2018 in the United States USA-related events during the year of 2018
This is a list of events in the year 2018 in the United States .
Incumbents
Federal government
Events
January
President Donald J. Trump arrives at Zurich Airport Thursday, January 25, 2018, in Zurich, Switzerland, and proceeds to Marine One traveling to Davos, Switzerland over the Swiss Alps.
January 1
January 3 – President Donald Trump boasts on Twitter that his nuclear button is "much bigger" and "more powerful" than North Korean leader Kim Jong-un 's.[ 4]
January 6 – The 2017–18 United States flu season causes dozens of deaths.[ 5]
January 8 – The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reports that 2017 was the costliest year on record for climate and weather-related disasters in the United States.[ 6] [ 7]
January 9 – The 2018 Southern California landslides occur, killing at least 13 people, and injuring 25. The main damage occurs in Montecito, California , which was nearly burned by the Thomas Fire a month prior.
January 10 – The city council of Washington, D.C., renames the street outside Russia's embassy after Boris Nemtsov , an opposition politician and critic of Vladimir Putin who was shot dead outside the Kremlin .[ 8]
January 11 – During a meeting with lawmakers about immigration , President Trump is reported to have asked, "Why are we having all these people from shithole countries come here?"[ 9] [ 10] His remarks are condemned as "racist" and "shocking" by a UN spokesman.[ 11] (comp. Donald Trump racial views ) The government of Botswana demands a clarification,[ 12] and Ambassador Earl R. Miller is asked if the USDS regards Botswana as a "shithole" country.[ 13] The event is termed by many media outlets "Shitholegate ".[ 14]
January 12 – A Baltimore woman who was a patient at the University of Maryland Medical Center is taken outside and left by hospital employees in freezing temperatures wearing nothing but her hospital gown and socks. She is stranded until bystander Imanu Baraka calls 911.[ 15]
January 13 – The Hawaii Emergency Management Agency sends a false alarm warning of an incoming ballistic missile attack, causing widespread panic across the state.[ 16]
January 15 – Turpin case : Police in California arrest a couple, 57-year-old computer engineer at Northrop Grumman David Allen Turpin and his wife, 49-year-old Louise Anna Turpin, who allegedly held their 13 children captive, some chained to beds in the dark.[ 17]
January 16
Democrat Patty Schachtner wins the special election for Wisconsin 's 10th Senate District, the same district President Trump won by 17 points.[ 18]
A meteor is reported near Michigan that causes a magnitude 2.0 earthquake.[ 19]
January 18 – Scotland Yard reveals that U.S. actor Kevin Spacey is being investigated over a third accusation of sexual assault in the UK, from 2005.[ 20]
January 20 – Senate Democrats block a bill that would have kept the government running until mid-February and the government shutdown of January 2018 begins.[ 21]
January 22
January 23 – A tsunami alert is triggered after an 8.0-magnitude earthquake is recorded off the southern Alaskan coast.[ 26]
January 24
Disgraced Olympic gymnastics team doctor Larry Nassar receives a prison sentence of up to 175 years after testimony from nearly 160 of his victims.[ 27]
President Trump attends the World Economic Forum at Davos in Switzerland.
January 30 – President Trump gives his first official State of the Union Address .[ 28] 75 percent of State of the Union viewers approved of Trump's address.[ 29]
February
February 2 – President Trump approves the release of a controversial Republican memo accusing the FBI of abusing its powers during the inquiry into alleged Russian meddling of US elections .[ 30]
February 4 – The Philadelphia Eagles win their first Super Bowl in franchise history by defeating the New England Patriots , 41–33, in Super Bowl LII , ending a 57-year championship drought.[ 31]
February 5 – The Dow Jones share index closes down 4.6%, its biggest drop since the 2008 financial crisis .[ 32]
February 6 – SpaceX successfully launches its Falcon Heavy rocket from LC39A at John F. Kennedy Space Center .[ 33]
February 9–25 – The United States compete at the Winter Olympics in Pyeongchang , South Korea and win 9 gold, 8 silver, and 6 bronze medals.[ 34]
February 14 – A mass shooting occurs at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida , resulting in 17 fatalities.[ 35] It is the deadliest high school shooting in the United States, surpassing the 1999 Columbine High School massacre .
February 15 – Pearl Fernandez pleads guilty to the murder of her son Gabriel Fernandez , an eight-year old tortured and killed in California. Her boyfriend Isauro Aguirre is also later convicted of murder in relation to the case.[ 36]
February 16
February 18 – In Stock Car racing, Austin Dillon wins the 60th running of the Daytona 500 . Darrell Wallace Jr. finishes 2nd highest finish for an African-American in the Daytona 500 .
February 22 – Teachers and other education personnel in West Virginia go on the first ever statewide strike in state history.[ 38]
February 23
February 24 – Paul Manafort is indicted with five federal criminal charges including money laundering and foreign lobbying violations.[ 41]
February 25 – In the wake of concerns about gun control , a number of major companies announce they are severing ties with the National Rifle Association of America (NRA) – including Alamo , Allied Van Lines , Avis Rent a Car , Budget Rent a Car , Delta , Enterprise , First National Bank of Omaha , Hertz , Met Life , National , SimpliSafe , Symantec , Teladoc , and United .[ 42] [ 43]
March
March 1 – President Trump announces tariffs of 25% on steel and 10% on aluminium imports.[ 44]
March 4 – The 90th Academy Awards , hosted by Jimmy Kimmel , are held at Dolby Theatre in Hollywood , with Guillermo del Toro 's The Shape of Water winning four awards out of 13 nominations, including Best Picture and Best Director . Frances McDormand and Sam Rockwell respectively win Best Actress and Best Supporting Actor for Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri , Gary Oldman wins Best Actor for Darkest Hour and Allison Janney wins Best Supporting Actress for I, Tonya . The telecast garners 26.5 million viewers, at that point the least-watched televised ceremony in Oscar history.[ 45]
March 5 – Ohio Attorney General Mike DeWine sues agricultural giant Monsanto , alleging the company concealed dangers posed by a toxic chemical compound it manufactured for nearly a half century.[ 46]
March 6 – Gary Cohn , a top economic adviser to President Trump, resigns his position.[ 47] [ 48]
March 7
March 9
President Trump accepts an invite from Kim Jong-un through South Korean officials for a meeting by May.[ 51]
Former drug firm executive Martin Shkreli is sentenced to seven years in federal prison for defrauding investors.[ 52]
March 13 – Secretary of State Rex Tillerson is fired (effective March 31) by President Trump. CIA Director Mike Pompeo is nominated to replace him.[ 53]
March 14
March 15 – A pedestrian bridge collapses at Florida International University , resulting in 6 fatalities.[ 59]
March 16
March 19
Uber suspends all of its self-driving cars worldwide after a woman is killed by one of the vehicles in Tempe, Arizona.[ 63]
British TV station, Channel 4 , airs a documentary about Cambridge Analytica , the data analysis company that worked for Donald Trump 's presidential campaign . Undercover reporters, talking to executives from the firm, discover the use of bribes, honey traps, fake news campaigns and operations with ex-spies to swing election campaigns around the world.[ 64] [ 65]
California residents are ordered to evacuate ahead of a storm described as an "atmospheric river ".[ 66]
March 20 – Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg receives a formal request from the British government to answer questions regarding Cambridge Analytica and the "catastrophic failure of process" behind the data breach.[ 67] [ 68]
