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This week's “shooting rampage” in the gUn-happy States of America

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Im2Sexy4MyPants
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« Reply #275 on: September 19, 2013, 05:07:13 pm »

you must just hate Americans lol

you must be really happy their empire is almost ready to collapse dragging us down with it lol
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Crusader
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« Reply #276 on: September 20, 2013, 08:31:40 am »


The Swiss are intelligent people.

Sadly, one cannot say the same about the type of dumb boofheads in the USA who love guns.

Some nationalities of people are simply to stupid to be allowed to have unfetered access to guns, as graphically shown in the USA on a regular basis.


More people are killed by guns in Africa than in America. I would say more people in Iraq are killed by guns too.
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« Reply #277 on: September 20, 2013, 06:32:05 pm »


The Jesuslanders are getting better at it — two mass shootings this week, the latest in Chicago....


12 people, including 3-year-old, shot at South Side park

(Chicago Tribune news story)
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Calliope
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« Reply #278 on: September 20, 2013, 10:23:13 pm »

http://www.stuff.co.nz/world/americas/9191246/Thirteen-shot-in-US
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Im2Sexy4MyPants
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« Reply #279 on: September 21, 2013, 10:59:20 pm »

Chicago has banned guns
only thing is gangsters and other bad guys are not obeying the law
this leaves the unarmed good people at the mercy of any thug with a gun
most shootings are black on black drug gang turf wars
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donquixotenz
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« Reply #280 on: September 22, 2013, 10:33:26 am »


get some ex sas and seals let them eradicate the gangs....gangbusters inc.
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« Reply #281 on: September 23, 2013, 11:20:23 am »

I find it interesting that if the mall massacre that happened in Kenya would have occurred in the USA, our anti USA spammer would have jumped all over it and posted about it. But there is a deafening silence when one occurs outside the USA.
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« Reply #282 on: September 23, 2013, 11:36:51 am »


Kenya is a third-world shit-hole where one expects this sort of thing to occur.

In fact, one would expect several mass shootings every year in Kenya, yet there has only been ONE this year.

How many mass-shootings have occurred in the USA so far this year? How about last year? Or the year before?

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« Reply #283 on: September 23, 2013, 12:32:29 pm »


Kenya is a third-world shit-hole where one expects this sort of thing to occur.

In fact, one would expect several mass shootings every year in Kenya, yet there has only been ONE this year.

How many mass-shootings have occurred in the USA so far this year? How about last year? Or the year before?



It is interesting that you put the USA up on such a high pedestal. It seems you are truly a Green, giving all the envy that oozes out of you.
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« Reply #284 on: October 22, 2013, 10:33:25 am »


From the Los Angeles Times....

Shooting at middle school in Sparks, Nevada: Slain teacher identified

By MATT PEARCE and ARI BLOOMEKATZ | 1:54PM PDT - Monday, October 21, 2013

Police secure the scene near Sparks Middle School after a shooting. Authorities say two people were killed and two wounded at the Nevada middle school. — Photo: Associated Press.
Police secure the scene near Sparks Middle School after a shooting. Authorities say two people were killed
and two wounded at the Nevada middle school. — Photo: Associated Press.


A MIDDLE-SCHOOL STUDENT in Sparks, Nevada, shot and killed a teacher and wounded two other students before apparently killing himself on campus, police said Monday.

Further details about the shooting at Sparks Middle School shortly after 7 a.m. remained scant after a news conference late Monday morning, but witnesses described hearing shots on the playground before a student in khakis gunned down a teacher.

Family members of the teacher shot and killed at Sparks Middle School identified him as Michael Landsberry.

"It doesn't feel real. It's totally surreal to have it happen," Landsberry's sister-in-law, Chanda Landsberry, told the Los Angeles Times.

A student who saw the shooting told the Reno Gazette-Journal that he and his friends were by the school basketball court when they heard a loud pop, followed by screaming.

“The teacher came to investigate,” 8th-grader Kyle Nucum, 13, told the Gazette. “I thought it was a firecracker at first, but the student was pointing a gun at the teacher after the teacher told him to put it down, and the student fired a shot at the teacher and the teacher fell and everybody ran away.”

“And we ran across the field to get somewhere safe and while we were running we heard about four or five more shots and we just got somewhere safe."

Andrew Thompson, a 7th grade student at Sparks Middle School, said Monday on KOLO-TV that the shooter, a student, “started getting mad and shoots one of my friends.”

“He got shot in the shoulder,” Thompson said. Then, the shooter came near a teacher “and said ‘back up’. The teacher backed up, and he pulled the trigger.”


A Sparks Middle School student and her mother walk near Agnes Risley Elementary School, after students were evacuated to the school after a shooting at Sparks Middle School. — Photo: Associated Press.
A Sparks Middle School student and her mother walk near Agnes Risley Elementary School, after students
were evacuated to the school after a shooting at Sparks Middle School. — Photo: Associated Press.


Sparks Middle School student Kyle Nucum told the Reno Gazette-Journal that he saw a 12 or 13 year old student shoot a teacher who told the gunman to put down the gun. — Photo: Reno Gazette-Journal.
Sparks Middle School student Kyle Nucum told the Reno Gazette-Journal that he saw a 12 or 13 year old
student shoot a teacher who told the gunman to put down the gun. — Photo: Reno Gazette-Journal.


A teacher who was killed trying to protect the other students has been hailed as a “hero” by police. — Photo: AFP.
A teacher who was killed trying to protect the other students has been hailed as a “hero” by police.
 — Photo: AFP.


The teacher has not yet been formally identified, and nor has the student suspect. Police said that one of the two wounded students had been through surgery as of late Monday morning.

