These Are The Victims Of The Texas School Shooting

Authorities confirmed the deaths of 10 people in the mass shooting. Here are their stories.

Students at Santa Fe High School in Texas spent Friday morning in fear as a gunman killed 10 people and injured 10 others at their school.

Law enforcement officials took a male suspect into custody later Friday ― a 17-year old believed to be a student at the school.

The tragedy marked the 16th school shooting in 2018, according to a count by The Washington Post. It was also the 10th since the February massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, which left 17 dead and sparked a nationwide conversation about gun violence in America.

"Santa Fe High, you didn't deserve this. You deserve peace all your lives, not just after a tombstone saying that is put over you. You deserve more than Thoughts and Prayers, and after supporting us by walking out we will be there to support you by raising up your voices," tweeted Emma González, a survivor of the Parkland shooting.

A number of the victims' identities have not been released, so this story will be updated as we get more information.

Sabika Sheikh

Sabika Sheikh was a YES program exchange student from Pakistan. The program's manager, Megan Lysaght, confirmed her death via email to all of the YES program participants.

Cynthia Tisdale

Cynthia Tisdale was a substitute teacher at Santa Fe High School. Her brother-in-law, John Tisdale, confirmed her death in a Facebook post on Friday evening, saying she had been teaching an art class when the shooting began.

"Cynthia planned on one day retiring and being a full-time grandmother. It will never happen," he wrote. She is survived by her husband, Rev. William Recie Tisdale, and four children, he said.

Chris Stone

Chris Stone, 17, was missing for much of Friday while his friends and family frantically called him and checked local hospitals to see if he was among the injured. Multipleoutlets confirmed his death on Friday evening.

Photos the teen's family released showed him smiling as he got ready for the high school prom just a week before he was killed.

Angelique Ramirez

The family of student Angelique Ramirez confirmed to CBS-affiliate KHOU that she was killed in the shooting.

Araceli Ramirez, who identified Angelique as her "baby sister" in a Facebook post, wrote: "You deserved so much, you had so much planned for yourself and they took that away from you."

Shana Fisher

Shana Fisher's aunt Candi Thurman confirmed on Twitter her niece didn't survive the shooting. In a tweet earlier Friday, Thurman ― also a student at the school ― said Fisher was in an art class when the gunman opened fire, shooting her in the leg.

"Its hard to believe one of the sweetest kids you would ever meet had a punk kill her," Tammy Fisher Whalen, who also identifies as Fisher's aunt on Facebook, wrote in a post. "Shana i love you sweet girl ..im sorry we couldnt help you."

Kyle McLeod

The family of Kyle McLeod, a student at Santa Fe High School, confirmed to ABC News that the young man was killed during the shooting.

Kim Vaughn

Kim Vaughn's mother, Rhonda Hart, said in a Facebook post earlier Friday that her daughter was in first-period art class at the time of the shooting. Her family later confirmed to ABC News that she had died.

Later in the day, Hart urged her Facebook friends to contact lawmakers in a post that included a hashtag of her daughter's name.

"Folks―call your damn senators. Call your congressmen," Hart wrote. "We need GUN CONTROL. WE NEED TO PROTECT OUR KIDS."

This is a developing story. Please check back for updates.

Sarah Ruiz-Grossman and Carla Herreria contributed reporting.

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