From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
USA-related events during the year of 2015
Incumbents
Federal government
Governors and lieutenant governors
Governors
Alabama : Robert J. Bentley (Republican)
Alaska : Bill Walker (Independent)
Arizona : Jan Brewer (Republican) (until January 5), Doug Ducey (Republican) (starting January 5)
Arkansas : Mike Beebe (Democratic) (until January 13), Asa Hutchinson (Republican) (starting January 13)
California : Jerry Brown (Democratic)
Colorado : John Hickenlooper (Democratic)
Connecticut : Dan Malloy (Democratic)
Delaware : Jack Markell (Democratic)
Florida : Rick Scott (Republican)
Georgia : Nathan Deal (Republican)
Hawaii : David Ige (Democratic)
Idaho : Butch Otter (Republican)
Illinois : Pat Quinn (Democratic) (until January 12), Bruce Rauner (Republican) (starting January 12)
Indiana : Mike Pence (Republican)
Iowa : Terry Branstad (Republican)
Kansas : Sam Brownback (Republican)
Kentucky : Steve Beshear (Democratic) (until December 8), Matt Bevin (Republican) (starting December 8)
Louisiana : Bobby Jindal (Republican)
Maine : Paul LePage (Republican)
Maryland : Martin O'Malley (Democratic) (until January 21), Larry Hogan (Republican) (starting January 21)
Massachusetts : Deval Patrick (Democratic) (until January 8), Charlie Baker (Republican) (starting January 8)
Michigan : Rick Snyder (Republican)
Minnesota : Mark Dayton (Democratic)
Mississippi : Phil Bryant (Republican)
Missouri : Jay Nixon (Democratic)
Montana : Steve Bullock (Democratic)
Nebraska : Dave Heineman (Republican) (until January 8), Pete Ricketts (Republican) (starting January 8)
Nevada : Brian Sandoval (Republican)
New Hampshire : Maggie Hassan (Democratic)
New Jersey : Chris Christie (Republican)
New Mexico : Susana Martinez (Republican)
New York : Andrew Cuomo (Democratic)
North Carolina : Pat McCrory (Republican)
North Dakota : Jack Dalrymple (Republican)
Ohio : John Kasich (Republican)
Oklahoma : Mary Fallin (Republican)
Oregon : John Kitzhaber (Democratic) (until February 18), Kate Brown (Democratic) (starting February 18)
Pennsylvania : Tom Corbett (Republican) (until January 20), Tom Wolf (Democratic) (starting January 20)
Rhode Island : Lincoln Chafee (Democratic) (until January 6), Gina Raimondo (Democratic) (starting January 6)
South Carolina : Nikki Haley (Republican)
South Dakota : Dennis Daugaard (Republican)
Tennessee : Bill Haslam (Republican)
Texas : Rick Perry (Republican) (until January 20), Greg Abbott (Republican) (starting January 20)
Utah : Gary Herbert (Republican)
Vermont : Peter Shumlin (Democratic)
Virginia : Terry McAuliffe (Democratic)
Washington : Jay Inslee (Democratic)
West Virginia : Earl Ray Tomblin (Democratic)
Wisconsin : Scott Walker (Republican)
Wyoming : Matt Mead (Republican)
Lieutenant governors
Alabama : Kay Ivey (Republican)
Alaska : Byron Mallott (Independent)
Arkansas : vacant (until January 13), Tim Griffin (Republican) (starting January 13)
California : Gavin Newsom (Democratic)
Colorado : Joseph Garcia (Democratic)
Connecticut : Nancy Wyman (Democratic)
Delaware : Matthew Denn (Democratic) (until January 6), vacant (starting January 6)
Florida : Carlos Lopez-Cantera (Republican)
Georgia : Casey Cagle (Republican)
Hawaii : Shan Tsutsui (Democratic)
Idaho : Brad Little (Republican)
Illinois : Sheila Simon (Democratic) (until January 12), Evelyn Sanguinetti (Republican) (starting January 12)
Indiana : Sue Ellspermann (Republican)
Iowa : Kim Reynolds (Republican)
Kansas : Jeff Colyer (Republican)
Kentucky : Crit Luallen (Democratic) (until December 8), Jenean Hampton (Republican) (starting December 8)
Louisiana : Jay Dardenne (Republican)
Maryland : Anthony Brown (Democratic) (until January 21), Boyd Rutherford (Republican) (starting January 21)
Massachusetts : vacant (until January 8), Karyn Polito (Republican) (starting January 8)
Michigan : Brian Calley (Republican)
Minnesota : Yvonne Prettner Solon (Republican) (until January 5), Tina Smith (Democratic) (starting January 5)
Mississippi : Tate Reeves (Republican)
Missouri : Peter Kinder (Republican)
Montana : Angela McLean (Democratic)