Their current medical conditions could not immediately be confirmed with the Renown Regional Medical Center, where the two students were originally taken in critical condition.

Police said about 20 to 30 students witnessed the shooting and will be questioned. The school was swept for explosives, police said, and none were found. Parents were told to show identification when picking up their children at a nearby school.

Dale Lundin, a site facilities coordinator at Sparks Middle School, told the Los Angeles Times that “it’s been a very scary morning.”

“I was in the building, it was just going to be a few minutes before the entry bell rang, and then there was a lot of commotion going on out in the hallway,” Lundin said. “I stepped into the hallway, heard a couple of gun shots … checked the hallway [to make sure there were no students] … and stepped into my office and closed the door.”

Lundin added, “It’s that same old story,” Lundin said. “You never really think that it’s going to happen at your place of work, or in this case, your school, when it does happen it kind of puts you in shock.”

That sentiment was echoed by school, community and state officials as Sparks came to grips with a traumatic act of school violence that brought parents streaming to the school in hopes that their children were safe.

“It’s been said that it’s a tragic day in the city of Sparks. Our hearts go out to all those affected,” Sparks Mayor Geno Martini told reporters. “The city itself is very safe, this is just an isolated incident.”

“It’s very, very tragic,” Martini added. “I’m saddened to be here.”

Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval said that he’d ordered the state’s lieutenant governor and state schools superintendent to Sparks to assist the local effort.


http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-sparks-middle-school-shooting-teacher-dead-20131021,0,5110065.story#axzz2iOgj2vsX
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« Reply #285 on: October 22, 2013, 10:53:32 am »

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« Reply #286 on: October 22, 2013, 06:24:14 pm »


From the Los Angeles Times....

Student shooter at Sparks Middle School used semi-automatic handgun

By MELANIE MASON and ARI BLOOMEKATZ | 4:59PM - Monday, October 21, 2013

Law enforcement personnel gather at the scene of a shooting at Sparks Middle School in Sparks, Nevada on Monday, October 21st, 2013. A student at the school opened fire on campus just before the starting bell Monday, wounding two boys and killing a teacher who was trying to protect other children, Sparks police and the victim's family members said. — Photo: Marilyn Newton/Reno Gazette-Journal.
Law enforcement personnel gather at the scene of a shooting at Sparks Middle School in Sparks, Nevada on Monday, October 21st, 2013.
A student at the school opened fire on campus just before the starting bell Monday, wounding two boys and killing a teacher who was
trying to protect other children, Sparks police and the victim's family members said. — Photo: Marilyn Newton/Reno Gazette-Journal.


SPARKS, NEVADA — The student who came armed to Sparks Middle School on Monday morning opened fire using a semi-automatic handgun, wounding two other students and killing a teacher before turning the gun on himself, police said.

Sparks Police Chief Tom Miller did not identify the deceased shooter or the teacher who was killed. Nor did he name the wounded boys, saying only that they are both 12 are hospitalized in stable condition. One was shot was shot in the abdomen, he said, and the other in the shoulder.

The teacher has been identified by family members as Michael Landsberry, who, according to the school's website, taught eighth-grade math.

Police said about 20 to 30 students witnessed the shooting and will be questioned.

After the incident, which authorities say they believe lasted only a few minutes, the school was swept for explosives, police said. None were found. Parents were told to show identification when picking up their children at a nearby school.

Pedro Martinez, superintendent of the Washoe County School District, said it was a "very tragic and sad day" but that "we have a lot of heroes today."

"Right now, our work is going to focus on the families and focus on the staff," he said before publicizing counseling sessions for students and staff members.

"We know this is a difficult time for all of us, but one of the things that I love about this community is we're a family," Martinez said. "We'll have to mourn together and we'll have to heal together."


http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-nevada-sparks-middle-school-semi-automatic-handgun-20131021,0,483059.story
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« Reply #287 on: October 22, 2013, 07:51:14 pm »


From the Los Angeles Times....

Sparks, Nevada, stunned after student kills teacher, himself

Two 12-year-old boys at the middle school are wounded in the shooting with
a semi-automatic handgun during the bustling start of the school day.


By MELANIE MASON and ARI BLOOMEKATZ | 10:53PM - Monday, October 21, 2013

A Sparks Middle School student and her mother walk together after students were evacuated following a shooting that left two dead at the school. — Photo: Kevin Clifford/Associated Press/October 21st, 2013.
A Sparks Middle School student and her mother walk together after students were evacuated following a shooting that left
two dead at the school. — Photo: Kevin Clifford/Associated Press/October 21st, 2013.


SPARKS, NEVADA — A middle school crowded with parents dropping off their children and students hurrying to class erupted into chaos Monday morning as a student drew a semi-automatic handgun and opened fire, killing a teacher and wounding two students before fatally turning the gun on himself.

The unidentified shooter was dressed in khaki slacks that are part of Sparks Middle School's required uniform, witnesses said. He shot one 12-year-old boy in the abdomen and another 12-year-old boy in the shoulder, Sparks Police Department Deputy Chief Tom Miller said, adding that both wounded boys were listed in stable condition. But he declined to identify any of the students or provide additional details, other than confirming that the shooter had committed suicide.

Witnesses said the slain man, identified by family members as eighth-grade math teacher Michael Landsberry, tried to intervene before the boy with the gun aimed his weapon at him and fired.

"We've got video we have to review, people we've got to talk to," said Tom Robinson, deputy chief of the Reno Police Department. "But in my estimation, he is a hero. We do know he was trying to intervene."

