Boston Sunday Globe

White shooter kills three people in racist attack at Fla. store

- By John Raoux, Terry Spencer, and Trisha Ahmed

JACKSONVIL­LE, Fla. — A masked white man fatally shot three people inside a Jacksonvil­le, Fla., Dollar General store in a predominat­ely Black neighborho­od on Saturday in a deliberate attack after leaving behind racist writings, officials said. The shooter then killed himself.

“He hated Black people,” Jacksonvil­le Sheriff T.K. Waters told a news conference. “There is absolutely no evidence the shooter is part of any larger group.”

Waters said the shooter, who was in his 20s, used a Glock handgun and an AR-15 semiautoma­tic rifle with at least one of the firearms painted with a swastika. He was wearing a bullet-resistant vest.

The two men and one woman who were killed were Black, Waters said.

Officials didn’t immediatel­y release the names of the victims or the shooter.

The sheriff said the gunman had left behind writings that led investigat­ors to believe that he committed the shooting because it was the fifth anniversar­y of when another gunman opened fire during a video game tournament in Jacksonvil­le, killing two people before fatally shooting himself.

The shooting happened just before 2 p.m. at a Dollar General about three-quarters of a mile from Edward Waters University, a small historical­ly Black university. Sheriff Waters said the suspect was seen on campus shortly before the shooting, putting on his vest and a mask.

“I can't tell you what his mindset was while he was there, but he did go there,” the sheriff said.

Edward Waters University students were being kept in their dorms, the school said in a statement.

No students or faculty are believed involved, the school said.

The shooter had driven to Jacksonvil­le from neighborin­g Clay County. Shortly before the attack, the shooter had sent his father a text message telling him to check his computer. The father found the writings and the family notified 911, but the shooting had already begun, Sheriff Waters said.

“This is a dark day in Jacksonvil­le’s history. There is no place for hate in this community,” the sheriff said. “I am sickened by this cowardly shooter's personal ideology.”

He said the investigat­ion will continue and that the shooter's home is being searched.

Mayor Donna Deegan said she is “heartbroke­n.”

“This is a community that has suffered again and again. So many times this is where we end up,” Deegan said. “This is something that should not and must not continue to happen in our community.”

Governor Ron DeSantis, after speaking by phone with the sheriff, called the shooter a “scumbag” and denounced his racist motivation.

President Biden and Attorney General Merrick Garland were briefed on the shooting, officials said.

The attack on a shopping center in a predominat­ely Black neighborho­od will undoubtedl­y evoke fears of past shootings targeting Black Americans, like the one at a Buffalo, N.Y., supermarke­t in 2022, and one at a historic African Methodist Episcopal church in Charleston, S.C., in 2015.

The Buffalo supermarke­t shooting, in particular, stands apart as one of the deadliest targeted attacks on Black people by a white lone gunman in US history.

Ten people were killed by the gunman, who has been sentenced to life in prison without the possibilit­y of parole.

 ?? JOHN RAOUX/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Residents near the shooting site, which is in a predominan­tly Black neighborho­od in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., gathered to pray.
JOHN RAOUX/ASSOCIATED PRESS Residents near the shooting site, which is in a predominan­tly Black neighborho­od in Jacksonvil­le, Fla., gathered to pray.

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