatory budget for the 2014
fiscal year ,
Congress ultimately reaches a
stalemate , resulting in a
shutdown of all federal government departments deemed nonessential by the
Antideficiency Act . Hundreds of thousands of federal government workers in these departments are temporarily
furloughed . The juxtaposition of the shutdown poses a major threat to the United States
economy , as it looms very closely to the date of the mandatory raising of the
debt ceiling . The shutdown ends with Congress voting to postpone debates over the debt ceiling until February 2014. It is the first federal government shutdown since the
1995-96 shutdown under the
Clinton administration .
[245]
October 3
Miriam Carey, a 34-year-old woman with a history of mental health issues, who was a New York and Connecticut-licensed dental hygienist, is
shot and killed by police in
Washington, D.C. The incident leads to a lockdown in the city.
[246]
Adobe reveals that 2.9 million customers' data was stolen in security breach which included credit card information.
[247]
October 8 – The new
United States $100 bill with
increased security features is released into circulation.
[248]
[249]
October 9 – The
FBI raids a warehouse in
Edison, New Jersey , and arrests nine members of the
New York divorce coercion gang ,
[250] with ringleader Mendel Epstein being arrested separately in
Brooklyn , New York.
[251]
October 11 – The two-year-old son of
NFL player
Adrian Peterson (
2012
AP NFL MVP ) dies at a
Sioux Falls, South Dakota , hospital due to injuries sustained during an alleged assault by the boyfriend of the child's mother, Joseph Robert Patterson.
[252]
October 14 –
The Thundermans debuts on
Nickelodeon .
[253]
October 21
October 30 – In
Major League Baseball , the
Boston Red Sox win the
World Series defeating the
St. Louis Cardinals 4 games to 2. This is the first series to be won in Boston by the Red Sox since
2004 World Series , see also
1918 .
[256]
[257]
November
November 1 – A gunman suspected to be 23-year-old Paul Ciancia
opens fire at the
Los Angeles International Airport in
Los Angeles, California , killing one
Transportation Security Administration officer and injuring an additional six people. The apprehended suspect sustains several gunshot wounds from police officers and survives. A handwritten note is later found in Ciancia's bag describing his desire to kill TSA officers and "pigs". A text message sent to one of his siblings suggests he was
suicidal .
[258]
November 3 –
Daylight saving time ends.
[259]
November 8 –
Thor: The Dark World , directed by
Alan Taylor , is released by
Marvel Studios as the eighth film in the
Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) and the sequel to 2011's
Thor .
November 13
November 18 –
MAVEN (Mars Atmosphere and Volatile EvolutioN) launches as a
space exploration mission to send a
space probe to orbit
Mars and study its atmosphere. After its scheduled September 22, 2014 Martian orbital insertion, it will help determine what caused the
Martian atmosphere —and
water —to be lost to space, making the climate increasingly inhospitable for life.
[262]
November 19 – In the largest-ever settlement with the U.S. government, banking giant
JPMorgan Chase agrees to pay
$ 13 billion and admits to making serious misrepresentations over mortgage-backed securities.
[263]
November 20 –
Illinois becomes the sixteenth state to legalize same-sex marriage. Provisions of the bill will not go into effect until June 1, next year.
[264]
November 21 – The
Dow Jones Industrial Average closes 16,000 for the first time and gaining 109.17 points at 16,009.99.
[265]
November 22
Crystal Mangum , the false rape accuser in the
Duke lacrosse case , is found guilty of murdering her boyfriend Reginald Daye and sentenced to 14–18 years in prison.
[266]
Walt Disney Animation Studios ' 53rd feature film,
Frozen , is released in theatres. Considered by some to be on the level of the studio's
Renaissance-era output, the film receives critical acclaim and is by far their biggest commercial success at that point, grossing $1.280 billion in worldwide revenue throughout its run. To date, it is the most recent fairy tale adaptation that the studio has produced.