Nebraska : John E. Nelson (Republican) (until January 8), Mike Foley (Republican) (starting January 8)
Nevada : Brian Krolicki (Republican) (until January 5), Mark Hutchison (Republican) (starting January 5)
New Jersey : Kim Guadagno (Republican)
New Mexico : John Sanchez (Republican)
New York : Kathy Hochul (Democratic) (starting January 1)
North Carolina : Dan Forest (Republican)
North Dakota : Drew Wrigley (Republican)
Ohio : Mary Taylor (Republican)
Oklahoma : Todd Lamb (Republican)
Pennsylvania : Jim Cawley (Republican) (until January 20), Michael J. Stack III (Democratic) (starting January 20)
Rhode Island : Elizabeth Roberts (Democratic) (until January 6), Daniel McKee (Democratic) (starting January 6)
South Carolina : Yancey McGill (Democratic) (until January 14), Henry McMaster (Republican) (starting January 14)
South Dakota : Matt Michels (Republican)
Tennessee : Ron Ramsey (Republican)
Texas : David Dewhurst (Republican) (until January 20), Dan Patrick (Republican) (starting January 20)
Utah : Spencer Cox (Republican)
Vermont : Phil Scott (Republican)
Virginia : Ralph Northam (Democratic)
Washington : Brad Owen (Democratic)
Wisconsin : Rebecca Kleefisch (Republican)
Events
January
January 1
New laws that go into effect on January 1:
Restaurant chain Chick-fil-A reveals that credit card information from up to 9,000 transactions in five states may have been stolen.[ 9]
January 3 – The 114th Congress begins, and, as per the 2014 elections , the Republican Party holds majority control of both the Senate and the House of Representatives .[ 10]
January 4- Longtime SportsCenter anchor Stuart Scott dies from appendix cancer at the age of 49.
January 5 – Groundbreaking and construction begin on the $68 billion California High-Speed Rail System, with the new transportation line planning to connect Los Angeles and San Francisco by 2029, reaching speeds of up to 200 mph (320 km/h).[ 11]
January 6
January 12
January 14
January 15 – The nominations for the 87th Academy Awards are announced at the Samuel Goldwyn Theater in Beverly Hills, California . The nominees for Best Picture are American Sniper , Birdman , Boyhood , The Grand Budapest Hotel , The Imitation Game , Selma , The Theory of Everything , and Whiplash .[ 19]
January 16 – The Supreme Court announces it will hear four appellate rulings whether there is a constitutional right to same-sex marriage . Oral arguments will take place in April and a ruling may occur by June.[ 20] [ 21]
January 18 – K.C. Undercover and Star vs. the Forces of Evil debuts on Disney Channel and Disney XD .[ 22]
January 20 – President Barack Obama delivers his State of the Union Address to the United States Congress .[ 23] [ 24] [ 25]
January 23
January 26–27 – A blizzard hits the Northeast, shutting down major cities including New York City and Boston , with up to 60 million people affected.[ 28]
February
March
April
April 1 – Governor Jerry Brown of California signs an executive order mandating that the state reduce its water use by 25% in an effort to confront the severe drought affecting the region.[ 86]
April 4 – Walter Scott , an unarmed black man, is shot and killed by a police officer in North Charleston, South Carolina . The officer, Michael Slager, is charged with Scott's murder. The event was filmed by a bystander.[ 87]
April 5 – A controversial Rolling Stone article by Sabrina Erdely is retracted after an investigation by the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism concludes that the story around which the article is centered was fabricated and exhibited confirmation bias . Rolling Stone makes no firings in accordance with the retraction.[ 88]
April 7 – Kentucky Senator Rand Paul announces his run for the Republican nomination in the 2016 presidential election .[ 89]
April 8 – A jury finds Dzhokhar Tsarnaev guilty for his role in perpetrating the Boston Marathon bombing in 2013.[ 90]
April 11 – President Barack Obama and Cuban President Raúl Castro discuss historic proposed normalizations to Cuba–United States relations at the 7th Summit of the Americas in Panama City, Panama.[ 91]