March 21 – It is reported that the Opioid epidemic may be worse than previously thought due to omissions on death certificates.[ 69] [ 70]
March 22
President Trump announces tariffs on up to $60bn in Chinese goods and plans to limit the country's investment in the US. The Dow Jones falls sharply in response.[ 71]
President Trump replaces his National Security Adviser H. R. McMaster with former United Nations ambassador John Bolton .[ 72]
March 25 – Advocates warn that Congress needs to devote more money to address the growing opioid epidemic .[ 73]
March 26
Six children are killed by their adoptive mothers, Jennifer and Sarah Hart , when their SUV intentionally drives over a California cliff in a mass murder-suicide.[ 74] Both perpetrators were known to have abused their six children before the crash.[ 75]
President Trump orders the expulsion of 60 Russian diplomats following the ex-spy poisoning case in the UK.[ 76]
March 28 – At least 12 states are reported to be suing the Trump administration over inclusion of a citizenship question on the 2020 census.[ 77]
March 29
Russia announces it will expel 60 US diplomats and close the US Consulate in St. Petersburg in retaliation for the US expelling 60 Russian diplomats.[ 78]
President Trump nominates Ronny Jackson , current physician to the President, to replace Veterans Affairs Secretary David Shulkin .[ 79]
Mark Zuckerberg disavows a 2016 memo on Facebook's expansion plans, saying in a statement that Andrew Bosworth "is a talented leader who says many provocative things. This was one that most people at Facebook including myself disagreed with strongly. We've never believed the ends justify the means."[ 80]
April
April 3 – Three people suffer gunshot wounds when a female shooter, Nasim Najafi Aghdam, attacks the YouTube headquarters in California, before killing herself.[ 81]
April 4
April 6 – The Trump administration imposes sanctions on seven Russian oligarchs and 17 senior government officials, accusing them of "malign activity around the globe".[ 84]
April 9 – The FBI raids the home, office and hotel room of President Trump's long-time lawyer, Michael Cohen , pursuant to a federal search warrant .[ 85]
April 10 – Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg is questioned in a joint session of several US senate committees, after the revelation that 87 million people had their private information accessed by Cambridge Analytica .[ 86]
April 11 – House of Representatives Speaker Paul Ryan announces that he will not run for re-election in November .[ 87]
April 13 – President Trump orders targeted strikes in Syria to retaliate for a suspected chemical weapons attack.[ 88]
April 17 – Southwest Airlines Flight 1380 , a Boeing 737-700 suffers an engine failure at cruise altitude, debris enters the fuselage causing substantial damage to the aircraft and loss of cabin pressure and diverts at Philadelphia International Airport . One passenger dies and seven are injured.[ 89]
April 18 – Coffee chain Starbucks is the subject of racism accusations when two black men are arrested at its Philadelphia store after asking to use a restroom reserved for paying customers.
April 19 – Jim Bridenstine is confirmed as the next NASA administrator.
April 20 – Smallville actress Allison Mack appears in court on charges of sex trafficking, sex trafficking conspiracy and forced labor conspiracy.[ 90]
April 22 – Four people are killed at a Waffle House restaurant in Nashville, Tennessee , when a naked gunman shoots them with a semi-automatic rifle before fleeing on foot.[ 91] The gunman is captured the next day after a manhunt and James Shaw Jr. propelled to national fame as a hero after disarming the armed aggressor and saving others in the restaurant.
April 23 – French President Emmanuel Macron arrives in the U.S. for a three-day visit, during which he meets President Trump and makes a speech to Congress.[ 92] [ 93]
April 24 – Joseph James DeAngelo , a suspect in the Golden State Killer case, is apprehended after law enforcement matched his DNA to the serial rapist and murderer.[ 94]
April 26
April 27 – Avengers: Infinity War , directed by the Russo brothers , is released by Marvel Studios as the 19th film of the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU) and the sequel to 2012's The Avengers and 2015's Avengers: Age of Ultron . It becomes the highest-grossing film of 2018 and the fourth-highest-grossing film of all time at that point (now the fifth), earning $2.048 billion as the fourth film to cross $2 billion. The film is also one of the most expensive of all time (unadjusted for inflation).
May
May 1 – A study conducted by health services company Cigna reveals that American adults are experiencing a "loneliness epidemic" with nearly half of Americans reporting they sometimes or always feel alone (46 percent) or left out (47 percent).[ 100]
May 2
The state of Iowa approves the so-called "heartbeat" bill, banning most abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected.[ 101]
A C-130 military plane crash in Savannah, Georgia kills nine people.[ 102]
Following a series of small earthquakes, the USGS warns that the Kīlauea volcano in Hawaii could erupt.[ 103] Two days later it erupts, there are stronger earthquakes and Hawaii declares a state of emergency, evacuating 1,700 residents.[ 104]
May 4
The national unemployment rate hits 3.9 percent, the lowest rate since 2000.[ 105]
The Trump administration announces an end to the special Temporary Protected Status program for 57,000 Hondurans.[ 106]
May 5
NASA's InSight spacecraft, designed to study the interior and subsurface of Mars , successfully launches at 11:05 UTC, with an expected arrival on November 26, 2018.[ 107] [ 108]
The state of California becomes the world's fifth-largest economy, with the state's GDP surpassing that of the United Kingdom's .[ 109]
In horse racing , pre-race favorite Justify wins the 144th running of the Kentucky Derby , becoming the first horse since 1882 to win the race while unraced as a two-year-old. The race was run under the wettest conditions in its history; by post time, more than 2.8 inches (7.1 cm) of rain had fallen on race day, breaking a record that had lasted since 1918.[ 110] [ 111] [ 112]
May 8
The Senate Intelligence Committee releases an unclassified version of its investigation into Russian cyberattacks in 2016, concluding: "Russian-affiliated cyber actors were able to gain access to restricted elements of election infrastructure. [...] In a small number of states, these cyber actors were in a position to, at a minimum, alter or delete voter registration data; however, they did not appear to be in a position to manipulate individual votes or aggregate vote totals."[ 113]
New York's attorney general Eric Schneiderman resigns over multiple allegations of assault.[ 114]
President Trump announces his intention to withdraw the United States from the Iranian nuclear agreement .[ 115] In a statement, former U.S. President Barack Obama calls the move "a serious mistake".[ 116]
The National Centers for Environmental Information reports that April 2018 was the coldest month in the U.S. since 1997.[ 117] [ 118]
May 9 – The California Energy Commission introduces its 2019 Building Energy Efficiency Standards, requiring all new homes to be fitted with solar power from 2020. It is the first state in the US to enact such a law.[ 119]
May 10
At around 2 a.m. local, President Trump ceremoniously greets three freed Korean-Americans, who were detained by North Korea for more than a year for "anti-state activities", on Joint Base Andrews in Maryland .[ 120]
NASA 's Carbon Monitoring System (CMS) is cancelled by the Trump administration.[ 121]
May 11 – U.S. fighter jets intercept two Russian TU-95 bombers in Alaskan airspace.[ 122]
May 16 – President Trump meets with Shavkat Mirziyoyev .
