The Asian Age

‘Texas gunman looked for survivors, children to execute’

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Houston, Nov. 8: Devin Patrick Kelley, who killed 26 people in a church shooting, went through the pews looking for survivors to execute and his first targets were children, according to media reports.

Authoritie­s in Sutherland Springs said nearly half of the 26 victims were children.

Rosanne Solis and Joaquin Ramirez were two of the around 20 survivors, who were gravely injured, in the worst shooting incident in Texas history.

They were in one of the first aisles of the First Baptist Church when the 26-year-old gunman entered and opened fire on the worshipper­s.

The gunman yelled “everybody’s going to die” and then began spraying bullets inside the church as we hid in terror beneath a pew (church bench), Solis said, adding that she could see the executione­r’s shoes as he marched through the sanctuary firing at will from his assault rifle.

“I did not want to move,” she was quoted as saying by the Univision news, an affiliate of NBC News. “If I spoke or if I moved he was going to kill me because he was standing there killing everyone who moved. I played dead and it saved my life.”

She also said that the gunman appeared to be targeting the children. “It was like he had a hatred for the children,” she was quoted as saying in the report.

Her husband, Ramirez said “When they (children) yelled he would riddle them (with bullets) like an animal”.

Meanwhile, the FBI is finding it difficult to access the mobile phone of the gunman who killed 26 worshipper­s in a shooting rampage in the church, shooting their probe to gather evidence about his motive, an official has said.

Christophe­r Combs, the special agent in charge of the agency’s San Antonio bureau which is probing the Sutherland Springs church shooting case, said, “We will know more when we are able to explore his phone”.

The FBI agent also said that with the advancemen­t in the technology, law enforcemen­t agencies are increasing­ly not being able to get into these phones.

He said that the gunman was not in the FBI’s database. The Air Force had failed to enter Kelley’s domestic violence courtmarti­al into a national database that would have barred him from buying weapons.

“With the advance of the technology and the phones and the encryption­s, law enforcemen­t — whether that’s at the state, local or federal level — is increasing­ly not able to get into these phones,” he said at a news conference.

 ??  ?? Devin Patrick Kelley
Devin Patrick Kelley

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