April 12 – Hillary Clinton announces her run for the Democratic nomination in the 2016 presidential election , the first major Democrat to announce a campaign.[ 92]
April 13
April 14 – President Barack Obama moves forward with removing Cuba from the State Sponsors of Terrorism list in light of his efforts to normalize relations with the country.[ 97]
April 23 – Shayna Hubers is convicted of the 2012 murder of her boyfriend Ryan Poston in Lexington, Kentucky . Hubers had shot Poston six times and tried to claim she acted in self-defense.[ 98]
April 25-May 3 – Protests in Baltimore, Maryland , from Baltimore City Hall to the Inner Harbor against the April 19 death of Freddie Gray in police custody soon turn violent, with extensive property damage, looting, numerous arrests, and injuries of both police officers and citizens being reported. Maryland Governor Larry Hogan declares a state of emergency in the city and deploys the Maryland National Guard in response.[ 99] [ 100]
April 27 – A teacher, Brady Olson, at North Thurston High School in Washington stops a student from going on a shooting rampage.[ 101]
April 28 – The Supreme Court hears arguments regarding the issue of whether the Constitution guarantees the right to marriage to same-sex couples .[ 102]
April 29
April 30
May
May 1 – Baltimore state's attorney Marilyn Mosby announces that the six police officers involved in the arrest of Freddie Gray, who died during their custody , will face criminal charges ranging from assault to manslaughter to second-degree homicide .[ 111]
May 2
May 3 – Two suspected Islamist gunmen attack the Curtis Culwell Center in the city of Garland, Texas , which was holding an exhibition of drawings of the Muslim prophet Muhammad . Both gunmen are shot dead by police. The Islamic State later claims responsibility for the attack.[ 115] [ 116]
May 4 – Former CEO of Hewlett-Packard Carly Fiorina announces her run for the Republican nomination in the 2016 presidential election . Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson also announces a run for the same nomination.[ 117]
May 5
May 10 – An article published in the London Review of Books by Seymour Hersh alleges that the official account of the Navy SEAL raid in Abbottabad , Pakistan , that killed al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden is largely false, and that the Pakistani government was always aware of bin Laden's whereabouts and assisted in the raid itself. The Obama administration later calls the report "baseless".[ 120]
May 12 – An Amtrak train derails in the Philadelphia neighborhood for Port Richmond , causing cars to roll over and killing at least 8 people and injuring over 200. The train was later found to have been going nearly twice the speed limit at the time of the incident.[ 121] [ 122]
May 15 – Dzhokhar Tsarnaev is sentenced to death for committing the 2013 Boston Marathon bombing .[ 123]
May 17 – A shootout erupts between rival biker gangs in a Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco, Texas , leaving nine dead.[ 124]
May 19 – The Federal Trade Commission alleges that four leading cancer charities conned donors out of $187 million over the course of four years, donating only 3% of the money to actual cancer research.[ 125]
May 20 – David Letterman broadcasts the last episode of his 22-year run as host of The Late Show on CBS , drawing a record audience. He is succeeded as Late Show host by Stephen Colbert .[ 126]
May 22
May 23–25 – Historic flash flooding levels occur in Texas and Oklahoma in a prolonged outbreak of floods and tornadoes , leaving at least 17 people dead and at least 40 others missing.[ 129]
May 23 – The USA Freedom Act , which aims to end the controversial bulk collection of communication data by the National Security Agency permitted by Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act , fails to reach the 60 votes needed to pass in the Senate , despite passing overwhelmingly in the House .[ 130]
May 24 – In the IndyCar Series , Juan Pablo Montoya wins the 99th Indianapolis 500 . This was this second victory in the race and his first in 15 years, after winning in 2000.