May 17 – The Kīlauea shield volcano on the Big Island of the state of Hawaii erupts from its summit , shooting ash 30,000 feet (9,100 m) into the sky.[ 123]
May 18 – A school shooting takes place at Santa Fe High School in Santa Fe, Texas. Eight students and two teachers are killed and thirteen other people are injured.
May 20 – U.S. Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin states that the Trump administration will put its proposed tariffs on Chinese imports "on hold", averting fears of a trade war between the two countries.[ 124]
May 21 – The Supreme Court , in a 5–4 ruling, upholds a law preventing employees from filing class action lawsuits against their employers over pay and hour disputes.[ 125]
May 23 – It is reported that Donald Trump's personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, received a secret payment of at least $400,000 to fix talks between the Ukrainian president and President Trump.[ 126]
May 24 – Actor Morgan Freeman is accused of sexual harassment by eight women.[ 127]
May 25 – Harvey Weinstein is charged with rape and several other counts of sexual abuse involving two separate women after turning himself in to police in New York City.[ 128]
May 28 – The Center for the Study of the Drone at New York's Bard College estimates that just over 900 law enforcement agencies , fire departments, and emergency services across the country are now using drones, no longer seen as a novelty by officials.[ 129]
May 29
ABC TV cancels comedian Roseanne Barr 's show after she tweets a racist comment, likening Valerie Jarrett to an ape.[ 130]
Missouri Governor Eric Greitens announces his resignation (effective June 1) amid a sex scandal.[ 131]
Starbucks temporarily closes its stores for one day to undergo racial sensitivity training following an incident in April in which two black men were arrested in its Philadelphia store.
May 30
May 31 – The Trump administration announces that it will extend its tariffs on imported steel (25%) and aluminium (10%) to include the EU, Mexico and Canada, starting at midnight.[ 134]
June
June 4 – In a 7–2 decision (Masterpiece Cakeshop v. Colorado Civil Rights Commission ), the Supreme Court rules in favor of a Colorado baker who, citing the First Amendment 's protection of religion , refused to create a customized wedding cake for a homosexual couple.[ 135]
June 7 – The Washington Capitals defeat the Vegas Golden Knights in game five of the 2018 Stanley Cup Finals to give the Capitals their first Stanley Cup in franchise history and the first championship for the city of D.C. since the Redskins won Super Bowl XXVI . Capitals left-winger Alex Ovechkin is the playoff MVP .
June 8
June 8–9 At the G7 summit in Canada, President Trump pushes for the reinstatement of the G8 (to include Russia). He also proposes the elimination of tariffs .[ 138]
June 11–12 – In a historic first, President Trump meets with Supreme Leader of North Korea , Kim Jong-un , in Singapore.[ 139]
June 14 – The Sand Blaster roller coaster on the Daytona Beach boardwalk derails. Six people are taken to hospital, with two suffering traumatic injuries.[ 140]
June 15
June 17 – A shooting at an all-night arts festival in Trenton, New Jersey , leaves one person dead and seventeen people injured.[ 142]
June 18
June 19
June 25
June 26 – The Supreme Court upholds President Trump's travel ban in a 5–4 decision.[ 151]
June 27
June 28
June 30 – Hundreds of thousands of people demonstrate across all 50 U.S. states against family separations carried out by the United States.[ 157]
July
July 5 – Scott Pruitt resigns as the Administrator of the Environmental Protection Agency , effective July 6. He is replaced by Andrew Wheeler .[ 158]
July 6
July 9 – President Trump nominates Brett Kavanaugh , a circuit judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit , to become an Associate Justice for the Supreme Court of the United States .
July 11 – President Trump attends the NATO Summit in Brussels.
July 12 – President Trump arrives in the UK. The four-day visit includes talks with Theresa May , tea with the Queen and a trip to Scotland . There are mass protests in London, featuring a 'Trump baby' blimp flown over Westminster .[ 161]
July 13 – Special counsel Mueller charges 12 Russian intelligence officers with hacking during the 2016 election.[ 162]
July 16 – President Trump meets with Russian President Vladimir Putin for private talks in the Finnish capital Helsinki . In a press conference afterwards, Trump praises Russia and Putin, drawing sharp criticism from both Republicans and Democrats alike.[ 163] Senator John McCain describes it as "one of the most disgraceful performances by an American president in memory."[ 164]
July 18 – In an interview with CBS News , President Trump says he holds Putin personally responsible for interference in the 2016 US election; a sharp contrast to his earlier comments in Helsinki.[ 165]
July 19
July 20 – The New York Times reports that President Trump's former lawyer Michael Cohen secretly recorded his client discussing payments to Karen McDougal , a former Playboy model who says she had an affair with Trump.[ 169]
July 26
Tesfaye Cooper is convicted of hate crime and aggravated kidnapping charges in Illinois and sentenced to seven years in prison for his role in the 2017 Chicago torture incident . He is the fourth and final member of an African-American group to be convicted in relation to the kidnapping of a mentally disabled white man in Chicago who livestreamed their torture of him on Facebook, shouting "Fuck Trump" and "Fuck white people" while doing so.[ 170]
The share price of Facebook drops by almost 20 percent after the company warns investors that user growth has slowed following the Cambridge Analytica data leak scandal. More than $109bn is wiped from its market value, the biggest stock market loss in corporate history, which includes a $14.5bn personal loss for founder Mark Zuckerberg .[ 171]
Michael Avenatti, the attorney for porn star Stormy Daniels, claims he is representing three other women who were allegedly paid by Donald Trump, AMI and Michael Cohen to keep quiet.[ 172]
July 28 – John Delaney announces his candidacy for U.S. president in 2020.[ 173]
July 29 – Wildfires in northern California continue to rage across vast swathes of land, destroying hundreds of structures and causing several deaths.[ 174]
August
August 1 – President Trump calls for the Russia investigation to end "right now", urging Attorney General Jeff Sessions to halt the inquiry into alleged election meddling, while accusing special counsel Robert Mueller of being "totally conflicted".[ 175]
August 2
The U.S. Department of Commerce proceeds with applying revised tariffs on Canadian newsprint.[ 176]
Apple, Inc. becomes the first public company to achieve a market capitalization of $1 trillion, as its share price exceeds a new record high above $207.[ 177]
August 5 – President Trump admits that his eldest son, Donald Trump Jr. , attended a meeting at Trump Tower during the 2016 election campaign "to get information on an opponent," but insists it was "totally legal and done all the time in politics – and it went nowhere. I did not know about it!"[ 178] [ 179]
August 6 – The ongoing wildfires in California are officially declared as the largest in the state's history.[ 180]
August 7
August 8 – Missouri voters vote against the right-to-work law by 67% to 33%.[ 183] [ 184] [ 185]
August 10
August 12
August 14 – Nebraska executes Carey Dean Moore, who was convicted of murder, in the state's first execution for 21 years and the first by lethal injection .[ 195]
August 15 – Former CIA Director John O. Brennan , an outspoken critic of Trump, has his security clearance revoked by the President.[ 196] The move is criticized as political retribution for Brennan's comments.[ 197]
August 19 – The Last Sharknado: It's About Time airs for the first time on Syfy .[ 198]