Relatives said Landsberry, 45, was the kind of teacher who would have tried to stop the attack.

"It doesn't surprise anybody that that's what Michael would do," Chanda Landsberry said of her brother-in-law. "It doesn't feel real. It's totally surreal to have it happen."

Kyle Nucum, 13, told the Reno Gazette-Journal that he and several students were near the basketball court when they heard a loud pop. "Everybody was screaming," he said.

Kyle said he saw a student point a gun at a teacher who had ordered the student to put the weapon down. "And then the student fired a shot at the teacher. The teacher fell, and everybody ran away," he said.

Four or five more shots were heard as students fled across a field to a nearby house to get away, Kyle said.

Sparks Mayor Geno Martini said late Monday that there still was no indication of the shooter's motive, but that the boy shot the two students before being confronted by Landsberry. Martini described Landsberry as a "well-liked teacher by students and faculty" who had served in the Nevada Air National Guard and had done two tours of duty in Afghanistan.

"This happens in other places but you never expect it to happen in your city, especially in a safe family town," said Martini, who has lived in Sparks all of his life.

Dale Lundin, site facilities coordinator at the school, said Monday was "a very scary morning."

"I was in the building ... a few minutes before the entry bell rang, and then there was a lot of commotion going on out in the hallway," he said. "I stepped into the hallway, heard a couple of gun shots."

After seeing that the hall was clear, Lundin went into his office and locked the door.

"I could hear the police out in the hallway, but we're trained to not open the door or go out until it's clear," he said. "The staff and the students both did a very good job because we've gone through these ‘code reds’ before."

"You never really think that it's going to happen at your place of work, or in this case, your school. When it does happen, it kind of puts you in shock."

The entire shooting episode lasted only a few minutes, with the first calls coming in to authorities at 7:16 a.m., police said.

"Law enforcement officers were on the scene in less than three minutes from the first calls," Mike Mieras, chief of police with the Washoe County School District, said at a news conference.

But by then, it was over.

Classes were immediately canceled, and the school will stay closed the remainder of this week, district officials said.

"We know this is a difficult time for all of us, but one of the things that I love about this community is we're a family," said Pedro Martinez, superintendent of the Washoe County School District. "We'll have to mourn together and we'll have to heal together."

"My condolences to our fallen hero," he said of Landsberry.

Brenda Mena and Isis Lopez, seventh-graders at Sparks Middle School, attended a district-sponsored counseling session Monday night.

Brenda said they were there "to get closure" after a day full of shock.

"They say that school's supposed to be safe," Brenda said.

"I still can't believe it," Isis said.

Neither girl had Landsberry as a teacher, but they said he was a recognizable figure, in part, they said, because of his bald head.

Brenda said Landsberry would be chatty in the halls, and students called him "Batman".

"He was not just a teacher," Isis said. "He's more like a friend, encouraging us to do our best."

The morning, Brenda said, was "intense — to walk into school and see all these people running." Now, she said, there were "crazy rumors" on Facebook, with people having heated disagreements on the latest developments.

"There's a lot of confusion," Brenda said. Isis agreed, adding she felt "overwhelmed" by the day.

Authorities were hesitant to release much information, emphasizing that the homicide investigation was just beginning. Another news conference is scheduled for Tuesday morning.

"We have 20 to 30 student witnesses," Sparks police Sergeant Greta Woyciehowsky said, adding that the middle school caters to seventh- and eighth-grade students who are generally 12 to 14 years old.

When the shooting occurred, the school area was bustling with traffic as parents dropped off their children and students got off buses, she said, and everyone crowds through the school's lone entrance and exit. Students were evacuated to nearby Sparks High School.

Elizabeth Alvarez, 33, lives in an apartment not far from the middle school and said that about 7:15 a.m. she "heard a lot of sirens and the streets were full of police."

She later went to the high school to pick up her 13-year-old nephew, Juan Basurto, an eighth-grader who had been walking to the middle school at the time of the shooting. Alvarez said the children were not crying but were scared, including her nephew.

"He was frightened," Alvarez said, speaking in Spanish. "He said a boy had shot a teacher and two other kids."

She said she saw parents running down the street in front of the middle school, because police had blocked off vehicle access. Hours later, the streets were quiet, but there was still a police presence.

State leaders offered their condolences.

In a Twitter message, Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval said he was "deeply saddened" to hear of the shootings. And Senator Harry Reid (Democrat-Nevada), in a statement, said: "No words of condolence could possibly ease the pain, but I hope it is some small comfort that Nevada mourns with them."

On Monday night, Michael Landsberry's teaching Web page still featured advice he had posted for his students:

"You are asking yourself what annoys me, it depends on any given day. Just like you I have good days and bad days. What may bother me one day may not the next. A very good skill to learn is reading people and their moods.... One of my goals is to earn your respect while you earn mine."

"I believe that with mutual respect that the classroom environment will run smoothly."


Mason reported from Sparks, Nevada, and Bloomekatz from Los Angeles.

L.A. Times staff writer Joseph Serna contributed to this report.

http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-sparks-middle-school-shooting-20131022,0,2336499,full.story
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« Reply #288 on: October 23, 2013, 09:19:57 am »

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« Reply #289 on: October 27, 2013, 03:06:19 pm »


From the Los Angeles Times....

Two dead after shootings and wild police chase in Mojave Desert

A police chase that began near a bloody crime scene in Ridgecrest ends
with two people dead, including the gunman, and three injured.


