Many celebrities have met violent ends over the years, the latest being director-actor Rob Reiner and his wife Michele. Here's an overview of some of the highest-profile cases.
Rob Reiner gained fame on the 1970s sitcom “All in the Family” before directing hit films including “When Harry Met Sally.” The couple was found dead Sunday at their home in Los Angeles. A law enforcement official said investigators believed they suffered stab wounds. Their son, Nick Reiner, was being held on $4 million bail in connection with the deaths.
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FILE - In this Dec. 6, 1995, file photo, The Notorious B.I.G., who won rap artist and rap single of the year, clutches his awards at the podium during the annual Billboard Music Awards in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)
FILE - This Oct. 1992 photo shows actor Phil Hartman. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - Actress Sharon Tate poses for a portrait in 1968. (AP Photo/Frank Tewkesbury, File)
FILE - Marvin Gaye, winner of Favorite Soul/R&B Single, "Sexual Healing," attends the American Music Awards in Los Angeles on Jan. 17, 1983. (AP Photo/Doug Pizac, File)
FILE -Run-D.M.C.'s Jason Mizell, Jam-Master Jay, poses with teenagers gathered at New York's Madison Square Garden, Oct. 7, 1986, in New York. (AP Photo/G. Paul Burnett, File)
FILE - Rapper Tupac Shakur attends a voter registration event in South Central Los Angeles, Aug. 15, 1996. (AP Photo/Frank Wiese, File)
FILE - In this May 13, 1968 file photo, singer John Lennon appears during a press conference at the Hotel Americana in New York. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - Selena performs on stage at Six Flags AstroWorld's Southern Star Amphitheater on July 31, 1994. (Howard Castleberry/Houston Chronicle via AP, File)
A 25-year-old who'd recently worked as a security guard, Mark David Chapman, shot Lennon outside the Beatles star's apartment building in New York on Dec. 8, 1980. Chapman said he considered Lennon a “phony” and was inspired by the main character of J.D. Salinger's novel, “The Catcher in the Rye.” Denied parole since 2000, Chapman remains in prison.
The R&B and soul musician's father shot Gaye when he intervened in a confrontation between his parents at the family's home in Los Angeles on April 1, 1984. Marvin Gay Sr. pleaded no contest to voluntary manslaughter and was given a six-year suspended prison sentence. He died of pneumonia in a nursing home in 1998.
Gunned down in a car in a drive-by shooting near the Las Vegas Strip on Sept. 7, 1996, the rapper and actor died in a hospital six days later. Trial for the only man charged in the killing, Duane “Keffe D” Davis, is set for early next year. Davis is an ex-gang leader who was arrested in 2023. Accused of orchestrating the Shakur's killing, he has pleaded not guilty to first-degree murder.
Six months after Shakur's death, rapper The Notorious B.I.G. was killed in a similar drive-by shooting on March 9, 1997, after he left a party in Los Angeles. He was 24. The murder of Shakur's friend-turned-rival, whose legal name was Christopher Wallace, remains unsolved.
Cooke was known as the “King of Soul” with dozens of hits in the seven years before his death. He was shot in the chest by a motel manager in Los Angeles after he forced his way into the motel office on Dec. 11, 1964. The killing was ruled a justifiable homicide and the motel manager wasn't prosecuted.
Selena Quintanilla-Pérez, the Tejano music star known as “Selena,” was shot in a motel room in Corpus Christi, Texas, on March 31, 1995. Selena, 23, identified her shooter as Yolanda Saldívar, manager of her clothing boutiques and president of her fan club, whom she'd suspected of embezzling money. Saldívar was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to 30 years to life in prison. She was denied parole in 2025.
The actress and model, 26, was one of five people killed by members of the Manson Family cult on Aug. 8, 1969, at the Los Angeles house she shared with her husband, director Roman Polanski. Tate was eight-and-a-half months pregnant. Manson and three members of his cult were convicted on Jan. 26, 1971, for the murders of seven people, including Tate.