August 21
Police in Iowa announce they have found a body in Poweshiek County during their investigation into the Disappearance of Mollie Tibbetts . They were led to the site by suspect Cristhian Bahena Rivera, an undocumented immigrant.[ 199]
Michael Cohen , who worked as a lawyer for Donald Trump from 2006 until May 2018, pleads guilty to eight charges: five counts of tax evasion, one count of making false statements to a financial institution, one count of willfully causing an unlawful corporate contribution, and one count of making an excessive campaign contribution at the request of a candidate or campaign.[ 200]
Paul Manafort , the former election campaign chairman for Trump, is convicted on eight out of eighteen charges of tax and bank fraud.[ 200]
August 22 – Mark Chapman , the man who shot and killed former Beatle John Lennon in 1980, is denied parole for the tenth time.[ 201]
August 23 – Intelligence specialist Reality Winner is sentenced to five years and three months in prison as part of a plea deal after pleading guilty to felony transmission of national defense information.[ 202]
August 25 – Arizona Senator John McCain dies at his home in Cornville, Arizona from glioblastoma , a rare aggressive form of brain cancer he had been battling for the past thirteen months at the time, four days before his 82nd birthday.[ 203]
August 26 – A mass shooting occurs during a Madden NFL 19 tournament at the Jacksonville Landing in Jacksonville, Florida , resulting in three fatalities including the perpetrator.[ 204]
August 28
California approves S.B. 100, a proposal to transition the state to 100% emissions-free electricity sources by 2045.[ 205] [ 206]
Shayna Hubers is convicted of the 2012 murder of her boyfriend Ryan Poston for a second time. Her previous conviction in relation to his fatal shooting had previously been overturned due to a member of the jury being ineligible.[ 207]
September
September 5
September 8 – The Cortlandt Street subway station reopens in Lower Manhattan, 17 years after it was destroyed by the 9/11 attacks.[ 212]
September 13 – Overpressured natural gas lines in the Merrimack Valley in Massachusetts cause a massive outbreak of explosions and fires in nearly 40 homes, killing one and injuring dozens.[ 213]
September 14 – Hurricane Florence makes landfall in North Carolina , with evacuation warnings in place for more than a million people.[ 214]
September 15 – NASA launches ICESat-2 , the agency's most technologically advanced ice-monitoring spacecraft to date.[ 215]
September 16 – Christine Blasey Ford alleges that Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in the early 1980s.[ 216]
September 22 – Christine Blasey Ford agrees to testify against Brett Kavanaugh the following week.[ 217]
September 23 – A second woman comes forward with sexual misconduct claims against Brett Kavanaugh.[ 218]
September 25 – TV star Bill Cosby , 81, is given a three to 10-year jail term for drugging and molesting a woman in 2004. Judge Steven O'Neill designates Cosby a "sexually violent predator", meaning he must undergo counselling for life and be listed on the sex offender registry .[ 219]
September 26 – A third woman accuses Brett Kavanaugh of sexual misconduct.[ 220]
September 27
October
October 2 – The Washington Post journalist Jamal Khashoggi is murdered inside the Saudi consulate in Istanbul, triggering a diplomatic crisis between the U.S. and Saudi Arabia.
October 5 – A Star Is Born is theatrically released by Warner Bros. A remake of the 1934, 1957 and 1976 versions, it was a critical and commercial success, grossing over $436 million worldwide and receiving praise for the performances Bradley Cooper (who also directed), Lady Gaga and Sam Elliott as well as the screenplay, cinematography and music.
October 6
The Senate confirms Brett Kavanaugh's Supreme Court nomination by a vote of 50–48, amid controversy over sexual assault claims against him.
Twenty people are killed in a crash involving a limousine transporting birthday party guests in Schoharie County, New York .[ 223] It is the deadliest transport crash in the U.S. since Colgan Air Flight 3407 , also in New York state, which claimed 50 lives in 2009.[ 224]
October 9 – America's ambassador to the UN, Nikki Haley , a senior Trump cabinet member, resigns unexpectedly.[ 225]
October 10 – Hurricane Michael approaches the Florida Panhandle , attaining peak wind speeds of 155 mph (250 km/h) and becoming the strongest hurricane to ever make landfall in that region.
October 17 – After 50 years of performing the characters Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch , longtime Sesame Street puppeteer Caroll Spinney announces his retirement in 2015. Spinney's role was limited to voice only due to health problems.
October 20 – President Trump announces that the US will "terminate" the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty over alleged Russian violations.[ 226]
October 24 – After a bomb was found at the home of George Soros in the suburbs of New York, suspected explosive devices are also sent to former US President Barack Obama and ex-Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. The latter devices are intercepted by technicians who screen mail sent to former US officials. The Time Warner building in New York (home to news broadcaster CNN ) is also evacuated, after a package containing an explosive and suspicious powder is found addressed to former CIA Director John Brennan . Additional suspicious packages, addressed to Democratic Representative Maxine Waters and former Attorney General Eric Holder , are investigated by law enforcement.[ 227]
October 25 – A suspicious package is found in Tribeca, New York City, addressed to actor Robert De Niro . Authorities also find two packages in Delaware, addressed to former Vice President Joe Biden .[ 228]
October 26
Two more suspicious packages are found, addressed to New Jersey senator Cory Booker and the former director of national intelligence, James Clapper .[ 229]
The perpetrator, Cesar Sayoc Jr., is captured in Plantation, Florida , in connection with the mail bombing attempts. He is questioned by FBI agents with the Joint Terrorism Task Force.[ 230]
October 27 – A mass shooting occurs at the Tree of Life synagogue in Pittsburgh , Pennsylvania, leaving 11 congregants dead. A 46-year-old male suspect is arrested and charged on making anti-semitic chants.[ 231] [ 232]
October 28 – The Boston Red Sox defeat the Los Angeles Dodgers , four games to one, to win their ninth World Series Championship.
October 29 – 800 U.S. soldiers are deployed to the Mexico–United States border as a part of Operation Faithful Patriot , reinforcing the border against incoming Central American migrant caravans .[ 233]
October 30
NASA announces that its Kepler space telescope mission has ended, with the telescope having run out of fuel two weeks before, after nine-and-a-half years in space. The telescope discovered 2,681 exoplanets , with a further 2,900 candidates at the time of its retirement. The spacecraft also discovered that there are more planets than stars in our galaxy.[ 234] [ 235] [ 236]
The Supreme Court of Hawaii approves the resumption of construction on Mauna Kea of one of the world's biggest telescopes, the Thirty Meter Telescope , costing $1.4 billion. Some native Hawaiians, regarding the mountain as sacred, opposed the construction since 2015.[ 237]
November
November 2 – Bohemian Rhapsody , a biographical film about Queen singer Freddie Mercury , is released in theaters nationwide, becoming a major box office success, grossing over $905 million worldwide on a production budget of about $50 million, becoming the sixth-highest-grossing film of 2018 worldwide and setting the all-time box office records for the biopic and drama genres.
November 6
November 7
Attorney General Jeff Sessions tenders his resignation at President Trump's request.