By KATE MATHER, RICHARD WINTON and RUBEN VIVES | 7:47PM - Friday, October 25, 2013

Helicopters and police vehicles block U.S. 395 in Central California south of Ridgecrest where officers killed a gunman after an hourlong chase. Two wounded people were found in the trunk of the fleeing car. — Photo: Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times/October 25th, 2013.
Helicopters and police vehicles block U.S. 395 in Central California south of Ridgecrest where officers killed a gunman after an hourlong
chase. Two wounded people were found in the trunk of the fleeing car. — Photo: Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times/October 25th, 2013.


THE MAN called Ridgecrest police early Friday morning with a warning: He planned to "wreak havoc" on the Central California community.

Less than three hours later, the caller — already suspected of killing one person and wounding another — lived up to his word. He led authorities on a high-speed, 35-mile chase on a Mojave Desert highway, shooting at authorities and other vehicles and forcing drivers off the road. At some point, the gunman's trunk popped open, revealing a man and woman inside. When the driver later opened fire on the two hostages in the trunk, officers shot and killed him.

Ridgecrest — which spent part of the morning locked down — was "very shook up," Mayor Dan Clark said.

"This is a small town," Clark said. "And things like this just don't happen here."

The bloody chain of events began about 5:15 a.m. at a home in the 500 block of West Atkins Avenue, where Kern County Sheriff Donny Youngblood said Ridgecrest police responded to a report of a shooting. Officers found a man with gunshot wounds and a woman dead — only the second homicide of the year in the town.

It was then that the gunman, whom Youngblood identified late Friday as Sergio Munoz, 39, called. The man said he wanted to "kill the officers, but they had too many guns," Youngblood said. Instead, Munoz said he had a package for police and was "going to wreak havoc."

About two hours later, a deputy spotted the man's Dodge sedan leaving town, authorities said. The deputy attempted to pull the vehicle over, but Munoz refused and the pursuit began.

As he drove south on U.S. 395, Munoz fired a shotgun and handgun an estimated 10 to 12 times at oncoming traffic and forced several vehicles off the roadway, Youngblood said. At one point, the vehicle pulled over and the trunk opened. Officers saw a man and woman inside, who then appeared to pull the trunk lid closed, the sheriff said.

Youngblood said the presence of people in the trunk "changed the entire dynamic" of the chase.

Several miles later — north of California 58 — Munoz pulled over again and began shooting through the back seat of the sedan into the trunk, Youngblood said. Seven officers from the Sheriff's Department, the Ridgecrest Police Department and the California Highway Patrol opened fire, killing the gunman, the sheriff said.

The people inside the trunk suffered gunshot wounds, but it wasn't clear at what point they were hit, sheriff's spokesman Ray Pruitt said. Both were flown to a hospital. The extent of their injuries was not immediately disclosed, but Pruitt said they had undergone surgery and would "most likely" survive.

The man found at the Atkins Avenue home suffered moderate injuries and was also expected to survive, Pruitt said. Late Friday, neighbors peered through a broken window at the home. A white door was splattered with blood, which also covered the floor.

Authorities had not released the name of the victims as of Friday evening. Media reports indicated that Munoz worked at the Searles Valley Minerals plant in nearby Trona. Arzell Hale, a spokesman for the company, declined to comment on the matter because it was "under a law enforcement investigation."

Youngblood said there was a "relationship amongst the players" but did not elaborate.

The sheriff said such an incident was "very unusual" for Ridgecrest, a town of just over 27,000 in northeastern Kern County.

"This type of thing is very alarming," Youngblood said.

Clark said he was thankful officers were able to stop the violence. The mayor said he was teaching a high school conflict-resolution class when his school — and all others in the city — went into lockdown.

"All we knew is we had a gunman roaming the community," he said.

Hours after the pursuit ended, U.S. 395 remained closed as investigators combed several crime scenes. South of the Highway 58 junction — known as the "four corners" to residents — a gas station employee said many northbound truckers and other drivers were stranded.

The employee, who declined to give her name, said she was stunned to hear about the shooting.

"These kind of things don't happen here in the middle of nowhere," she said.

A woman who said she was a friend of the victims at the Ridgecrest home and knew the gunman said that he recently lost his job and had a couple of run-ins with police.

"They're both friends of his," she said of the victims in Ridgecrest. "The guy had some problems recently, but I don't know why he did this."


http://www.latimes.com/local/la-me-ridgecrest-shooting-20131026,0,2662898.story
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« Reply #290 on: October 27, 2013, 07:01:30 pm »


Those “gun-toting” JESUSLANDERS are in “fine form” at the moment....



From the Los Angeles Times....

Phoenix shooting leaves 5 people dead

By MATT HAMILTON | 7:42PM - Saturday, October 26, 2013



A GUNMAN killed four people and two dogs at a Phoenix residential complex on Saturday before shooting himself, according to police.

Just after 9 a.m., Phoenix Police Department officers responded to a report of gunfire at a townhouse in a central Phoenix housing complex, said police spokesman Sgt. Tommy Thompson.

Police interviewed neighbors and narrowed down the two likely town homes where the gunman could be hiding, Thompson told the Los Angeles Times.

SWAT crews, a terrorism liaison unit and multiple police officers arrived to assist.

After a neighbor told police that the gunman had entered one of the two possible town homes, police entered the other one, hoping to evacuate everyone inside.

Instead, police found carnage: two people shot dead on the patio, and two more dead inside. Two dogs were also found killed.

Inside the neighboring unit, police found a man who they believe was the gunman, dead from a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

The entire search process took "several hours," Thompson said, because police "were determined to locate the shooter."

Police have not yet released the identities of the victims or suspected gunman. On Saturday night, detectives were working to notify the next of kin and piece together a possible motive for the killings, Thompson said.