Hartman, a “Saturday Night Live” cast member who helped Paul Reubens develop his character Pee-wee Herman, was shot and killed in his sleep by his wife, Brynn Omdahl, on May 28, 1998. He was 49. Omdahl took her own life soon after.
The rap musician and DJ for Run-DMC was 37 when he was shot and killed in his recording studio in New York. In 2024, jurors convicted Karl Jordan Jr. and Ronald Washington of killing the pioneering DJ — born Jason Mizell — in a case prosecutors described as revenge for a failed drug deal. The case stalled while investigators pursuing numerous leads struggled to get witnesses to open up.
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This story has been updated to correct the spelling of Michele Reiner's name.
FILE - In this Dec. 6, 1995, file photo, The Notorious B.I.G., who won rap artist and rap single of the year, clutches his awards at the podium during the annual Billboard Music Awards in New York. (AP Photo/Mark Lennihan, File)
FILE - This Oct. 1992 photo shows actor Phil Hartman. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - Actress Sharon Tate poses for a portrait in 1968. (AP Photo/Frank Tewkesbury, File)
FILE - Marvin Gaye, winner of Favorite Soul/R&B Single, "Sexual Healing," attends the American Music Awards in Los Angeles on Jan. 17, 1983. (AP Photo/Doug Pizac, File)
FILE -Run-D.M.C.'s Jason Mizell, Jam-Master Jay, poses with teenagers gathered at New York's Madison Square Garden, Oct. 7, 1986, in New York. (AP Photo/G. Paul Burnett, File)
FILE - Rapper Tupac Shakur attends a voter registration event in South Central Los Angeles, Aug. 15, 1996. (AP Photo/Frank Wiese, File)
FILE - In this May 13, 1968 file photo, singer John Lennon appears during a press conference at the Hotel Americana in New York. (AP Photo, File)
FILE - Selena performs on stage at Six Flags AstroWorld's Southern Star Amphitheater on July 31, 1994. (Howard Castleberry/Houston Chronicle via AP, File)
On a recent December day, Mark Latino and a handful of his workers spun sheets of vinyl into tinsel for Christmas tree branches. They worked on a custom-made machine that’s nearly a century old, churning out strands of bright silver tinsel along its 35-foot (10-meter) length.
Latino is the CEO of Lee Display, a Fairfield, California-based company that his great-grandfather founded in 1902. Back then, it specialized in handmade velvet and silk flowers for hats. Now, it's one of the only companies in the United States that still makes artificial Christmas trees, producing around 10,000 each year.
Tariffs shone a twinkling light this year on fake Christmas trees — and the extent to which America depends on other countries for its plastic fir trees.
Prices for fake trees rose 10% to 15% this year due to the new import taxes, according to the American Christmas Tree Association, a trade group. Tree sellers cut their orders and paid higher tariffs for the stock they brought in.
Despite those issues, tree companies say they aren’t likely to shift large-scale production back to the U.S. after decades in Asia. Fake trees are labor-intensive and require holiday lights and other components the U.S. doesn’t make, said Chris Butler, CEO of the National Tree Co., which sells more than 1 million artificial trees each year.
Americans are also very price-sensitive when it comes to holiday décor, Butler said.
“Putting a ‘Made in the U.S.A.’ sticker on the box won’t do any good if it’s twice as expensive,” Butler said. “If it’s 20% more expensive, it won’t sell.”
About 80% of the U.S. residents who put up a Christmas tree this year planned to use a fake one, according to the American Christmas Tree Association. That percentage has been unchanged for at least 15 years.
Mac Harman, the founder and CEO of Balsam Brands, which sells hundreds of thousands of Balsam Hill trees each year, said Americans like to set up their trees on Thanksgiving and leave them up for weeks, which dries out fresh-cut trees. Others prefer fake trees because they’re allergic to the mold spores on real trees, he said.
Americans also like convenience; 80% of the fake trees sold each year have the lights already strung on them, Butler said.