12 people and the perpetrator are killed in a shooting at the Borderline Bar and Grill, in Thousand Oaks, California , about 40 miles (65 km) north-west of Los Angeles.[ 240]
November 8
November 8–25 – Major wildfires in California , including the Woolsey in southern California and Camp to the north, leave 91 dead and at least 1,000 missing, with more than 250,000 residents forced to flee.[ 244] [ 245] [ 246] President Trump suggests that wildfires could be stopped by spending "a lot of time on raking and cleaning".[ 247]
November 23 – Volume II of the Fourth National Climate Assessment (NCA4) is released.[ 248] [ 249] [ 250] [ 251]
November 26 – SpongeBob SquarePants creator Stephen Hillenburg dies at the age of 57 from ALS .[ 252]
November 29 – President Trump's former lawyer Michael Cohen pleads guilty to lying to Congress in relation to the Russia inquiry.[ 253]
November 30
Former President George H. W. Bush dies from Parkinson's disease at the age of 94 at his home in Houston, Texas . His passing was announced the next morning and at the time, he was both the nation's oldest and longest living president. (Jimmy Carter (who was born four months after Bush) held the record for being America's oldest living POTUS in March 2019.)
Anchorage is hit by a 7.0 magnitude earthquake .
December
December 11 – The Balangiga bells , which had been taken by the United States Army from Balangiga, Eastern Samar in 1901 as war trophies during the Philippine–American War , are returned to the Philippines after 117 years of U.S. possession.[ 254]
December 12 – Michael Cohen , the ex-Trump lawyer who once said he'd "take a bullet" for the president, is given a 36-month jail term.[ 255]
December 13 – In a rare rebuke to the White House, the Senate votes 56–41 to end US military assistance to Saudi Arabia's intervention in Yemen over alleged war crimes. It passes a separate resolution that holds Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman personally responsible for the death of Saudi dissident Jamal Kashoggi .[ 256]
December 14
December 18 – The Donald J. Trump Foundation is shut down, amid allegations that President Trump and others illegally misused its funds.[ 259]
December 20 – Defense Secretary Jim Mattis resigns, effective February 28, 2019, after failing to persuade Trump to reconsider his decision of the previous day to withdraw the remaining American troops from Syria.[ 260] [ 261]
December 21
December 22
December 24 – Actor Kevin Spacey is charged with sexually assaulting a teenager at a bar in Massachusetts in July 2016 and ordered to appear in court on January 7.[ 266]
December 31 – Senator Elizabeth Warren announces her intention to run for president in the 2020 election .[ 267]
Deaths
January
Frank Buxton
Rick Hall
Jerry Van Dyke
John W. Young
Denise LaSalle
Doreen Tracey
Jean Porter
Naomi Stevens
Dan Gurney
Bradford Dillman
Jo Jo White
Stansfield Turner
Olivia Cole
Dorothy Malone
John Coleman
Ursula K. Le Guin
Lari White
Mort Walker
Eddie Shaw
Mark Salling
Rasual Butler
Leah LaBelle
January 1
January 2
Frank Buxton , actor, writer, author, and director (b. 1930)
Emily Dole , professional wrestler (b. 1957)
Rick Hall , record producer, songwriter, and music publisher (b. 1932)
Thomas S. Monson , religious leader and writer (b. 1927)
Betty Woodman , ceramic artist and sculptor (b. 1930)
January 3
January 4
January 5
January 6
January 7
January 8
Bruce Cole , humanist (b. 1938)
Frank Kreith , Austrian-born mechanical engineer (b. 1922)
Denise LaSalle , singer, songwriter, and record producer (b. 1934)
George Lindbeck , Lutheran theologian (b. 1923)
Kynaston McShine , curator (b. 1935)
James N. Morgan , economist (b. 1918)
Chuck Murphy , prelate (b. 1947)
Myron Rush , Kremlinologist (b. 1921)
Charles H. Turner , American attorney (b. 1935)
January 9
January 10
January 11
January 12
January 13
January 14
January 15
January 16
Bill Bain , management consultant (b. 1937)
George Bandy , politician (b. 1945)
Bradford Dillman , actor (b. 1930)[ 319]
LaFayette Duckett , politician (b. 1918)
Kingdon Gould Jr. , diplomat (b. 1923)
Tyler Hilinski , football player (b. 1996)
Julie Beth Lovins , computational linguist (b. 1945)
John Monteith , actor, writer and director (b. 1948)
Timothy J. O'Connor Jr. , politician (b. 1936)
Thomas Newman O'Neill Jr. , federal judge (b. 1928)
Harold Rosen , politician (b. 1925)
John Spellman , politician (b. 1926)
Jo Jo White , basketball player (b. 1946)[ 320]
January 17
January 18
Julius Lester , civil rights activist, writer, musician, photographer, professor (b. 1939)[ 326]
Edward C. Rochette , numismatist (b. 1927)
B. L. Shaw , educator and politician (b. 1933)
Anthony Allen Shore , serial killer and rapist (b. 1962)
Henry Soles Jr. , chaplain and author (b. 1935)
Mae Tischer , politician (b. 1928)
Stansfield Turner , admiral and academic (b. 1923)[ 327]
January 19
Harvey R. Blau , attorney and executive (b. 1935)
Lin Bolen , television executive and producer (b. 1941)
James C. Browne , computer scientist (b. 1934)
Olivia Cole , actress (b. 1942)[ 328]
John Conboy , television producer (b. 1934)
Ed LaForge , politician (b. 1935)
Dorothy Malone , actress (b. 1924)[ 329]
Fredo Santana , rapper and singer-songwriter (b. 1990)
Allison Shearmur , film producer (b. 1963)
Moose Stubing , baseball player (b. 1938)
Barbara Weil , artist (b. 1933)
Leslie Wyche , community activist (b. 1944)
January 20
Wendell Castle , furniture designer and artist (b. 1932)
John Coleman , American meteorologist (b. 1934)[ 330]
William Cousins , judge (b. 1927)
Terry Evans , blues and soul singer, songwriter and guitarist (b. 1937)
Naomi Parker Fraley , naval machinist (b. 1921)[ 331]
Bill Johnson , 57, American baseball player (b. 1960)
Jerry Keeling , American-born Canadian football player (b. 1939)
Bob Smith , American comedian and author (b. 1958)
Jack Whitten , artist (b. 1939)
January 21
January 22
Carl Blair , painter and sculptor (b. 1932)[ 336]
Andrew Carroll , 32, American ice hockey player (b. 1985)[ 337]
Dale Engstrom , politician (b. 1917)
Billy Hancock , musician (b. 1946)[ 338]
Ursula K. Le Guin , novelist (b. 1929)[ 339]
William Joseph McDonough , banker (b. 1934)[ 340]
Preston Shannon , blues singer, songwriter and guitarist (b. 1947)[ 341]
Annie Young , politician, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (b. 1942)[ 342]
January 23
January 24
January 25
January 26
January 27
January 29
January 30
January 31
Richard N. Berry , politician (b. 1915)[ 378]
Rasual Butler , basketball player (b. 1979)[ 379]
Leah LaBelle , Canadian-born singer (b. 1986)
Del Delker , gospel singer (b. 1924)[ 380]
Gabriel Fackre , theologian (b. 1926)[ 381]
Oscar Gamble , baseball player (b. 1949)[ 382]
Jack Halpern , chemist (b. 1924)[ 383]
Elizabeth Hartley , archaeologist and curator (b. 1942)[ 384]
John Fitzallen Moore , physicist (b. 1928)[ 385]
William O'Connor , artist (b. 1970)[ 386]
February
Dennis Edwards
Jon Huntsman Sr.
