In the grim statistics of terrorism in America, the shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando appears to represent the deadliest attack on US soil since September 11, 2001. It may also mark the doubling of the number of people killed in the US by a terrorist motivated by Islamist ideology in the years since September 2001.
Before the attack in Orlando on Sunday, 45 people in the US had died in jihadist terrorist attacks since 9/11 according to a database maintained by the New America, a Washington thinktank. The thinktank has added 50 more deaths to its database due to the attacks in Orlando, taking the toll to 95.
The shooter's ties to terrorism are not yet fully established. Omar Mateen, 29, reportedly called 911 and pledged allegiance to Isis (Islamic State). The group has also claimed credit, though it is not confirmed whether it did in fact have any role.
The New America database on deaths due to terrorism in the US gathers information about violent extremist activity and separates incidents into several groups - including those motivated by jihadist ideology, like al-Qaeda, and those driven by non-jihadist ideologies, like right-wing and left-wing beliefs.
In recent years, domestic terrorism motivated by right-wing hate groups had been behind most deaths. But that changed with the massacre in San Bernardino, California, last December.