May 26
May 27
May 28 – Former New York Governor George Pataki announces his run for the Republican nomination in the 2016 presidential election .[ 136]
May 29 – Cuba is officially removed from the U.S. State Sponsors of Terrorism list.[ 137]
May 30 – Former Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley announces his run for the Democratic nomination in the 2016 presidential election .[ 138]
June
June 1 – South Carolina Senator Lindsey Graham announces his run for the Republican nomination in the 2016 presidential election .[ 139]
June 2
The USA Freedom Act passes the Senate after several delays and revisions since its inception and is signed into law by President Barack Obama. Though the law does restrict government surveillance under Section 215 of the Patriot Act , it does not completely end bulk collection of American phone metadata, which will now be collected by phone companies who may give information to the NSA voluntarily under the bill.[ 140] [ 141]
The director of the Transportation Security Administration is reassigned by the Department of Homeland Security after TSA officials were unsuccessful in identifying weapons in screenings 93 percent of the time during a covert test.[ 142]
June 3
June 4
June 5
Christopher Monfort is convicted of the 2009 Murder of Timothy Brenton , a Seattle police officer. Brenton had been ambushed and shot by Monfort while sitting in his police car. The perpetrator, motivated by an anti-police agenda, was also convicted of two counts of attempted murder and arson.[ 149]
A pool party in McKinney , Texas receives attention when police officer Eric Casebolt is filmed restraining an unarmed teenage girl on the ground and pointing his weapon at other bystanders. Amid heated debate in the media, Casebolt later resigns.[ 150]
June 6
June 9 – Former Olympian and television personality Bruce Jenner , coming out as a transgender woman and now going by "Caitlyn", becomes the first transgender person to appear on the cover of Vanity Fair magazine.[ 154] [ 155]
June 10 – Dee Dee Blanchard is murdered by her daughter Gypsy Rose and her daughter's boyfriend. Dee Dee had abused her daughter for many years, forcing her to use a wheelchair and to pretend to be ill.[ 156]
June 15
June 16
June 17
June 18 – Four months after Lester Holt was named interim weeknight anchor of NBC Nightly News in the wake of preceding anchor Brian Williams ' suspension for his misrepresentation of certain events, NBC News makes the move permanent, with Holt assuming full-time weeknight duties effective June 22. Holt, who had previously anchored Nightly News ' Saturday and Sunday editions from 2007 until Williams' suspension, becomes the first African-American to serve as the sole lead anchor of a weeknight network newscast.[ 165] [ 166]
June 19 – Delaware Governor Jack Markell signs a bill into law that decriminalizes the possession and private recreational use of up to one ounce of marijuana . Using marijuana in a public place will now yield a $100 civil fine rather than being treated as a misdemeanor .[ 167]
June 22 – Lester Holt replaces a suspended Brian Williams as weeknight anchor of NBC Nightly News . Williams now serves as a breaking news anchor for MSNBC .
June 23 – Defense Secretary Ashton Carter announces that the US will position tanks and heavy weapons in eastern and central Europe in response to Russia's continued military involvement in Ukraine.[ 168]
June 24
June 25 – In a 6–3 decision , the Supreme Court upholds subsidies for the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (also known as Obamacare) nationwide, even in states that did not set up their own insurance exchanges.[ 171] [ 172]
June 26
June 27 – Bree Newsome is taken into custody after climbing the flagpole on the grounds of the South Carolina State House and removing its Confederate flag as an act of protest following the Charleston church shooting ten days earlier. The flag is flown again 45 minutes later.[ 176]
June 28 – Convicted murderer David Sweat is shot and apprehended by police near the Canada–US border 22 days after escaping from the Clinton Correctional Facility in New York.[ 177]
June 29
June 30
July
July 1
July 2
July 3 – The Swiss experimental solar-powered aircraft Solar Impulse completes its 118-hour non-stop flight from Japan, landing in Hawaii. It is the longest successful flight of a solar-powered aircraft in history.[ 191]
July 5 – The United States beats Japan 5–2 in the final game of the 2015 FIFA Women's World Cup , making it the highest scoring Women's World Cup game in history. The US is the first country to ever win three Women's World Cup titles.[ 192]
July 10
July 13
July 14
July 16
July 17–21 – The Cajon Pass wildfire spreads across 4,250 acres (1,720 ha) in the Mojave Desert near the towns of Victorville and Hesperia , north of San Bernardino and south of Bakersfield in the state of California, destroying seven homes (one damaged), 16 out buildings (four damaged), and 74 vehicles[ 201] and also injuring three people.[ 202]
July 20 – After 54 years, the United States reopens its embassy in Havana , Cuba, and Cuba reopens its embassy in Washington, D.C. [ 203]
July 21
July 22 – Sharknado 3: Oh Hell No! airs for the first time on Syfy .[ 208]
July 23 – A gunman opens fire at a movie theater in Lafayette, Louisiana , killing two people and injuring nine others before committing suicide.[ 209]
July 24 – The United States Department of Transportation opens an investigation into whether airlines engaged in price gouging by raising ticket prices in the Northeastern United States following the 2015 Philadelphia train derailment in May.[ 210]
July 25 – The 2015 Special Olympics World Summer Games open at the Los Angeles Memorial Coliseum in Los Angeles, California.