November 30 – Actor
Paul Walker , and friend Roger Rodas, are killed in a
single-vehicle accident when their
Porsche Carrera GT catches on fire and disintegrates after hitting a lamp post and striking two trees while going over 100 MPH in
Santa Clarita, California . After being notified of Walker's death,
Universal announces
Furious 7 will be delayed
December
December 1 – At least four are dead and 63 others injured following a
Metro-North Railroad train
derailment near
Spuyten Duyvil ,
The Bronx , New York City.
[267] Preliminary reports by the NTSB determine that the train was traveling at 82 miles per hour; the speed limit for the section of track involved is 30 miles per hour.
December 2 – In the
New Hampshire 's U.S. District Court, the former medical technician David Kwiatkowski is sentenced to 39 years in prison for infecting unknown numbers of patients in various states with hepatitis C through the reuse of his contaminated syringes.
[268]
December 6
December 9 –
American Airlines Group is formed from the merger of
AMR Corporation and
US Airways Group and begins trading on the
NASDAQ .
[275]
December 12
December 13
December 14 –
Florida State University
quarterback
Jameis Winston wins the
Heisman Trophy as the most outstanding player in
U.S. college football .
[282]
December 15 –
Japanese -born
British and
American actress
Joan Fontaine , best known for her two roles under
Alfred Hitchcock (
Rebecca ,
Suspicion ), and the sister of
Olivia de Havilland , dies at the age of 96.
[283]
December 16 – For an undisclosed price,
Google acquires the robot-making company
Boston Dynamics which had previously been contracted by the
U.S. military .
[284]
December 17
December 18 – An
EPA employee who committed fraud regarding his vacation pay is sentenced to 32 months in prison.
John C. Beale had perpetrated a scam whereby he disappeared from work for years at a time saying he was a covert CIA agent.
[287]
December 19
December 20
December 22 – Black market sales begin of
credit and
debit card data which was compromised due to a
Target Corporation
data breach .
[295]
December 24
December 25 – An unnamed gunman shoots three teenagers, two fatally, in a neighborhood near
Interstate 78 in
Newark , New Jersey. This occurs shortly after three other men are killed and two more wounded by a shooting at a strip club in
Irvington .
[300]
December 26 – President
Barack Obama signs the
2013 bipartisan budget deal , which successfully passed through the mostly
Republican
House and the mostly
Democratic
Senate , easing spending cuts and including a projected $85 billion in savings for the next two years.
[301]
Ongoing
Births
Deaths
January
Patti Page
Conrad Bain
Stan Musial
January 1 –
Patti Page , singer (b.
1927 )
January 2
January 4 –
Pete Elliott , American college football player and coach (b.
1926 )
January 5
January 6 –
John Ingram , American lawyer and politician (b.
1929 )
January 7
January 9 –
James M. Buchanan , American Nobel economist (b.
1919 )
January 10
January 11 –
Aaron Swartz , computer programmer and internet activist (b.
1986 )
January 14 –
Conrad Bain , Canadian-American actor (b.
1923 )
January 16 –
Pauline Phillips , a.ka.
Dear Abby , columnist, radio show host, and twin sister of
Ann Landers (b.
1918 )
January 17
January 19
January 20
January 21 –
Jake McNiece , American veteran (b.
1919 )
January 23 –
Ed Bouchee , baseball player (b.
1933 )
January 31 –
Jean Giambrone , American sports journalist (b.
1921 )
February
Ed Koch
Chris Kyle
Ronald Dworkin
Robert Coleman Richardson
Donald A. Glaser
February 1
February 2
February 4 –
Donald Byrd , American trumpet player (b.
1932 )
February 6 –
Ronnie "Fast Eddie" Allen , pool player (b.
1938 )
February 7 –
John Livermore , geologist and engineer (b.
1918 )
February 8
February 10 –
Petro Vlahos , engineer and film special effects inventor (b.