"That’s the tragedy of this incident," Thompson said. "You have five individuals whose lives are gone, and we may never know why."


http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-phoenix-shooting-five-dead-20131026,0,6913438.story
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« Reply #291 on: October 31, 2013, 11:01:44 am »


from the Charlotte Observer....

Six people shot dead in South Carolina domestic dispute

By MITCH WEISS - Associated Press | Wednesday, October 30, 2013

Sheriff's deputies gather outside a house where six people, including two children, died in a shooting in Greenwood, South Carolina. — Photo: FoxCarolina.
Sheriff's deputies gather outside a house where six people, including two children, died in a shooting
in Greenwood, South Carolina. — Photo: FoxCarolina.


GREENWOOD, South Carolina — Bryan Sweatt was in the middle of a custody fight with his girlfriend over their 7-month-old daughter and facing a burglary charge that could put him in jail for years.

His girlfriend's father had warned him to stay away from his house and the dirt track Sweatt had built in the backyard for his all-terrain vehicles.

Then on Tuesday afternoon, Sweatt broke into the parents' house and waited for them and the girlfriend to come home, police said. When they did, Sweatt fatally shot his girlfriend, her parents and two children living there, before turning the gun on himself, Greenwood County Sheriff Tony Davis said.

"Once you see a horrific scene like this it never leaves you. It's with you day in and day out," he said.

The victims were identified as Richard Fields, 51; his wife, Melissa Fields, 49; their daughter Chandra Fields, 26; and two of the couple's grandchildren who lived with them: William Robinson, 9; and Tariq Robinson, 11.

Davis didn't specify a motive for the shootings, but said it appears they stemmed from a "domestic violence situation."

He said Sweatt felt that Chandra Fields wasn't allowing him to see their infant child often enough. The girl was not among the dead.

He said that Sweatt had called 911 while he was in the Fields' house, stating that he was on the edge and contemplating suicide, before hanging up.

It's unclear how many — if any — victims had been shot before he made the call at 5:54 p.m. on Tuesday. A police report said a dispatcher heard a woman in the background say: "Do not point that at me" before the call was disconnected.

Sweatt allowed four children to escape — his 7-month-old daughter, the infant's cousin and two neighborhood children who came to the door after school to play with the Fields' grandchildren.

No one knows why Sweatt let them live and shot the others, Davis said.

"I cannot tell you at this point that I have all the answers for you," he said.

While they're still searching for clues, one thing is clear: Sweatt's life was spinning out of control.

Sweatt has a lengthy arrest record that dates back nearly a decade, according to state police records. Most of his charges were related to property crimes, such as burglary or forgery, although he was arrested once on aggravated assault charges.

He was supposed to be in court Tuesday on a burglary charge, Davis said. The sheriff didn't have many details about the hearing, but said Sweatt faced up to 30 years if he was convicted.

On July 6th, 2012, a woman filed a complaint, saying she wanted to have Sweatt checked out because he was threatening suicide, according to a Greenwood County sheriff's office report. She also said she was afraid of him. No charges were filed.

Neighbors said that a few months ago Richard Fields started allowing Sweatt to store his recreational vehicles on his property. The Fields lived in a one-story home on a rural stretch of road south of Greenwood, a city of about 23,000 in northwestern South Carolina.

Neighbor Jeff Hicks said he didn't mind initially but things quickly changed. Strangers began showing up and racing the four-wheelers long into the night, he said, adding that Fields had complained to him about the noise and said he was going to ask Sweatt to stop coming around.

"He just couldn't take it anymore. He was just fed up," Hicks said.

Hicks said he had frequently talked with his quiet, friendly neighbor about hog hunting and other outdoor activities.

"It's a shame. It just tears you up," said Hicks, who last saw Fields Tuesday morning. "I waved to him, and now I'll never see him again. That's how short life is."

On Wednesday morning, Hicks showed an Associated Press reporter the shed and backyard that still houses more than half-a-dozen four-wheelers. Children's toys and a plastic slide were strewn about an adjoining back yard.

Sheriff Davis said Fields also believed that Sweatt had stolen property from him and told him "not to come back."

But on Tuesday, Sweatt returned.

After breaking in, he waited for the victims to come to the house.

Officers went to the home after receiving the 911 call from Sweatt. Davis said while police were on their way, a neighbor called 911 saying four children from that address had arrived at her house and told her a shot had been fired. He said the children remained at her house.

After about an hour and "several unsuccessful attempts" by officers to make contact with anyone in the home, the SWAT team entered and discovered the bodies, authorities said.

"This is a tragedy," said neighbor Ansel Brewer. "It just so hard to imagine something like this going on here. Why would someone do this?"


http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2013/10/30/4425572/6-people-dead-in-sc-in-apparent.html
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« Reply #292 on: October 31, 2013, 01:23:02 pm »


From the Los Angeles Times....

Four days, four massacres, 21 dead — and as always, few answers

By MATT PEARCE | 2:02PM PDT - Thursday, October 30, 2013

Law enforcement officials stand near a home on Callison Highway where six people were found dead, on Tuesday in Greenwood, South Carolina. — Photo: Matt Bruce/Associated Press/October 30th, 2013.
Law enforcement officials stand near a home on Callison Highway where six people were found dead, on Tuesday
in Greenwood, South Carolina. — Photo: Matt Bruce/Associated Press/October 30th, 2013.


IF YOU bundled the attacks all together into one brutal event, it would have been the worst massacre since Adam Lanza walked into an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut, last December.

Instead, America's latest criminal tragedy has been doled out in bloody increments, just as senselessly as any mass shooting, and with no less of an astonishing casualty total: 21 people dead, after four days of inexplicable violence in four states.

