Fun Tea and the Louisville Metro Police Foundation will host the fundraiser on Saturday, May 27, and Sunday, May 28.
A blood drive at Lynn Family Stadium on Saturday was just the latest way that people in Louisville came together in this tragic time.
They're there for each other to help break the stigma and let them know that it's OK to not be OK.
Below the caution tape that surrounds a growing memorial at Old National Bank, where the shooting happened, a little girl and her brother paid their respects and placed flowers on the steps Wednesday afternoon.
Grief counselors, therapists, psychiatrists and social workers are helping people cope with the trauma.
Monday morning, officers were called to fulfil their promise to serve and protect when a gunman opened fire with an AR-15 rifle inside Old National Bank downtown.
Jim Tutt, 64, was among five people who lost their lives in Monday's mass shooting at a downtown Louisville bank.
Louisville Metro Police released body camera footage from an incident involving a man accused of running with a firearm toward a crowded bar in the Highlands.