1916 )
February 12 –
Christopher Dorner , police officer and murderer (b.
1979 )
February 14
Mary Brave Bird , writer, civil rights activist, and wife of
Leonard Crow Dog (b.
1954 )
Richard J. Collins , television and film screenwriter and producer, and husband of
Dorothy Comingore (b.
1914 )
Ronald Dworkin , philosopher and lawyer, died in
London ,
United Kingdom (b.
1931 )
Walt Easley , American football player (b.
1957 )
Shadow Morton , songwriter and record producer (b.
1940 )
T. L. Osborn , evangelist and author (b.
1923 )
February 15
February 16
February 17
February 18
February 19
February 20 –
David S. McKay , geologist (b.
1936 )
February 21 –
Cleotha Staples , singer (b.
1934 )
[305]
February 22 –
Claude Monteux , musician and conductor (b.
1920 )
February 23 –
Paul McIlhenny , businessman (b.
1944 )
February 25 –
C. Everett Koop , 13th Surgeon General of the United States from 1982 until 1989. (b.
1916 )
February 26 –
Randolph Bromery , geologist, World War II airman, and college administrator (b.
1926 )
February 27
February 28 –
Donald A. Glaser , Nobel physicist, molecular biologist, neurobiologist, and business executive (b.
1926 )
March
Bonnie Franklin
Jason Molina
March 1 –
Bonnie Franklin , actress (b.
1944 )
March 3 –
Bobby Rogers , singer, songwriter, and husband of
Wanda Young (b.
1940 )
March 5
March 7 –
Claude King , country music singer-songwriter (b.
1923 )
March 13
March 14 –
Jack Greene , country musician (b.
1930 )
[306]
March 16
March 19 –
Harry Reems , pornographic actor (b.
1947 )
March 20 –
Nicholas C. Petris , lawyer and politician (b.
1923 )
March 21 –
Chinua Achebe , Nigerian writer, died in
Boston ,
Massachusetts (b.
1930 )
March 23 –
Joe Weider , Canadian-American bodybuilder and publisher (b.
1919 )
March 24 –
Deke Richards , songwriter and producer (b.
1944 )
March 28
March 29 –
Reid Flair , professional wrestler, son of
Ric Flair (b.
1988 )
March 30
April
Roger Ebert
Jonathan Winters
Richie Havens
George Jones
April 1
April 2
April 4 –
Roger Ebert , film critic and writer (b.
1942 )
April 8 –
Annette Funicello , film and television actress and singer (b.
1942 )
April 9 –
Paolo Soleri , Italian-born American architect (b.
1919 )
April 10 –
Jimmy Dawkins , singer and guitarist (b.
1936 )
April 11 –
Jonathan Winters , film and television actor and comedian (b.
1925 )
April 13
April 15 –
Joe Francis , American football player and coach (b.
1936 )
April 16
April 19
April 20
April 21 –
Chrissy Amphlett , Australian singer and songwriter, died in
New York City (b.
1959 )
April 22 –
Richie Havens , American folk singer (b.
1941 )
April 24
April 25 –
Virginia Gibson , dancer, singer, and actress (b.
1925 )
April 26
April 28 –
János Starker , Hungarian-born American cellist (b.
1924 )
April 30 –
Mike Gray , director, producer, and screenwriter (b.
1935 )
May
Jeanne Cooper
Ray Manzarek
Jean Stapleton
May 1 –
Chris Kelly , rapper, “Mac Daddy” of the hip-hop duo Kris Kross (b.
1978 )
May 2 –
Jeff Hanneman , American guitarist (b.
1964 )
May 4 –
Mario Machado , Chinese-American journalist and actor (b.
1935 )
May 7
May 8
May 9 –
Malcolm Shabazz , criminal, grandson of
Malcolm X (b.
1984 )
May 11
May 12
May 13 –
Joyce Brothers , psychologist, columnist, and actress (b.