Edwin Jackson
John Mahoney
John Perry Barlow
Mickey Jones
Pat Torpey
Reg E. Cathey
John Gavin
Vic Damone
Jan Maxwell
Tom Rapp
Marty Allen
Daryle Singletary
Billy Graham
Nanette Fabray
February 1
February 2
February 3
February 4
February 7
February 8
February 9
February 10
February 11
February 12
February 13
Edward M. Abroms , film editor (b. 1935)[ 410]
Scott Boyer , singer, songwriter and musician (b. 1947)[ 411]
Chyskillz , hip hop producer (b. 1969)[ 412]
James W. Downing , naval officer and author (b. 1913)[ 413]
Tito Francona , baseball player (b. 1933)[ 414]
Sandra Love , politician (b. 1945)[ 415]
Victor Milán , author (b. 1954)[ 416]
George P. Steele , military officer (b. 1924)[ 417]
Peter Daniel Truman , politician (b. 1934)[ 418]
February 14
February 15
February 16
February 17
February 18
February 19
February 20
February 21 – Billy Graham , evangelist and Southern Baptist minister (b. 1918)
February 22 – Nanette Fabray , actress (b. 1920)
February 23
February 24
February 25
February 26
February 27
February 28
March
Billy Herrington
David Ogden Stiers
Nokie Edwards
Morgana King
Debbie Lee Carrington
Zell Miller
Linda Carol Brown
March 1 – Anatoly Lein , Russian-born chess grandmaster (b. 1931)
March 2
March 3 – David Ogden Stiers , American actor (b. 1942)
March 5 – Hayden White , American historian (b. 1928)
March 6 – Donna Butterworth , American actress (b. 1956)
March 7
Gary Burden , American rock album cover artist (b. 1933)
Woody Durham , American college basketball radio announcer (b. 1941)
Chuck Ortmann , American football player (b. 1929)
Bill Pulte , American real estate developer (b. 1932)
Thomas L. Rhodes , American political activist (b. 1939)
Charles Thone , American politician, Governor of Nebraska (1979–1983), U.S. Representative (b. 1924)
March 8
March 10
March 12
March 14
March 15 – Augie Garrido NCAA baseball coach who won 1,975 career games the second most of any NCAA Division I coach (b. 1939)
March 16 – Louise Slaughter , oldest member of the United States House of Representatives (b. 1929)
March 17
March 18
March 20
March 22 – Morgana King , American jazz singer and actress (b. 1930)
March 23
March 25 – Linda Carol Brown , American campaigner for equality in education (b. 1943)
March 27
March 28
March 29
March 30
March 31
April
Steven Bochco
Susan Anspach
Tim O'Connor
Cecil Taylor
Chuck McCann
Miloš Forman
R. Lee Ermey
Harry Anderson
Barbara Bush
Bruno Sammartino
Verne Troyer
Charles Neville
Robert Mandan
April 1
April 2
Susan Anspach , American actress (b. 1942)[ 450]
Clyde Billington Jr. , American politician (b. 1934)[ 451]
P. L. Thibaut Brian , American chemical engineer (b. 1931)[ 452]
Alton Ford , American basketball player (b. 1982)[ 453]
Morris Halle , Latvian-born linguist (b. 1923)[ 454]
Tuiloma Pule Lameko , Samoan politician (b. 1934)[ 455]
Connie Lawn , American journalist (b. 1945)[ 456]
Bill Rademacher , American football player (b. 1942)[ 457]
Laura Roslof , American illustrator (b. 1948)[ 458]
Burton Smith , American computer scientist (b. 1941)[ 459]
April 3
April 4
April 5
April 6
April 7
April 8
April 9
April 10
April 11
April 13
Art Bell , American broadcaster and author (b. 1945)
Miloš Forman , Czech and American film director (b. 1932)
William Nack , American journalist and author (b. 1941)
April 14
April 15 – R. Lee Ermey , American actor (b. 1944)[ 462]
April 16 – Harry Anderson , American actor and magician (b. 1952)[ 463]
April 17 – Barbara Bush , First Lady of the United States (b. 1925)[ 464]
April 18 – Bruno Sammartino , Italian-American professional wrestler (b. 1935)[ 465]
April 19
April 20
April 21
April 22
April 23
Don Bustany , American radio and television broadcaster (b. 1929)
Bennie Cunningham , American football player (b. 1955)
Bob Dorough , American pianist, singer and composer (b. 1923)[ 467]
Jerrold Meinwald , American chemist (b. 1927)
Alice Provensen , American children's illustrator and writer (b. 1919)
Arthur B. Rubinstein , American composer (b. 1938)
Bob Schermerhorn , American college basketball coach (b. 1943)
Art Simmons , American jazz pianist (b. 1926)
Arthur R.G. Solmssen , American novelist (b. 1929)
Edward W. Tayler , American literary scholar (b. 1931)
Leland B. Yeager , American economist (b. 1925)
April 24
April 26 – Charles Neville , American R&B and jazz musician (b. 1938)[ 468]
April 27
April 28 – Larry Harvey , artist and philanthropist (b. 1948)
April 29 – Robert Mandan , American actor (b. 1932)[ 471]
April 30
May
Margot Kidder
Tom Wolfe
Joseph Campanella
Patricia Morison
Allyn Ann McLerie
Clint Walker
Philip Roth
Jerry Maren
Alan Bean
Donald H. Peterson
May 1
Arthur Barnard , American sprinter and Olympic bronze medalist (b. 1929)
Dennis Claridge , American football player (b. 1942)
Ninalee Craig , American-born Canadian teacher (b. 1928)
Carl W. Duckworth , American politician (b. 1955)
Raymond D. Dzendzel , American politician (b. 1922)
Phil Gowan , American historian (b. 1953)
Robert B. Kennedy , American politician (b. 1940)
Chuck Missler , American evangelist and author (b. 1935)
John "Jabo" Starks , American drummer (b. 1937)[ 472]
Betty Workman , American politician (b. 1925)
May 2
May 3
May 4
May 5
May 6
May 7
May 8
May 9
May 12
May 13 – Margot Kidder , Canadian-American actress and activist (b. 1948 )[ 475]
May 14 – Tom Wolfe , author and journalist (b. 1930)[ 476]
May 15 – Joseph G. Clemons , American soldier (b. 1928)
May 16
May 17
May 19 – Robert Indiana , American artist (b. 1928)[ 479]
May 20
May 21
May 22 – Philip Roth , American writer (b. 1933)[ 485]
May 24 – Jerry Maren , American actor (b. 1920)[ 486]
May 25 – Bill Mallory , American football player and coach (Indiana Hoosiers , Miami RedHawks , Colorado Buffaloes ), (b. 1935)[ 487]
May 26
May 27
May 28
May 29
May 30
May 31
June
Eddy Clearwater
Paul D. Boyer
Anthony Bourdain
D. J. Fontana
Big Van Vader
XXXTentacion
Charles Krauthammer
Deanna Lund
Vinnie Paul
Stanley Anderson
Richard Harrison
Joe Jackson
Harlan Ellison
Steve Ditko
June 1
June 2
June 3
June 4
June 5 – Kate Spade , fashion designer (b. 1962)[ 493]
June 8 – Anthony Bourdain , celebrity chef, author and television personality (b. 1956).[ 494]
June 9
June 10
June 11
June 12
June 13
June 14
June 15 – Matt "Guitar" Murphy , American blues guitarist (b. 1929)[ 498]
June 16 – Martin Bregman , American film producer (b. 1926)
June 17
June 18
Walter Bahr , American Hall of Fame soccer player (b. 1927)