In Phoenix, Arizona: a disturbed pharmacist and former financial blogger, who had argued with his neighbors over their barking dogs, took his shotgun next door and killed four members of the Moore family — plus two of their dogs — before killing himself Saturday morning.

In Brooklyn, New York: a troubled Chinese immigrant, said to be jealous of his relatives' success in the United States, stands accused of slaughtering a cousin-in-law and her four small children with a butcher knife at their apartment on Saturday night.

In Terrell, Texas: a small-time criminal is accused of unleashing eight hours of terror on the town of Terrell on Monday night, killing five people in four locations — his mother, his aunt, two acquaintances and a convenience-store worker — before his arrest after a high-speed chase.

In Greenwood, South Carolina: an unknown man, who called 911 to say he was planning on hurting himself, hung up and instead apparently killed three adults, two children, and then himself in what officials think may be a domestic-violence-related incident. Greenwood County Sheriff Tony Davis told reporters it might be the worst crime scene he'd seen in 40 years of police work.

There has been no suggestion that any of these attacks are related; nor is there much reason to think they would be.

Instead, they're events bound together by a mutual senselessness, and when viewed from a step back, the past four days' killings reflect a more basic reality.

Events like these — in each a handful of people were homicide victims, unlike the steep toll of Newtown, or of Aurora, Colorado — are a relatively common if largely unacknowledged staple of American crime.

Every year, according to FBI data, at least 12,000 Americans are killed in homicides all over the country, a number that has now long been dropping for reasons that criminologists don't really agree on.

Cities once ravaged by drugs and gang violence in the '80s and '90s have now gotten so safe that experts argue you're more likely to get hurt if you live in the country, where car crashes help make injury-related deaths more common than in urban areas.

And in a reflection of the times, the national debate over public safety has quietly shifted.

The old concerns over drug dealers and gang violence have slowly been edged out by concerns over mass shootings, the worst of which spurred Congress this year to try (and fail) to pass a federal gun-control bill with the support of victims' families.

Just watching the news, it's certainly felt as if massacres are happening more often — but are they really? It's tough to say; everyone seems to keep different figures.

Last week, U.S. Attorney General Eric H. Holder Jr., the nation's top law-enforcement official, said Justice Department figures show that mass shootings have tripled in recent years.

The Associated Press reported that from 2000 to 2008, 324 people were shot and 145 were killed in mass shootings; from 2009 to 2012, 404 people were shot and 207 people were killed, amounting to a fraction of the nation's annual homicide totals, but a notable increase nonetheless.

A Justice Department spokesperson couldn't immediately be reached for clarification on how the numbers were gathered — which matters.

A Texas State University study released in March on the frequency of "active shooters" between 2000 and 2010 — showing that active-shooter events nearly tripled at the end of the aughts — shows just how tortuous the definition of a mass shooting can get:

An active shooter event involves one or more persons engaged in killing or attempting to kill multiple people in an area (or areas) occupied by multiple unrelated individuals. At least one of the victims must be unrelated to the shooter. The primary motive appears to be mass murder; that is the shooting is not a by-product of an attempt to commit another crime. While many gang-related shootings could fall within this category, gang-related shootings were excluded from this study because gang-related shootings are not considered to be active shooter events by the police.

Got it? Gang violence doesn't count; nor does domestic violence, even when a whole family is slaughtered. And of course, such a tally excludes extremely public mass attacks like the Boston Marathon bombings or intensely private rampages like Saturday's Brooklyn stabbings, since the suspects didn't use guns.

That rankles Northeastern University criminologist James Alan Fox, who in the last couple of years has dissented from specially tailored tallies (such as ‘Mother Jones’) that insist mass shootings and spree killings are on the rise.

“Sometimes the criteria are arbitrary, sometimes they’re hard to apply, and it tends to be a little subjective," Fox told the Los Angeles Times last week. “How do you classify what workplace shootings count and what don’t count?"

He says that his numbers (which count only shootings) show no big fluctuation: There are usually about 20 mass shootings a year that kill four or more people, many of which make no long-term splash with politicians or the media.

And for Fox, a casualty is a casualty.

"As far as people killed, does it matter if there’s two shooters, one shooter, it's in a public place, a semi-public place, a private place, or in a home?" Fox asked. "Does it matter where there was some military motive?”


http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-massacres-20131030,0,570401.story
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« Reply #293 on: October 31, 2013, 01:31:33 pm »

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« Reply #294 on: October 31, 2013, 01:36:44 pm »




Yeah, nothing to worry about, eh?

After all, they're only DEAD AMERICANS, so no great loss.

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« Reply #295 on: November 07, 2013, 08:26:48 pm »


from the Chicago Tribune....

At least two dead, eight wounded in Detroit shooting

By STEVE NEAVLING - Reuters | 12:42AM CST - Thursday, November 07, 2013

DETROIT — Two people died and eight were wounded on Wednesday evening when gunfire erupted outside a barbershop on Detroit's east side, police said.

Police said they were searching for two suspects who were believed to have fled the scene in two vehicles after the shooting, which occurred at about 6:15 p.m. local time.

It involved the occupants of three cars, two of them Chevrolet Impalas, that pulled into an alley near the back of the barbershop, the Detroit Free Press newspaper reported, citing police sources. Police were looking for at least two shooters.

All of the victims were male and at least one man was listed in critical condition on Wednesday night, the newspaper said.

The wounded were taken to several hospitals in the area. Authorities, who initially said that three people had been killed in the incident, did not immediately release information on their condition.