July 26
Verizon employees in nine states (Connecticut, Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Virginia) and Washington, D.C. vote to go on strike on August 1 if disputes between the union and the company result in no new contracts.[ 211]
Nike agrees to pay a combined $ 2.4 million to consumers of Nike+ FuelBand over false advertising.[ 212]
August
August 3
August 4 – A street-corner sized sinkhole forms at the intersection of Fifth Avenue and 64th Street in Sunset Park in Brooklyn , New York City, around 7:30 am, destroying the street corner. The northbound N Broadway Local train is delayed; there is at least one disconnected pipe and gas lines are being repaired by National Grid workers, and the police have cordoned off the area. No fatalities or injuries have been reported.[ 217]
August 6
August 7 – The jury in the penalty phase of the trial of Aurora shooter James Holmes reaches a verdict to sentence him to a life in prison without parole[ 219] for killing 12 and injuring 70 during the attack at Century 16 Theatres in Aurora, Colorado , on July 20, 2012.[ 220] after they reject the death penalty.[ 220]
August 12 – Former President Jimmy Carter reveals that he is being treated for brain cancer .[ 221]
August 18 – The White House confirms that Haji Mutazz, deputy to ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi , has been killed in a U.S. airstrike near Mosul , Iraq.[citation needed ]
August 19
August 20 – After an axe attack on cinema-goers in Tennessee earlier in the month, American movie theater chain Regal Entertainment Group announces that it will now perform security bag checks at all its theater venues.[ 224]
August 22 – Extramarital affair dating website Ashley Madison is faced with a $578 million class action lawsuit by two Canadian law firms after the breach of thousands of customers' personal data in July.[ 225]
August 26 – News reporter Alison Parker and camera operator Adam Ward are shot and killed on live television during an interview in Moneta, Virginia . The shooter, Vester Lee Flanagan (a former colleague of Parker and Ward at station WDBJ in Roanoke ), commits suicide several hours later.[ 226]
August 27
August 28 – Ashley Madison CEO Noel Biderman resigns from his position in response to the growing information coming out of the site's hacking incident a month earlier.[ 229]
August 30 – At the MTV Video Music Awards , Kanye West announces he's running for president in 2020 .[ 230]
August 31 – The University of Texas–Rio Grande Valley is founded in Brownsville, Texas .[citation needed ]
September
September 1
September 3 – Kim Davis , a clerk for Rowan County, Kentucky , is found in contempt of court by federal judge David Bunning and jailed for five days for refusing to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples on religious grounds, defying the Supreme Court case legalizing same-sex marriage.[ 235]
September 6 – Harvard Law School professor Lawrence Lessig announces his run for the Democratic nomination in the 2016 presidential election .[ 236]
September 8 – Stephen Colbert begins his run as the successor to David Letterman as host of The Late Show on CBS .[ 237]
Phoenix Sundown is arrested in San Diego, California for mailing a package to an underage girl to Abby Lee Dance Company the site of the television reality show Dance Moms .
September 10 – Senate Democrats block a Republican resolution to reject the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action put forward by President Barack Obama regarding the nuclear program of Iran .[ 238]
September 11 – Former Governor of Texas Rick Perry drops out of the race for the Republican nomination in the 2016 presidential election .[ 239]
September 13 – The Valley wildfire claims at least three lives in Lake County, California , with thousands of people forced to evacuate.[citation needed ]
September 14
September 16 – After sharp criticism and accusations of racial profiling , police in Irving, Texas , drop charges on 14-year-old Ahmed Mohamed, who was suspended from MacArthur High School after authorities believed a reassembled digital clock he brought to school was a makeshift bomb. President Barack Obama also extends an invitation to Mohamed to the White House .[ 241]
September 18 – German car manufacturing company Volkswagen is directed by the Obama administration to recall about 500,000 vehicles in the United States after the company is accused of installing software in its diesel-powered cars that allow emissions of 40 times as much polluting exhaust pipe gas as is allowed by the Clean Air Act .[ 242]
September 20 – The 67th Primetime Emmy Awards are held at the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles, California.
September 21 – Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker drops out of the presidential race .[ 246]
September 22–27 – Pope Francis visits Washington, D.C., New York City, and Philadelphia , where he spoke to a joint session of the United States Congress , addressed the United Nations, attended the World Meeting of Families , and held several masses .[ 247]
September 22 – County clerk Kim Davis once again faces legal action after four couples ask a judge to order Davis to reissue their marriage licenses after she removed her name from them.[ 248]
September 25 – Speaker of the House John Boehner announces that he will resign from his position, effective October 30.[ 249]
September 28 – NASA announces that there is strong evidence that liquid water flows on Mars during the summer months, increasing the chance of sustainable life on the planet.[ 250]
October
October – The unemployment rate drops to 5%, the lowest since April 2008 and the same as when the Great Recession started in December 2007.
