Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Coroner: Ohio gunman had drugs in his system

- JOHN SEEWER AND DAN SEWELL

CINCINNATI — The gunman in Dayton, Ohio, who killed nine people had cocaine, an antidepres­sant and alcohol in his system during the mass shooting, and was cut down by a barrage of at least two dozen police bullets that penetrated gaps in his body armor, a coroner said Thursday.

Montgomery County coroner Dr. Kent Harshbarge­r said authoritie­s found a pipe device and a bag of cocaine on 24-year-old Connor Betts. Harshbarge­r also reported in his preliminar­y autopsy findings that Betts had more than 50 entry and exit wounds.

“This incident involved an intense firefight that is rarely seen other than combat and an active-shooter incident,” Dayton Police Chief Richard Biehl said. “The officers were confronted with a moving shooter wearing body armor, actively executing victims with an AR15-type weapon and high-capacity magazines.”

The coroner said police gunfire hit two people. One of them died, but Harshbarge­r said the gunman, not police, fired the lethal round.

Police investigat­ors will review the medical records of the 17 who were wounded to determine if any of them were struck by the officers’ bullets, Biehl said.

Betts opened fire in a popular entertainm­ent district in Dayton. Police shot him as he neared a crowded bar.

One of the victims was Betts’ 22-year-old sister, Megan, although it’s not known whether he targeted her. They had spent an hour together at a bar in the same area before the shooting.

The family will hold private memorial services for both of their children.

Meanwhile, Ethan Kollie, a longtime friend of Betts who told investigat­ors he bought the body armor, a 100-round magazine and a key part of the gun Betts used will remain in jail after a judge ordered Thursday that he be held without bond until his trial.

Authoritie­s have said there’s no indication Kollie knew Betts was planning the mass shooting, but they charged him with lying on a federal firearms form while buying a pistol not used in the shooting.

His attorneys wanted him released on house arrest with electronic monitoring and other conditions, saying Kollie had no history of violence and no role in the shooting. Prosecutor­s opposed his request to stay with a family friend.

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