Daily Times (Primos, PA)

WORST MASS SHOOTING IN U.S. HISTORY AGAIN!

GUNMAN KILLS 50, WOUNDS DOZENS IN ORLANDO NIGHTCLUB

- By Mike Schneider

Annette Stubbs, a pastor at a local church, prays for victims a few blocks from a crime scene at the nightclub where a mass shooting took place in Orlando, Fla. Inset, suspected gunman Omar Mateen allegedly opened fire inside the gay nightclub early Sunday, killing at least 50 people before dying in a gunfight with SWAT officers, police said.

ORLANDO, FLA. >> It had been an evening of drinking, dancing and drag shows. After hours of revelry, the party-goers crowding the gay nightclub known as the Pulse took their last sips before the place closed.

That’s when authoritie­s say Omar Mateen emerged, carrying an AR15 and spraying the helpless crowd with bullets. Witnesses said he fired relentless­ly — 20 rounds, 40, then 50 and more. In such tight quarters, the bullets could hardly miss. He shot at police. He took hostages.

When the gunfire finally stopped, he had slain 50 people and critically wounded dozens more in the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history. Mateen, who law enforcemen­t officials said had pledged allegiance to Islamic State in a 911 call shortly before the attack, died in a gun battle with SWAT team members.

Authoritie­s immediatel­y began investigat­ing whether the assault was an act of terrorism and probing the background of Mateen, a 29-year-old American citizen from Fort Pierce, Florida, who had worked as a security guard. The gunman’s father recalled that his son recently got angry when he saw two men kissing in Miami and said that might be related to the assault.

Thirty-nine of the dead were killed at the club, and 11 people died at hospitals, Mayor Buddy Dyer said.

Jon Alamo had been dancing at the Pulse for hours when he wandered into the club’s main room just in time to see the gunman. “You ever seen how Marine guys hold big weapons, shooting from left to right? That’s how he was shooting at people,” he said.

“My first thought was, oh my God, I’m going to die,” Alamo said. “I was praying to God that I would live to see another day.”

Pulse patron Eddie Justice texted his mother, Mina: “Mommy I love you. In club they shooting.” About 30 minutes later, hiding in a bathroom, he texted her: “He’s coming. I’m gonna die.” As Sunday wore on, she awaited word on his fate.

At least 53 people were hospitaliz­ed, most in critical condition, and a surgeon at Orlando Regional Medical Center said the death toll was likely to climb.

The previous deadliest mass shooting in the U.S. was the 2007 attack at Virginia Tech, where a student killed 32 people before killing himself.

Mateen’s family was from Afghanista­n, and he was born in New York. His family later moved to Florida, authoritie­s said.

His ex-wife, Sitora Yusufiy, told reporters that her former husband was bipolar and “mentally unstable.”

The couple was together for only four months, she said in remarks televised from Boulder, Colorado, and the two had no contact for the last seven or eight years.

Mateen was short-tempered and had a history with steroids, she said. She described him as religious but not radical. He wanted to be a police officer and applied to a police academy, but she had no details.

A law enforcemen­t official said the gunman made a 911 call from the club in which he professed allegiance to the leader of the Islamic State, Abu Bakr alBaghdadi. The official was familiar with the investigat­ion, but was not authorized to discuss the matter publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.

The extremist group did not officially claim responsibi­lity for the attack, but the IS-run Aamaq news agency cited an unnamed source as saying the attack was carried out by an Islamic State fighter.

Even if the attacker supported IS, it was unclear whether the group planned or knew of the attack beforehand. Mateen was not unknown to law enforcemen­t: In 2013, he made inflammato­ry comments to co-workers and was interviewe­d twice, according to FBI agent Ronald Hopper, who called the interviews inconclusi­ve. In 2014, Hopper said, officials found that Mateen had ties to an American suicide bomber, but the agent described the contact as minimal, saying it did not constitute a threat at the time.

 ?? LOREN ELLIOTT — TAMPA BAY TIMES VIA AP ??
LOREN ELLIOTT — TAMPA BAY TIMES VIA AP
 ?? PHELAN M. EBENHACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A body is loaded into a van outside the Pulse nightclub after a shooting involving multiple fatalities at the nightclub in Orlando, Fla., Sunday.
PHELAN M. EBENHACK — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A body is loaded into a van outside the Pulse nightclub after a shooting involving multiple fatalities at the nightclub in Orlando, Fla., Sunday.

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