That preference is one reason artificial tree production shifted away from the U.S., first to Thailand in the early 1990s and to China about a decade later. Winding lights around the branches is time-consuming and tedious, Harman said.
“Where are we going to get 15,000 people in America who want to string lights on Christmas trees?” Harman said.
It takes an hour or two to make an artificial Christmas tree, from molding and cutting the needles to tying branches together and attaching the lights, Butler said. Workers in China, where 90% of fake trees are made, are paid $1.50 to $2 per hour, he said.
Harman said the workers who wrap the lights on Balsam Hill's trees are so efficient “it's like watching an Olympian.”
One of Balsam Brands’ Chinese partners employs 15,000 to 20,000 people; another in Indonesia has up to 10,000, he said. Many are seasonal workers, since orders for Christmas décor slow down between October and February.
Balsam Brands, which is based in Redwood City, California, studied whether it could make faux trees in Ohio during the first Trump administration, when President Donald Trump threatened -– but eventually delayed –- tariffs on imported Christmas décor, Harman said.
The company hired consultants and considered automating some work. But it concluded a tree that currently sells for $800 would cost $3,000 if it was made in the U.S. Harman said Balsam couldn’t even find a U.S. company to make the pair of gloves it includes in each box for fluffing out branches.
Lee Display employs three or four people for most of the year, adding more during the holiday rush to help with installations and displays. About half its business is making custom displays for companies such as Macy’s, while the other half is selling directly to consumers.
Latino said he likes that he can produce an order quickly instead of waiting for it to ship from overseas.
“You have more control over it. I like to think that everything here is either my fault or my mistake or my careful planning and skill,” he said.
The tariffs still affected Lee Display. Latino's son James, who leads business development and marketing, said the company didn’t import lights or decorations from China this year and relied on items it already had in stock. It's getting low on lights, so next year it will have to pay more to import them, he said.
Some artificial tree companies are branching out so they’re less reliant on China. National Tree Co., which is based in Cranford, New Jersey, moved some manufacturing to Cambodia in 2024, and could source all its trees from outside China by next year if it wanted to, Butler said.
But diversifying their suppliers didn't make those companies immune from the impact of tariffs either. In April, the Trump administration threatened a 49% tariff against products from Cambodia. That rate was eventually reduced to 19%. Tariffs on artificial trees from China also bounced around but now average 20%, according to the American Christmas Tree Association.
Butler said his company imported fewer trees this year and also raised prices by 10%. He said he used a lot of the money to offer customer discounts since demand was weak because of consumer worries about the economy.
“It’s a discretionary item. People say, ‘I can wait one more year,’” Butler said.
Balsam Brands cut its workforce by 10%, canceled travel, froze raises and even stopped serving lunch in the office once a week to absorb the impact of tariffs, Harman said. It also raised tree prices by 10%.
Harman said his sales are down 5% to 10% this year in the U.S. but up 10% or more in Germany, Australia, Canada and France. That tells him tariffs have decreased U.S. demand.
“If a merry Christmas is measured in how many decorations people put up, by that measure it's going to be a slightly less merry Christmas,” he said.
AP Video Journalist Terry Chea contributed from Fairfield, California.
Anjali Bisaria shops for an artificial Christmas tree at the Balsam Hill outlet store in Burlingame, Calif. on Dec. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)
Mac Harman, founder and CEO of Balsam Hill, looks at artificial Christmas trees at the company's outlet store in Burlingame, Calif. on Dec. 10, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)
Juan Gonzalez assembles an artificial Christmas wreath at Lee Display's warehouse, in Fairfield, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)
Mark Latino, CEO of Lee Display, works with a machine that makes tinsel brush for artificial Christmas trees at the company's warehouse, in Fairfield, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)
Melissa Webb assembles an artificial Christmas tree at Lee Display's warehouse, in Fairfield, Calif., Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2025. (AP Photo/Terry Chea)