October 1
October 3 – The United States Air Force bombs a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Kunduz , Afghanistan , by request of local Afghan forces. The bombing may be in violation of international humanitarian law .[ 252]
October 9
October 13 – The first debate for the Democratic Party before the 2016 primaries is held in Las Vegas, Nevada , and broadcast on CNN .[ 256]
October 15 – President Barack Obama announces that the United States will extend its military presence in Afghanistan until the end of 2017.[ 257]
October 20 – Former Virginia Senator Jim Webb drops out of the presidential race .[ 258]
October 21 – Vice President Biden announces he will not run for President .[ 259]
October 22 – Hillary Clinton testifies for a second time before the Benghazi Committee and answered members' questions for more than eight hours in a public hearing.
October 23 – Former Governor of Rhode Island Lincoln Chafee drops out of the presidential race .[ 260]
October 25 – A drunk driver plows into the Oklahoma State Homecoming parade in Stillwater, Oklahoma , killing four people and injuring 34.
October 26
October 27 – The United States Senate votes overwhelmingly in favor of the controversial Cybersecurity Information Sharing Act , which would grant companies immunity from lawsuits for sharing personal data with the government for surveillance. The bill has several noted critics, including the American Civil Liberties Union and Edward Snowden .[ 263]
October 28 – A military JLENS blimp from the United States Army breaks loose from its moorings at the Aberdeen Proving Ground in Maryland , and drifts over 16,000 ft above Pennsylvania . F-16 Fighter jets were scrambled to track the blimp that has since deflated, causing widespread power outages from a long cable it dragged along the ground.[citation needed ]
October 29 – Representative Paul Ryan takes over for John Boehner as Speaker of the House of Representatives after being elected following Boehner's resignation.[ 264]
October 30
November
November 1 – In Major League Baseball , the Kansas City Royals defeat the New York Mets in the 2015 World Series 4 games to 1 to win their first championship title in 30 years.[ 267]
November 2 – Harvard Law School professor Lawrence Lessig drops out of the 2016 presidential election .[ 268]
November 5 – Newspapers report that oil companies knew that burning oil and gas could cause global warming since the 1970s but, nonetheless, funded deniers for years.[ 269] [ 270]
November 9 – Amid increasing racial tension at the school, Tim Wolfe , president of the University of Missouri System , resigns from his position after a football team strike and a University of Missouri student's hunger strike.[ 271]
November 11 – A suspect is arrested by University of Missouri police for making racially charged violent threats on social media as the university protests continue to gain media attention.[ 272]
November 12 – NASA scientists report that human-made carbon dioxide (CO2 ) continues to increase above levels not seen in hundreds of thousands of years: currently, about half of the carbon dioxide released from the burning of fossil fuels remains in the atmosphere and is not absorbed by vegetation and the oceans.[ 273] [ 274] [ 275] [ 276]
November 13 – The US Department of Defense announces their belief that an American airstrike in Syria killed Mohammed Emwazi, better known as Jihadi John , who is responsible for numerous recorded beheadings of several hostages of the Islamic State , including American citizens.[ 277]
November 17 – Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal withdraws from the 2016 presidential election .[ 278]
November 22 – The 2015 New Orleans shooting took place at Bunny Friend playground in the Ninth Ward of New Orleans , Louisiana.[ 279] In conjunction with the music video recorded at an impromptu unauthorized block party ,[ 280] 17 people were injured , with Joseph "Moe" Allen identified as a suspect.[ 281]
