Business World

Family dispute may have sparked church shooting

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SUTHERLAND SPRINGS — A family dispute may have sparked the rampage by a US Air Force veteran who killed 26 people with an assault rifle in a small-town church even though he was legally prohibited from buying guns, officials said Monday.

Ten people remained in critical condition a day after Devin Patrick Kelley, a 26-year-old private security guard, burst into the rural Baptist church during Sunday morning services and sprayed bullets at the congregati­on.

The Pentagon said it would probe why the Air Force failed to enter a domestic violence conviction into a database that would have prohibited Kelley from purchasing weapons, such as the AR-15 rifle and two handguns he had in his possession.

Investigat­ors were focusing on reports that Kelley had sent threatenin­g text messages to his mother-inlaw, who regularly attended the church but was not there during the assault.

Victims of the massacre included an unborn baby, an 18-month-old toddler, eight members of a single family, and reportedly the gunman’s grandmothe­r-inlaw. Twenty people were wounded.

President Donald J. Trump, who is traveling in Asia, said the United States was living in “dark times.”

But he brushed off calls for stricter gun control, saying the latest tragedy “isn’t a guns situation” but rather a “mental health problem at the highest level.”

The authoritie­s said Kelley may have died of a selfinflic­ted gunshot to the head after using his car to flee the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, a rural community of rolling hills and ranches of nearly 400 people near San Antonio.

Kelley, who was kicked out of the military for assaulting his wife and stepson, was dressed in black and wore a bulletproo­f vest and a black mask with a skull face when he walked up and down the aisle of the church shooting people in the pews, officials said.

Two men — Stephen Willeford, 55, and Johnnie Langendorf­f, 27 — were lauded as heroes for confrontin­g Kelley after he mowed down nearly 50 churchgoer­s with gunfire.

Willeford grabbed his own AR-15 rifle and shot and wounded Kelley as he emerged from the church and headed for his car.

Willeford then flagged down a passing pickup truck driven by Langendorf­f and they pursued Kelley at high speed until he crashed his vehicle into a field.

Freeman Martin of the Texas Department of Public Safety said 10 people were in critical condition, including four categorize­d as serious and six as stable.

Sunday’s carnage came just five weeks after the worst gun massacre in modern US history, when a heavily armed retired accountant opened fire on a country music concert in Las Vegas, killing 58 people.

“This was not racially motivated, it wasn’t over religious beliefs,” Mr. Martin said.

“There was a domestic situation going on with the family and in-laws... We know that he expressed anger toward his mother-in-law.” —

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