Big Van Vader , American professional wrestler and football player (b. 1955)[ 499]
Billy Connors , American baseball player (b. 1941)
Barry McDaniel , American opera singer (b. 1930)
Claude Ramsey , American politician (b. 1943)
Billy Sammeth , American talent manager (b. 1951)
Lawrence A. Skantze , 89, American military officer (b. 1928)
Jimmy Wopo , 21, American rapper (b. 1997)
XXXTentacion , rapper, singer and songwriter, gunshot wound (b. 1998)[ 500]
June 19
Hubert Green , American Hall of Fame golfer (b. 1947)
Stefan Kanfer , American journalist (b. 1933)
Bill Kenville , American basketball player (b. 1931)
Chuck Klingbeil , American football player (b. 1966)
Koko , American-bred Western lowland gorilla (b. 1971)[ 501]
Don Mason , American baseball player (b. 1945)
Ian Orme , British-American microbiologist (b. 1953)
Jane Cronin Scanlon , American mathematician (b. 1923)
Lowrell Simon , American soul singer-songwriter (b. 1943)
Jack Stallings , American baseball coach (b. 1931)
Antwon Rose Jr. , African-American man shot and killed by white police officer Michael Rosfeld in Pittsburgh (b. 2000)
June 20
June 21
June 22
June 23
June 24 – Stanley Anderson , American actor (b. 1939)[ 506]
June 25 – Richard Benjamin Harrison , American businessman and television personality (b. 1941)[ 507]
June 27 – Joe Jackson , American talent manager (b. 1928)[ 508]
June 28 – Harlan Ellison , American writer (b. 1934)[ 509]
June 29
June 30
July
Henry Butler
Richard Swift
Ed Schultz
Tab Hunter
Billy Knight
Frank Ramsey
Roger Perry
Robert Wolders
Adrian Cronauer
Meg Randall
Jonathan Gold
Elbert Howard
Johnny Lewis
Brian Christopher
Nikolai Volkoff
July 1
July 2 – Henry Butler , American jazz pianist and photographer (b. 1948)
July 3 – Richard Swift , American singer, songwriter, multi-instrumentalist, producer, and film maker (b. 1977)
July 4
July 5
July 6
July 7
July 8
July 9
July 10
July 11
July 12
July 13
July 14
July 15
July 16
July 17
July 18
July 19
July 20 – Meg Randall , American actress (b. 1926)
July 21 – Jonathan Gold , American food and music critic (b. 1960)
July 22
July 23
Maryon Pittman Allen , American journalist and politician (b. 1926)
George Brown , American long jumper (b. 1932)
Tony Cline , American football player (b. 1949)
Howard Felsher , American game show producer (b. 1928)
Elbert Howard , American civil rights activist, co-founder of the Black Panther Party (b. 1938)
Stephen Juan , American anthropologist and author (b. 1949)
Mary Jane McCaffree , American secretary (b. 1912)
Jacob Tanzer , American attorney (b. 1935)
Elliot Vesell , American pharmacologist (b. 1934)
July 24 – Jack P. Lewis , American Biblical scholar (b. 1919)
July 26 – Robert Martin , American fighter pilot (b. 1919)
July 27
July 28
July 29
July 30
July 31
August
Mary Carlisle
Lorrie Collins
Charlotte Rae
Stan Mikita
Jim Neidhart
Aretha Franklin
Eddie Willis
Robin Leach
John McCain
Kyle Pavone
Neil Simon
Susan Brown
August 1
August 2
August 3 – Joseph C. Burke , American educator and academic (b. 1932)
August 4 – Lorrie Collins , American country singer (b. 1942)[ 513]
August 5 – Charlotte Rae , American actress (b. 1926)[ 514]
August 6
August 7
August 8
August 9
August 10
August 11
August 12
August 13
August 14
August 15
August 16
August 17
August 18
August 19
August 20
August 21 – Barbara Harris , American actress (b. 1935)[ 521]
August 22 – Ed King , American musician (b. 1949)[ 522]
August 24 – Robin Leach , English television personality (b. 1941)[ 523]
August 25
August 26 – Neil Simon , American playwright (b. 1927)[ 526]
August 27
August 29
August 30
August 31
September
Randy Weston
Bill Daily
Christopher Lawford
Burt Reynolds
Mac Miller
Arthur Mitchell
Gary Kurtz
Marty Balin
Otis Rush
September 1
September 2
September 3
September 4
September 5
September 6
September 7
September 8 – Chelsi Smith , American singer and beauty pageant winner (b. 1973)
September 9
September 10
September 11
September 13 – Marin Mazzie , American actress and singer (b. 1960)
September 14
September 16
September 17
September 18
September 19 – Arthur Mitchell , American ballet dancer and choreographer (b. 1934)
September 20
September 21
September 23
September 24
September 25
September 27 – Marty Balin , American singer and musician (b. 1942)
September 29 – Otis Rush , American blues guitarist and singer (b. 1934)
September 30
October
Scott Wilson
Peggy McCay
Celeste Yarnall
Jim Taylor
Paul Allen
James Karen
Tony Joe White
Sonny Fortune
Freddie Hart
Ntozake Shange
Beverly McClellan
Willie McCovey
October 1
October 2 – Dorothy Hukill , American politician (b. 1946)
October 3
October 4
October 5
October 6 – Scott Wilson , American actor (b. 1942)
October 7
October 8
October 9
Carolyn Blanchard Allen , American politician (b. 1921)
Robert Bausch , American author (b. 1945)
Thomas M. Hannigan , American politician (b. 1940)
Diane Jergens , American actress (b. 1935)
Larry Larrañaga , American politician (b. 1938)
Frank Padavan , American politician (b. 1935)
Warner Saunders , American news anchor (b. 1935)
Alex Spanos , American billionaire and real estate developer (b. 1923)
Thomas A. Steitz , American Nobel biochemist (b. 1940)
Carolyn Warner , American politician (b. 1930)
William Wilbanks , American criminologist (b. 1940)
October 10
October 11
October 12
October 13
October 15 – Paul Allen , co-founder of Microsoft , non-Hodgkin lymphoma (b. 1953)[ 543]
October 18
Elihu Abrahams , American theoretical physicist (b. 1927)
Todd Bol , American teacher (b. 1956)
Dick Cole , 92, American baseball player
Randolph Hokanson , 103, American classical pianist
Danny Leiner , 57, American film director
Dick Slater , 67, American professional wrestler
October 19
October 21
October 22 – Hank Greenwald , American sportscaster (b. 1935)
October 23 – James Karen , American actor (b. 1923)
October 24
October 25
October 26
October 27
October 28
October 29
October 30
October 31 – Willie McCovey , American baseball player (b. 1938)
November
Roy Hargrove
Sondra Locke
Wayne Maunder
Stan Lee
David Pearson
Roy Clark
William Goldman
Willie Naulls
Ricky Jay
Stephen Hillenburg
George H. W. Bush
November 1
November 2
November 3
November 4
Donna Axum , American model and beauty pageant winner (b. 1942)
Bill Brown , American football player (b. 1938)
Jack Gargan , American politician (b. 1930)
Tetsugen Bernard Glassman , American Zen Buddhist monk (b. 2939)
Katherine Herring , American baseball player (b. 1933)
Harris Hines , American judge (b. 1950)