November 27 – A gunman opens fire at a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs, Colorado , killing 3, including a police officer, and injuring 9. After a 5-hour standoff, shooter Robert Lewis Dear surrenders to police.[ 282]
December
Elections
April
November
Deaths
January
Mario Cuomo
Rod Taylor
Lizabeth Scott
January 1
January 2
January 3
January 4
January 5
January 7 – Rod Taylor , Australian-American actor (b. 1930)
January 8 – Andraé Crouch , musician and pastor (b. 1942)
January 9
January 10
George Dickerson , actor, writer, and poet (b. 1933)
Harry V. Jaffa , historian, philosopher, and academic (b. 1918)
Taylor Negron , actor, comedian, painter, and playwright (b. 1957)
January 12 – A. J. Masters , country musician (b. 1950)
January 18
January 19
January 21
January 22 – Wendell H. Ford , 53rd Governor of Kentucky (b. 1924)
January 23
January 24 – Joe Franklin , radio and television host (b. 1926)
January 27 – Charles Hard Townes , Nobel physicist (b. 1915)
January 30 – Carl Djerassi , American chemist (b. 1923)
January 31 – Lizabeth Scott , actress (b. 1922)
February
Gary Owens
Clark Terry
Leonard Nimoy
February 1 – Monty Oum , animator (b. 1981)
February 2 – Joseph Alfidi , American pianist, composer, and conductor (b. 1949)
February 3 – Charlie Sifford , golfer and first African American to play on the PGA Tour (b. 1922)
February 5 – Val Logsdon Fitch , Nobel physicist (b. 1923)
February 7
February 9 – Ed Sabol , American football filmmaker (b. 1916)
February 10
February 11
February 12
February 14
February 15 – Arnaud de Borchgrave , Belgian-born American journalist and executive (b. 1925)
February 16 – Lesley Gore , singer, songwriter, and activist (b.1946)
February 17 – June Fairchild , actress and dancer (b. 1946)
February 18
February 19 – Harris Wittels , actor, comedian, writer, and producer (b. 1984)
February 21
February 24
February 25 – Eugenie Clark , zoologist (b. 1922)
February 26 – Earl Lloyd , American basketball player and first African American in the NBA (b. 1928)
February 27 – Leonard Nimoy , actor and director (b. 1931)
February 28
2015 –
March
Sam Simon
March 1
March 2
Dean Hess , minister and U.S. Air Force officer (b. 1917)
Jenna McMahon , television actress, writer, and producer (b. 1925)
March 4 – Harve Bennett , television and film producer and screenwriter (b. 1930)
March 5
March 7
March 8 – Sam Simon , television producer, director, and screenwriter and husband of Jennifer Tilly (b. 1955)
March 10
March 11 – Jimmy Greenspoon , musician and composer (b. 1948)
March 12 – Michael Graves , architect (b. 1934)
March 13
March 15
March 16
March 18 – Lyle E. Schaller , church consultant and writer (b. 1923)
March 20
March 21 – Chuck Bednarik , American football player (b. 1925)
March 22 – Tom Koch , comedy writer (b. 1925)
March 27
March 28
March 30 – Robert Z'Dar , actor and victim of rare congenital deformity (b. 1950)
April
April 1
April 2 – Robert H. Schuller , minister and televangelist (b. 1926)
April 3 – Sarah Brady , gun control activist and wife of James Brady (b. 1942)
April 4 – Bob Burns , rock drummer (b. 1950)
April 5
April 6
April 7
April 10
April 13 – Herb Trimpe , comic book artist and writer (b. 1939)
April 14 – Percy Sledge , singer (b. 1940)
April 15
April 16 – Lee Remmel , sportswriter and American football executive (b. 1924)
April 17
April 19 – Betty Willis , visual artist and graphic designer (b. 1923)
April 20
April 21
April 22 – Audree Norton , actress (b. 1927)
April 23 – Richard Corliss , film critic and magazine editor (b. 1944)
April 24
April 25
Jim Fanning , American Canadian baseball player, manager and executive (b. 1927)
Dan Fredinburg , software engineer and business executive (b. 1981)
Don Mankiewicz , German-born American screenwriter and novelist (b. 1922)
April 26
April 27
April 28 – Marcia Brown , children's author and illustrator (b. 1918)
April 29 – Jean Nidetch , businesswoman and weight-loss activist (b. 1923)
April 30
May
Grace Lee Whitney
B.B. King
Anne Meara
John Forbes Nash Jr.
