Gunman kills 27 at Texas church service
A black-clad gunman
armed with an assault rifle opened fire on a small-town Texas church during Sunday
morning services, killing 27 people and wounding 20 in the last mass shooting
to shock the United States.
Authorities did not
identify the gunman, saying only that he was a “young white male, maybe in his
early 20s,” who was wearing a bulletproof vest and found dead in his vehicle
after being confronted by a local resident.
Governor Greg Abbott
warned the toll may rise.
“There are 26 lives that
have been lost. We don’t know if that number will rise or not, all we know is
that’s too many, and this will be a long, suffering mourning for those in
pain,” he said.
Exactly five weeks after
the worst shooting in modern US history, the latest tragedy prompted an
outpouring of condolences, led by US President Donald Trump.
The victims, who ranged
in age from five to 72, were gunned down at First Baptist Church in Sutherland
Springs, a rural community of about 400 people located 30 miles (50 kilometers)
southeast of San Antonio.
The gunman fired outside
at the church before entering the building and continuing to spray bullets,
said Freeman Martin, regional director of the Texas Department of Public
Safety.
“As he exited the
church, a local resident grabbed his rifle and engaged that suspect. The
suspect dropped his rifle, which was a Ruger AR assault-type rifle, and fled
from the church. Our local citizen pursued the suspect at that time,” Martin
said.
Law enforcement later
found the gunman dead in his car, which had crashed, on the Wilson-Guadalupe
county line. It was not clear if he had committed suicide or was shot by the
resident who had confronted him.
US media outlets had
identified the shooter as a 26-year-old veteran who had faced a court-martial
and was dishonorably discharged from the Air Force.
Comments
Post a Comment