Vince Manuwai , American football player (b. 1980)
Grant R. Osborne , American theologian (b. 1942)
Mike Parker , American news reporter (b. 1943)
Douglas Turner , American Olympic rower (b. 1932)
November 5
November 6
November 7
November 8
November 9
November 10
November 11
November 12
November 13 – Katherine MacGregor , American actress (b. 1925)[ 550]
November 15
November 16
November 17
November 18
November 19
November 20
November 21
November 22
November 23
Betty Bumpers , American childhood immunizations activist (b. 1925)
Bob McNair , 81 American businessman and sports club owner (b. 1937)
Shawn O'Hara, American politician (b. 1958)
November 24 – Ricky Jay , American magician and actor (b. 1946)[ 555]
November 25
November 26 – Stephen Hillenburg , marine biologist, cartoonist (SpongeBob SquarePants ) (b. 1961)[ 252]
November 27
November 28 – Robert Morris , American sculptor (b. 1931)
November 30 – George H. W. Bush , American politician, 41st president of the United States (b. 1924)[ 558]
December
Ken Berry
Nancy Wilson
Joe Osborn
Penny Marshall
Steve Daskewisz
Richard Arvin Overton
December 1 – Ken Berry , American actor (b. 1933)
December 2
December 3
December 4
December 5
December 6
December 7
December 8
December 9
December 10 – Bob and John , American racehorse (b. 2003)
December 11
December 13 – Nancy Wilson , American jazz singer (b. 1937)
December 14 – Joe Osborn , American bass guitarist (b. 1937)[ 560]
December 15 – Jerry Chesnut , American songwriter (b. 1931)[ 561]
December 17
December 18
December 20
December 21 – Forrest Fezler , American golfer and golf course designer (b. 1949)
December 22 – Jimmy Work , American country singer (b. 1924)
December 23
December 27 – Richard Arvin Overton , war veteran (b. 1906)[ 564]
December 30
December 31 – Ray Sawyer , Country music singer (b. 1937)
See also
References
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^ "Viewers approve of Trump's first State of the Union address – CBS News poll" . CBS . January 30, 2018.
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^ "THE EAGLES ARE SUPER BOWL CHAMPIONS!!" . PhiladelphiaEagles.com . February 4, 2018. Archived from the original on February 6, 2018. Retrieved February 4, 2018 .
^ "Dow Jones hit by worst fall since 2008" . BBC News . February 5, 2018. Retrieved February 5, 2018 .
^ "Elon Musk's Falcon Heavy rocket launches successfully" . BBC News . February 6, 2018. Retrieved February 6, 2018 .
^ Maese, Rick (February 25, 2018). "With 23 medals, Team USA falls short of expectations at PyeongChang Olympics" . The Washington Post . Retrieved March 5, 2018 .
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^ "Mother pleads guilty to murder, torture in death of 8-year-old California boy" . www.cbsnews.com . February 15, 2018. Retrieved November 24, 2022 .
^ "Russia-Trump inquiry: Russians charged over US 2016 election tampering" . BBC News . February 16, 2018. Retrieved February 16, 2018 .
^ "West Virginia's Teachers Walk Off The Job, Protesting Low Pay And Benefit Cuts" . NPR . February 22, 2018. Archived from the original on February 23, 2018. Retrieved March 2, 2018 .
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^ "Trump-Russia: Ex-campaign aide Rick Gates pleads guilty" . BBC News . February 23, 2018. Archived from the original on February 23, 2018. Retrieved February 25, 2018 .
^ "Trump-Russia: Manafort 'paid European ex-politicians' " . BBC News . February 24, 2018. Archived from the original on February 24, 2018. Retrieved February 24, 2018 .
^ Danielle Wiener-Bronner (February 25, 2018). "Why companies are abandoning the NRA" . CNN Business . Cable News Network. Archived from the original on February 25, 2018. Retrieved October 16, 2023 .
^ "#BoycottNRA: Firms cut ties with gun lobby after Florida shooting" . Al Jazeera . February 25, 2018. Archived from the original on February 16, 2021. Retrieved October 16, 2023 .
^ "US steel and aluminium imports face big tariffs, Trump says" . BBC News . March 1, 2018. Retrieved March 1, 2018 .
^ "Oscars 2018: Complete list of winners" . CBS News . March 5, 2018.
^ "Monsanto concealed effects of toxic chemical for decades, Ohio AG says in suit" . NBC News . March 6, 2018.
^ Kelly, Kate; Haberman, Maggie (March 6, 2018). "Gary Cohn to Resign as Trump's Top Economic Adviser" . The New York Times . Retrieved March 6, 2018 .
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^ "Stormy Daniels sues Trump over 'hush agreement' " . BBC News . March 7, 2018. Retrieved March 7, 2018 .
^ "Florida shooting: Gun control law moves step closer" . BBC News . March 7, 2018. Retrieved March 8, 2018 .
^ "Trump and North Korea's Kim Jong-un to hold 'milestone' meeting" . BBC News . March 9, 2018.
^ " 'Pharma Bro' Martin Shkreli sentenced to seven years" . BBC News . March 9, 2018. Retrieved March 9, 2018 .
^ "Trump fires Rex Tillerson as secretary of state" . BBC News . March 13, 2018. Retrieved March 13, 2018 .
^ "Democrat Conor Lamb declares victory in Pennsylvania race" . The Hill . March 14, 2018. Retrieved March 14, 2018 .
^ "Democrat Conor Lamb is the apparent winner of Pennsylvania special election in Trump country" . CNBC. March 14, 2018. Retrieved March 14, 2018 .
^ "U.S. Senate approves bill rewriting post-crisis bank rules" . NBC News . March 14, 2018.
^ Borak, Donna; Barrett, Ted. "Senate votes to roll back parts of Dodd-Frank banking law" . CNN.
^ Javers, Eamon; Pramuk, Jacob (March 14, 2018). "Larry Kudlow to replace Gary Cohn as Trump's top economic advisor" . CNBC . Retrieved March 14, 2018 .
^ "At least six dead in Florida university bridge collapse" . BBC News . March 15, 2018. Retrieved March 15, 2018 .
^ "FBI ex-deputy director Andrew McCabe sacked days before retirement" . BBC News . March 17, 2018. Retrieved March 17, 2018 .
^ "Facebook suspends controversial data firm Cambridge Analytica" . BBC News . March 16, 2018. Retrieved March 17, 2018 .
^ "UMBC vs. Virginia - Men's College Basketball Game Recap - March 16, 2018" .
^ "A self-driving Uber has killed a pedestrian in Arizona" . Technology Review . March 19, 2018. Retrieved March 19, 2018 .
^ "Revealed: Trump's election consultants filmed saying they use bribes and sex workers to entrap politicians" . Channel 4 News. March 19, 2018. Retrieved March 19, 2018 .
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link )
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link )
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External links