1927 )
May 15 –
Linden Chiles , actor (b.
1933 )
May 17
May 18 –
Steve Forrest , actor (b.
1925 )
May 20
May 23 –
Flynn Robinson , American basketball player (b.
1941 )
May 26 –
Jack Vance , American novelist (b.
1916 )
May 27 –
Cullen Finnerty , American football player (b.
1982 )
May 30 –
Reveille VII , notable mascot (b.
2000 )
May 31
June
Esther Williams
James Gandolfini
July
Dennis Farina
J. J. Cale
July 2 –
Douglas Engelbart , American computer scientist and inventor (b.
1925 )
July 4
July 7 –
Joe Conley , American actor (b.
1928 )
July 11 -
Zeb Alley , American lawyer, lobbyist, and politician (b.
1928 )
July 12 –
Amar Bose , American engineer and entrepreneur (b.
1929 )
July 14 –
Bill Warner , motorcycle racer (b.
1969 )
July 18
July 16 –
Talia Castellano , American Internet personality and model (b.
1999 )
July 20 –
Helen Thomas , American journalist (b.
1920 )
July 22
July 23 –
Emile Griffith , American welterweight boxer (b.
1938 )
July 25 –
Walter De Maria , American sculptor and composer (b.
1935 )
July 26 –
JJ Cale , American singer and songwriter (b.
1938 )
July 28
July 31 –
Michael Ansara , American actor (b.
1922 )
August
Karen Black
Julie Harris
September
Ken Norton
October
Lou Reed
October 1 –
Tom Clancy , American writer (b.
1947 )
October 3
October 10 –
Scott Carpenter , astronaut and naval aviator (b.
1925 )
October 11
October 12 –
Malcolm Renfrew , American chemist and academic (b.
1910 )
October 16 –
Ed Lauter , American actor (b.
1938 )
October 20 –
Lawrence Klein , American Nobel economist (b.
1920 )
October 22 –
Andy Lopez , notable victim (b.
2000 )
October 24 –
Brooke Greenberg , notable victim of rare congenital disease (b.
1993 )
October 25
October 27 –
Lou Reed , American singer, songwriter, and musician (b.
1942 )
October 28
October 30 –
Michael Palmer , physician and author (b.
1943 )
November
Paul Walker
November 2 –
Walt Bellamy , American basketball player (b.
1939 )
November 4 –
Lois Graham , materials engineer (b.
1925 )
November 10 –
Richie Jean Jackson , American author, teacher, and civil rights activist (b.
1932 )
November 11 –
Shirley Mitchell , actress (b.
1919 )
November 12 –
Al Ruscio , American actor (b.
1924 )
November 13 –
Todd Christensen , American football player and sportscaster (b.
1956 )
November 15
November 16
November 18 –
Bennett Reimer , American author and academic (b.
1932 )
November 20 –
Joseph Paul Franklin , murderer (b.
1950 )
November 23
November 25 –
Chico Hamilton , drummer and bandleader (b.
1921 )
November 26
November 29 –
Dick Dodd , actor and musician (b.
1945 )
November 30 –
Paul Walker , American actor (b.
1973 )
[311]
December
Joan Fontaine
James Avery
December 2 –
William Allain , soldier and politician, 58th
Governor of Mississippi (b.
1928 )
December 8 –
Don Mitchell , actor (b.
1943 )
December 9 –
Eleanor Parker , actress (b.
1922 )
December 10
December 12
December 15
December 16 –
Ray Price , singer and songwriter (b.
1926 )
December 20 –
Lord Infamous , rapper (b.
1973 )
December 21
December 22 –
Ed Herrmann , baseball player, coach, and manager (b.
1946 )
December 23 –
Yusef Lateef , jazz musician and composer (b.
1920 )
December 26 –
Marta Eggerth , Hungarian-American singer and actress (b.
1912 )
December 28
December 31 –
James Avery , actor (b.
1945 )
[313]
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External links