Twenty-two people have died and 26 were injured in a mass shooting at a Walmart in El Paso, Texas, on Saturday, when a man opened fire on a store filled with customers.

Local hospitals have confirmed that they’re treating more than 20 victims of the shooting, the Associated Press reported.

Shooting survivor Octavio Ramiro Lizarde spoke to reporters on Tuesday at a press conference at Del Sol Medical Center. Lizarde described watching as the gunman killed his nephew, Javier Amir Rodriguez, who was 15 and the youngest victim of the attack. Lizarde was shot in the foot.

“I feel grateful that I’m alive. He had the chance to kill me, but he didn’t because God’s with me.”

The initial death toll was previously reported at 20, but the El Paso Police Department announced an additional person died at a hospital early Monday morning, as did the Del Sol Mar Medical Center.

There were 11 victims at Del Sol Medical Center, and three of those patients remained in critical condition, Director Dr. Stephen Flaherty said at a news conference Sunday morning, according to CNN. Their ages range from 35-82.

El Paso police spokesperson Sgt. Robert Gomez said that the Walmart was “at capacity” at the time of the shooting, and that between 1,000 and 3,000 people were believed to be inside. Police had responded within six minutes after receiving the first reports of an active shooter at 10:39 a.m.

Several victims were Mexican nationals, Mexican President Andrés Manuel López Obrador said Saturday evening.

“I lament the events that have occurred in El Paso, Texas, neighbor and brother to Ciudad Júarez and our country. I send my condolences to the families of the victims, American citizens as well as Mexicans,” he wrote on Twitter.

Mexican Foreign Relations Secretary Marcelo Ebrard tweeted on Sunday morning that seven Mexicans were wounded in the shooting. On Sunday evening, Ebrard shared the names of seven of the victims.

Those wounded include 45-year-old Mario de Alba Montes, 44-year-old Olivia Mariscal Rodríguez and 10-year-old Erika de Alba Mariscal, according to the AP.

The attack is being investigated as an act of domestic terrorism, and the alleged shooter, Patrick Crusius, is facing possible hate crime charges.

“If he was a racist, poor him,” Lizarde said of Crusius. “That doesn’t have to be a reason to kill.”

Here’s what we know about the victims so far:

Jordan Anchondo

A 25-year-old woman and mother of three, Jordan Anchondo was killed while trying to shield her 2-month-old son, according to the AP.

Anchondo’s 19-year-old sister Leta Jamrowski learned the day of the shooting that Anchondo had been one of the victims.

“From the baby’s injuries, they said that more than likely my sister was trying to shield him,” Jamrowski told AP. “So when she got shot she was holding him and she fell on him, so that’s why he broke some of his bones. So he pretty much lived because she gave her life.”

Andre Anchondo

The 23-year-old was the husband of Jordan Anchondo and the father of their two-month-old son. According to the Associated Press, a friend said he had recently started a business in El Paso that built things from granite and stone, after turning his life around from drug dependence and run-ins with police.

“He had the character and the charisma,” Koteiba “Koti” Azzam, a friend of Andre Anchondo, said, according to the Associated Press.

Another one of Andre’s friends, Benjamin Thompson, had not met Jordan, but told The Dallas Morning News that he had heard she seemed to be a “happy and family-fueled mother.”

“What happened to their new beautiful family is devastating,” Thompson said.

Arturo Benavides

Arturo Benavides, whom other media outlets have reported was 67 years old, was one of the victims who died in the attack, his wife tells TIME.

Benavides was a bus driver and an army veteran, according to CNN. “He was an absolutely caring and strong-willed man,” his niece Jacklin Luna told CNN. “He was the person that would give any dime and shirt off his back, a meal and a home to anyone.”

Mario De Alba

Mario De Alba, who is reported to be in serious condition after being shot in the back, has a Facebook page full of pictures with his 10-year-old daughter Erika, the AP reported.