John Zakar, 26, said he was working at the Riviera Party Shoppe when he heard about 20 shots ring out about a block away and three wounded people ran into his store and hid.

"I locked the door behind them and applied pressure to the wounds," Zakar told Reuters in a telephone interview.

A woman who declined to give her name told the Free Press that she believed one of the men who was slain was her 40-year-old son.

"I heard he's dead ... they won't let me up there," the woman told the newspaper.

Detroit, which filed for bankruptcy in July, is experiencing its highest murder rate in decades. The city faces a declining population and fiscal problems that have strained city services and lengthened police response times.

Police did not immediately offer a motive for the shooting.

Detroit Police Chief James Craig said the barbershop had a reputation for gambling, but it was too early to tell whether that played a role in the crime.


Additional reporting by Brendan O'Brien in Milwaukee and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles; Writing by David Bailey; Editing by Eric M. Johnson and John Stonestreet.

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/sns-rt-us-usa-crime-detroit-20131106,0,184041.story
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« Reply #296 on: November 26, 2013, 06:20:30 am »


Quote
CNN Radio’s Jim Roope talks with experts who say that even if people try to react to warning signs, many violent events cannot be prevented.

Jeanette Halton-Tiggs is the mother of Timothy Halton, Jr., who attacked and killed a police officer in 2007.

“I knew there was something wrong with him at a very young age, about 8-years-old. He started torturing small squirrels and cats,” said Halton-Tiggs.

She said while he was young she could get help for him but when he turned 18 he was able to emancipate himself. The courts, in spite of numerous violent episodes including threatening President George Bush in 2002, let him out on his own. “He didn’t think anything was wrong with him. He was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia. He thought we were the problem,” she said.

Forensic psychologist Dr. Carole Lieberman says the state should exert more control. “The unspoken tendency is to go too far in giving mentally ill people the freedom to be on their own,” said Lieberman. “It’s really freedom to not get the help they need. ...

...To hear the complete story, click the play button on the audio player above. ...
http://thechart.blogs.cnn.com/2011/01/13/warning-signs-of-violence-a-mothers-view/

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« Reply #297 on: November 26, 2013, 10:19:40 pm »

Abandoned homes and buildings are part of the landscape in Detroit. The city has an estimated 78,000 abandoned buildings across its 139 square miles of land.




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« Reply #298 on: December 14, 2013, 09:10:57 am »

Los Angeles (AFP) - Two students were injured in a shooting incident at a school in the US state of Colorado on Friday, before the suspected gunman apparently killed himself, the local sheriff said.

The suspect was a student at Arapahoe High School in Centennial, outside Denver, just a few miles from the sites of last year's Aurora movie theater shooting and the 1999 Columbine massacre.

"The suspect has been found inside the school and he has deceased as a result of what appears to be a self-inflicted gunshot wound," Arapahoe County Sheriff Grayson Robinson told reporters.

http://nz.news.yahoo.com/a/-/world/20324469/two-injured-suspected-gunman-dead-at-colorado-school/
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« Reply #299 on: December 15, 2013, 04:44:30 pm »


From the Los Angeles Times....

Colorado shooter was said to be targeting his school debate coach

By MOLLY HENNESSY-FISKE, SOUMYA KARLAMANGLA and JENNY DEAM | 10:52PM PST - Friday, December 13, 2013

Students, escorted by armed police, are led out of Arapahoe High School after a shooting on the campus in Centennial, Colorado. — Photo: Craig F. Walker/Associated Press.
Students, escorted by armed police, are led out of Arapahoe High School after a shooting on the campus in Centennial, Colorado.
 — Photo: Craig F. Walker/Associated Press.


CENTENNIAL, COLORADO — An 18-year-old high school student reportedly frustrated when he was ejected from the school debate club has been identified as the shooter who opened fire at a suburban Colorado high school Friday, wounding another student before killing himself.

Karl Halverson Pierson, 18, was said to be angry at the school debate coach and entered the school shortly after noon Friday with a shotgun, repeatedly calling the teacher’s name, according to interviews with students and law enforcement officials.

When he found the teacher, he “shot once and missed” before the teacher fled, according to senior Frank Woronoff, 18, who talked with the instructor—who seemed shell-shocked afterward—outside the school as students fled for safety.

“He could barely speak. All he could say were the same statements over and over. He seemed like he might have a panic attack,” Woronoff said of the teacher, whose name has not been released by authorities.

Contrary to earlier reports, there was only one gunshot victim, a 15-year-old girl, Arapahoe County Sheriff Grayson Robinson told reporters. “There’s no reason to believe she was a target,” the sheriff said, adding that it was unclear whether the girl had tried to confront the shooter.

A second girl was mistakenly thought to have been shot, but she had blood on her only because she had come into contact with the injured girl, Robinson said.

The wounded student remained in critical condition in a local hospital. The rest of the high school was evacuated earlier Friday, with students filing out with arms raised—a chilling image reminiscent of other school shootings.

The shooting in Centennial, a city of about 100,000 not far from Denver, reminded many of the deadly 1999 attack at nearby Columbine High School in which two students killed a dozen classmates and a teacher.

This latest shooting also comes as the nation prepares to commemorate the first anniversary Saturday of the massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, where 20 children and six educators were killed by a lone gunman before he committed suicide.

Investigators said they recovered two Molotov cocktails after Friday’s shooting, one of which had detonated, but said it was not yet known who owned the shotgun used in the assault or when it was purchased.

Authorities will execute search warrants on three locations — the home where Pierson lived with his mother, his father’s home in Denver and Pierson’s car, which is still in the school’s west parking lot, police said.

