Windsor Star

4 DEAD IN WAFFLE HOUSE SHOOTING.

Suspect sought after fleeing from scene

- Sheila Burke

NASHVILLE • A nearly naked gunman wearing only a green jacket and brandishin­g an assault rifle stormed a Waffle House restaurant in Nashville early Sunday, shooting four people to death before a customer rushed him and wrestled the weapon away.

Authoritie­s were searching for the 29-year-old suspect, Travis Reinking, who they said drove to the busy restaurant and killed two people in the parking lot before entering and continuing to fire. When his AR-15 rifle either jammed or the clip was empty, the customer disarmed him in a scuffle.

Four people were also wounded before the gunman fled, shedding his jacket. Nashville Police Chief Steve Anderson said there was no clear motive, though Reinking may have “mental issues.” He may still be armed, Anderson told a mid-afternoon news conference, because he was known to have owned a handgun that authoritie­s have not recovered. The AR-15 used in the shooting and the handgun were among four firearms that authoritie­s took from Reinking after U.S. Secret Service agents arrested him last July for being in a restricted area near the White House, officials said. Special Agent Todd Hudson said Reinking was detained after refusing to leave the restricted area, later explaining he wanted to meet President Donald Trump.

State police in Illinois, where Reinking lived until last fall, revoked his state firearms card at the request of the FBI and the four guns were taken from him, authoritie­s said. Nashville Police spokesman Don Aaron said the guns were returned to his father, who told authoritie­s Sunday he had given the weapons to his son. Authoritie­s hailed the customer who intervened to stop a further bloodbath, 29-year-old James Shaw, Jr., as a hero — though the father of a 4-year-old girl demurred and said he was just trying to survive.

Shaw told reporters he first thought the gunshots fired around 3:25 a.m. were plates falling from a dishwashin­g station. He said when he realized what was happening, he took cover behind a door as shots shattered windows. The gun either jammed or needed a new clip, and that is when Shaw said he pounced after making up his mind that “he was going to have to work to kill me.”

They cursed at each other as they scuffled, Shaw said, and he was able to grab the gun and toss it over a counter. The gunman then ran away into the dark of the workingand middle-class Antioch neighbourh­ood of southeast Nashville. Authoritie­s said he shed his jacket nearby and police found two AR-15 magazines loaded with bullets in the pockets. He was seen walking, naked, on a road, officials said, but later was seen in pants after apparently returning to his apartment. Another witness, Chuck Cordero, told The Tennessean newspaper he had stopped to get a cup of coffee and was outside the Waffle House when the chaos unfolded.

“He did not say anything,” Cordero said of the gunman, who he described as “all business.”

Cordero said Shaw saved lives. “There was plenty more people in that restaurant,” he said.

The dead were identified as 29-year-old restaurant worker Taurean C. Sanderlin, and patrons 20-year-old Joe R. Perez, 23-year-old Akilah Dasilva and Deebony Groves, 21. A police statement said Sanderlin and Perez were killed outside the restaurant, Groves was fatally shot inside, and Dasilva was wounded inside and later died at Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Of the four wounded, one was in critical condition and the other in critical but stable condition.

 ?? GEORGE WALKER IV / THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP ??
GEORGE WALKER IV / THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP
 ?? WADE PAYNE / THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP ?? Law enforcemen­t officials work at the scene of a fatal shooting at a Waffle House restaurant in the Antioch neighbourh­ood of Nashville, Tenn., on Sunday. Hero James Shaw, left, speaks during a news conference after the restaurant patron was hailed for...
WADE PAYNE / THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP Law enforcemen­t officials work at the scene of a fatal shooting at a Waffle House restaurant in the Antioch neighbourh­ood of Nashville, Tenn., on Sunday. Hero James Shaw, left, speaks during a news conference after the restaurant patron was hailed for...

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