Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Casino gunman ID’d as gambler in debt

- TODD PITMAN Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jim Gomez of The Associated Press.

MANILA, Philippine­s — The lone suspect behind a deadly attack on a casino and shopping complex in Manila was a heavily indebted Filipino gambling addict, police said Sunday, bolstering their claim that the assault was not terrorism-related.

The man’s immediate family confirmed his identity as Jessie Carlos — a 42-year-old married father of three and former Finance Department employee who owed more than $80,000.

The revelation­s confirm that “this is not an act of terrorism,” Manila Police Chief Oscar Albayalde told a news conference. “This incident is confined to the act of one man alone as we have always said.”

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for Friday’s attack on Resorts World Manila, where 37 patrons and employees died, mostly from smoke inhalation as they tried to hide in one of the casino’s VIP rooms on the second floor. But authoritie­s have rejected the militants’ claim, saying there is no evidence to back it and pointing out that the assailant shot no civilians during the two-hour ordeal.

On Sunday, Carlos’ father told reporters that his son had no connection­s to terrorism. Carlos’ distraught mother, Teodora, wept and asked for forgivenes­s.

“The message of what happened to my son is people should not get hooked on gambling so their families won’t get destroyed,” she said.

Carlos’ wife was also brought before reporters. She was so distressed, she entered in a wheelchair and kept her head, hidden by a cream-colored towel, down on a desk as she sat beside the police.

Albayalde said that Carlos had sold off property, including a vehicle, to support his gambling habit of at least several years. His family had grown so concerned, they had asked casinos in the capital to ban him from entering since April 3.

The breakthrou­gh in efforts to identify him came when investigat­ors traced his path to the casino from a Manila suburb where he had hailed a taxi after midnight Thursday.

They found his wife there early Sunday.

She told them she had seen images of her husband on TV. “She knew it was him, but she was really afraid,” Albayalde said.

In 2014, Philippine newspapers had reported that Carlos was fired from his job at the government’s Finance Department “for grave misconduct and neglect of duty” because he failed to disclose that he owned a Manila house, a Toyota SUV and other business interests — an annual requiremen­t for government officials and employees.

As a result, he was permanentl­y banned from government employment and his retirement benefits were forfeited.

Authoritie­s on Saturday released video footage of the attack to bolster their argument that it was a botched robbery attempt by one man with no known link to terrorism.

The security footage showed Carlos casually exiting a taxi just after midnight and walking calmly inside the entertainm­ent complex. Shortly afterward, he dons a black ski mask, slips on an ammunition vest and pulls an M4 carbine rifle out of his backpack.

What happened next borders on the surreal: a slow-motion arson attack and robbery so methodical and unhurried, the gunman appears to walk much of the way — even as he exchanges fire with a security guard and flees, slightly wounded, up a stairwell.

As thousands of people flee, the gunman is seen torching gambling tables and slot machines, setting fires police believe were meant as a diversiona­ry tactic to allow his escape.

Then, just 11 minutes after his arrival, Carlos fires through the door of a storage room filled with poker chips, hauling a huge stash away.

He was later found dead on the fifth floor of a hotel connected to the complex, the 38th fatality of the night. Police said he shot himself and set fire to the empty room he had burst into.

 ?? AP/BULLIT MARQUEZ ?? Employees of the Resorts World Manila complex pray Sunday in Pasay, southeast of Manila, at a memorial for the victims of a deadly casino attack by a lone gunman.
AP/BULLIT MARQUEZ Employees of the Resorts World Manila complex pray Sunday in Pasay, southeast of Manila, at a memorial for the victims of a deadly casino attack by a lone gunman.

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