Betsy Palmer
Beau Biden
May 1
May 2
May 4
May 5 – Oscar Holderer , German-born American scientist and engineer (b. 1919)
May 6
May 9
May 10
May 11 – Stan Cornyn , record label executive (b. 1933)
May 12
May 13 – Earl Averill Jr. , baseball player (b. 1931)
May 14 – B.B. King , blues musician (b. 1925)
May 15
May 16
May 17
May 19
May 20
May 21 – Louis Johnson , bass guitarist (b. 1955)
May 22
May 23
May 24 – Marcus Belgrave , jazz trumpeter (b. 1936)
May 25
May 27 – S. Parker Gilbert , business executive (b. 1933)
May 28 – Reynaldo Rey , actor and comedian (b. 1940)
May 29
May 30
May 31
Nico Castel , Portuguese-born American opera tenor and diction coach (b. 1931)
Will Holt , singer and songwriter (b. 1929)
Slim Richey , jazz guitarist and fiddler (b. 1938)
June
Ornette Coleman
James Horner
Dick Van Patten
June 1 – Jean Ritchie , folk musician (b. 1922)
June 2 – Irwin Rose , biologist (b. 1926)
June 3
June 5
June 6
June 7 – Harold LeDoux , cartoonist (b. 1926)
June 8
June 9
June 10 – Robert Chartoff , film producer (b. 1933)
June 11
June 12
June 13 – George Winslow , child actor (b. 1946)
June 14 – John Carroll , journalist and editor (b. 1942)
June 15
June 16 – Stephen Blauner , music manager and film producer (b. 1933)
June 17
June 18
June 19 – James Salter , writer (b. 1925)
June 20
June 21
June 22
June 23
June 24
June 26
June 28
June 29 – Glenn Ford , exonerated death row inmate (b. 1949)
July
August
August 2
August 3
August 4
August 6 – Frederick R. Payne Jr. , United States Marine Corps general and aviator (b. 1911)
August 7
August 8
August 9
August 10
August 11 – Richard S. Ross , cardiologist (b. 1924)
August 13 – John A. Nerud , horse trainer and owner (b. 1913)
August 14 – Bob Johnston , record producer (b. 1932)
August 15
Julian Bond , Georgia state legislator and civil rights activist (b. 1940)
August 16
August 17
August 18
August 19 – George Houser , minister and civil rights activist (b. 1916)
August 20 – Melody Patterson , actress (b. 1949)
August 21 – Jimmy Evert , tennis player and coach, father of Chris Evert (b. 1924)
August 22
August 24 – Joseph F. Traub , computer scientist (b. 1932)
August 25
August 26 – Amelia Boynton Robinson , civil rights activist (b. 1911)
August 27
August 28 – Nelson Shanks , painter (b. 1937)
August 29 – Kyle Jean-Baptiste , actor (b. 1993)
August 30
Brad Anderson , cartoonist (b. 1924)
Wes Craven , film director, producer, writer, and actor (b. 1939)
Wayne Dyer , self-help writer and motivational speaker (b. 1940)
Marvin Mandel , 56th Governor of Maryland (b. 1920)
J. Donald Millar , physician and public health administrator (b. 1934)
Oliver Sacks , English neurologist and writer, died in Manhattan (b. 1933)
August 31 – Tom Scott , American football player (b. 1930)
September
Jackie Collins
Yogi Berra
September 1
September 3
September 4
September 5 – Dennis Greene , singer and music executive (b. 1949)
September 6
September 7
September 8
Merv Adelson , real estate developer and television producer (b. 1929)
Andrew Kohut , pollster and news commentator (b. 1942)
Tyler Sash , American football player (b. 1988)
September 9 – Einar H. Ingman Jr. , United States Army soldier and Medal of Honor recipient (b. 1929)
September 10 – Norman Farberow , psychologist and suicidologist (b. 1918)
September 11
September 12
September 13
September 16 – Joe Morrone , soccer coach (b. 1935)
September 17 – Milo Hamilton , sportscaster (b. 1927)
September 19 – Jackie Collins , British novelist (b. 1937)
September 20 – Jack Larson , actor, librettist, screenwriter and producer (b. 1928)
September 21
September 22
September 27
October
October 1
October 2
October 3
October 4
October 5
October 6
October 7
October 8
October 9
October 10 – Richard F. Heck , chemist (b. 1931)
October 11
October 12 – Joan Leslie , actress (b. 1925)
October 23 – James P. Liautaud , industrialist, inventor and business theorist (b. 1936 )
October 24 – Maureen O'Hara , Irish-American actress (b. 1920)
October 25 – Flip Saunders , basketball player and coach (b. 1955)
October 26 – Leo Kadanoff , physicist (b. 1937)
October 28
November
Fred Thompson
René Girard
December
Robert Loggia
Natalie Cole
December 1
December 2
December 3
December 4 – Robert Loggia , actor (b. 1930)
December 10
December 12
December 13 – Benedict Anderson , academic (b. 1936)
December 20
December 21
December 23 – Alfred G. Gilman , pharmacologist and biochemist (b. 1941)
December 25 – Jason Wingreen , actor (b. 1920)
December 27
December 28
Eloy Inos , 8th Governor of the Northern Mariana Islands (b. 1949)
Ian Murdock , German-born software programmer (b. 1973)
December 30 – Doug Atkins , football player (b. 1930)
December 31
See also
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: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link )
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External links