Robinson said authorities hoped information gleaned from the searches “will help us put the pieces together.”

Friends described Pierson as an intelligent, likeable youth who liked to talk about politics and was a strong advocate of gun rights, though they said they had never seen him with a gun.

“I had class with him and knew he was very outspoken and willing to contribute, and also that he had a controlled temper he would use during discussion,” Carl Schmidt, a fellow senior, told the L.A. Times in a Facebook message.

Pierson had friends, a younger sister and a middle-class family. He was “slightly geeky,” Woronoff said, but not a loner. He attended school dances and competed at track meets. “He was one of the nicest, most down-to-earth kids I knew.”

But he was picked on.

“The kids at school knew how to push his buttons,” Woronoff said. “He was bullied a bit, but he didn’t stop. He’d get right back up.”

Though Pierson had “a multitude of friends,” Schmidt said, “only those that could cope with his personality became close with him.”

Pierson appeared to care passionately about debate, and became upset over a disagreement with the debate coach, friends said.

Joe Redmond, also a fellow senior and one of three co-captains of the debate team, said Pierson was kicked off the team and suspended from school in September for a few weeks after threatening the coach.

“When he came back he was really, really angry,” Redmond said.

The debate team won first place in a tournament Saturday, Redmond said, and when students returned to school Monday, Redmond asked Pierson if he would consider rejoining the team.

Pierson told Redmond that he still hated the teacher, and said, “Apparently you get suspended for threatening to kill a teacher.” He said Pierson went cold at that point, looked at Redmond, and then looked at the ground.

Redmond said that Pierson and the teacher had argued over changes Pierson had wanted to make to the debate team.

“He doesn’t take a no very lightly,” Redmond said.

Redmond said his team's victory on Saturday may have made Pierson upset that he was no longer on the team. He said Pierson was the best debater on the team.

Redmond said Pierson also seemed to be affected by the divorce of his parents within the last two years.

“At the end of the day Karl was a good person, and I hate the idea that he might be defined by his ending acts,” Redmond said. “I loved to be around him. I loved to talk to him. It’s always a shame when you hear friends making bad choices, but this one was particularly devastating.”

Pierson was active on social media, filing his most recent public Facebook update on December 5th, when he changed his cover photo to a melded image of the recently deceased actor Paul Walker, the late former South African leader Nelson Mandela, and Brian the dog from the television show “Family Guy”, all sitting in a car.

On the Arapahoe Speech and Debate club’s Facebook page, Pierson was a frequent poster, motivating his teammates with funny images and countdowns to future debates.

“39 more days till nationals!” he posted on May 7th, with a link to a meme of Joe Biden with “#Turn myswagon” as the caption.

On June 18th he wrote, “Hey guys! I just got back from day 2 of nationals and I’m sorry to say I am not moving on, nor am I in the top 60 of the country. Thank you from everyone for your support, and have a great rest of your summer and hope we can send some more guys to nationals in Kansas next year!”

Pierson was also a member of the Facebook group Smart Sundays, which according to the page is “for people who want to partake in discussions of politics, philosophy, religion and things of that nature.”

On May 28th, he posted a question to spark debate in the group: “I know it's not Sunday, but I was wondering to all the neoclassicals and neoliberals, why isn't the market correcting itself? If the invisible hand is so strong, shouldn't it be able to overpower regulations?”

Police say the shooting incident began about 12:30 p.m. and lasted about 14 minutes.  Students huddled in closets and locked classrooms, carrying out the instructions that had been drilled into them since the shootings at Columbine.

Whitney Riley, a 15-year-old freshman, said she was walking into the study center with a group of friends. They were laughing and joking until “all of a sudden we heard a bang,” she said.

She said everyone started running when they heard more shots. She finally ended up with eight other people, including two teachers, crammed into a tiny sprinkler system room. In those those moments, she said, she remembered all of the drills she had gone through.

“People were running through the halls, yelling, ‘Get out, get out’,” she said.

Students in the sprinkler room said they heard someone urging them to come out but, as they were trained, refused to open the door because they did not know whether it might be the shooter seeking more targets.

Finally, one of the teachers said, “Let’s go while we can.”

As a group, they ran toward the exit. As Riley was running, she said, she saw two adults holding up a student who seemed to be injured in the leg.

John Spiegel, an 18-year-old senior, said he was in his psychology class on the north side of the high school when he heard a popping sound.

The sound brought the class to a halt, he said, and everyone began looking around, trying to identify it. Seconds later, there were three more rapid shots.

“It was clear as day. It sounded right outside the door,” Spiegel said.

At the same time, he said, he heard what sounded like a student screaming, “We need help.” Students in his classroom ran to the front of the room, turned off the light, and huddled together.

“We were just clumped together on the floor. It felt unreal,” Spiegel said.

Blaise Potvien, 14, a freshman, said he was in his fifth-period class — U.S. history — when he heard three or four gunshots in the hallway.

“It was the loudest thing I ever heard,” Potvien said at the nearby Shepherd of the Hills church. Parents rushed there to greet students who had left the school in an orderly march.

Seconds after the booming sounds, Potvien said, counselors and staff members were running down the hallway ordering everyone to close the classroom doors.

He said they turned out the lights in his classroom and hid in a far corner. Students were crying and screaming.

He said he texted his mother: “I love you mom and dad. Thank you for a wonderful life.”

Teresa Potvien, his mother, said she was Christmas shopping when she got that text. “I almost threw up,” she said.


L.A. Times staff writer Saba Hamedy contributed to this report.

http://www.latimes.com/nation/nationnow/la-na-nn-colorado-school-shooter-identified-20131213,0,1442691,full.story
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