In one photo, he is wearing a Patriots vest in the front seat of a car while Erika is sitting in the back. In another, they are standing in front of what appears to be a Christmas tree. In a third, Erika is making a heart symbol with her hands, while wearing a pink sweater.

His sister described him as an “excellent father” and as a “decent, hardworking person,” according to the Associated Press.

He lives in Mexico about four hours from El Paso. He came into town to go shopping for school supplies with his family.

Jessica Coca Garcia and Memo Garcia

Norma Coca told KWCH, a TV station in Wichita, Kansas, that her daughter and son-in-law were near the entrance of the Walmart on Saturday morning when they were shot and injured, according to the Associated Press. They were at Walmart raising funds for a youth sports team on which one of their children plays.

Coca said her daughter, Jessica Coca Garcia, was in stable condition after being shot three times in the leg, while her son-in-law, Memo Garcia, was in critical condition after being shot twice in the leg and once in the back.

Jessica and Memo’s five-year-old-son and 11-year old-daughter were also at the Walmart, but were not shot, the Associated Press reports.

Angie Englisbee

Englisbee, 86, was in the check-out line at the time of the shooting and had just hung up from a phone call with her son, the New York Times reports.

Englisbee’s granddaughter Mia Peake told the Times that she had seven children, and a son who died as an infant. She loved watching General Hospital and was “a very strong person, very blunt,” Peake added.

Leo Campos and Maribel Hernandez

CNN affiliate KFOX/NDBC reports that Campos and Hernandez had dropped their dog off at the groomer before going to Walmart. The family told the outlet they didn’t realize there was anything wrong until the groomer called to say the dog had not been picked up. Police later confirmed that both died in the shooting.

Javier Amir Rodriguez

Rodriguez, 15, was getting ready to start his sophomore year of high school. He attended Horizon High School in El Paso, according to the AP.

Ivan Manzano

Manzano, from Ciudad Juarez, Mexico, ran an orthopedic implants business. He had a 5-year-old daughter and a 9-year-old son, the AP said

His wife, Adriana Manzano, said that he was friendly and calm. According to the AP, she told their children that he died in an “accident,” choosing not to give them the full story.

David Johnson

Johnson, 63, was shopping with his wife and his 9-year-old granddaughter for back to school stuff when the shooting happened, the AP said.

Johnson’s nephew Dominic Patridge called his uncle “the kindest and most giving individual I’ve ever known,” according to the AP.

Maria Flores

Flores, 77, was a U.S. citizen.

Raul Flores

Raul Flores, 77, was a U.S. citizen

Jorge Calvillo Garcia

Calvillo Garcia, 61, was a Mexican national from Torreon, Coahuila.

Alexander Gerhard Hoffman

Hoffman, 66, was a German citizen.

Luis Alfonzo Juarez

Juarez, 90, was a U.S. citizen and the oldest victim in the shooting.

Maria Eugenia Legarreta Rothe

Legarreta Rothe, 58, was a Mexican national from Chihuahua, Chihuahua.

Elsa Libera Marquez

Libera Marquez, 57, was a U.S. citizen.

Maribel Loya

Loya, 56, was a U.S. citizen

Gloria Irma Marquez

Marquez, 61, was a Mexican national from Ciudad Juárez.

Margie Reckard

Reckard, 63, was a U.S. citizen.

Sarah Esther Regaldo Moriel and Adolfo Cerros Hernandez

Regaldo Moriel, 66, was a Mexican national from Ciudad Juárez. Her husband, Hernandez was from Aguascalientes, Mexico.

Teresa Sanchez

Sanchez, 82, was a Mexican national.

Angelina Sliva-Elisbee

Sliva-Elisbee, 86, was a U.S. citizen.

Juan Velazquez

Velazquez, 77, was a U.S. citizen.

Correction, Oct 21



The original version of this story misstated the names of two of the victims. They are Maria Eugenia Legarreta Rothe and Elsa Libera Marquez, not Maria Eugenia Legarrega Rothe and Elsa Libera Maequez.



Write to Sanya Mansoor at sanya.mansoor@time.com.