Hartford Courant

DANCE CARNAGE

Wordless Gunman Kills 12, Himself At Bar’s College Night

- By KATIE ZEZIMA, MARK BERMAN and DAVID A. FAHRENTHOL­D Washington Post

THOUSAND OAKS, Calif. — It was college night at a country-music bar in the third-safest city in America. Inside, people were line dancing. Outside, a man in black clothing approached the door.

He shot the security guard with a .45-caliber handgun. Then he went inside. In the next few minutes, the gunman — identified by police as 28-year-old Ian David Long — killed 11 other people in the Borderline Bar & Grill, including a sheriff’s sergeant who rushed in to stop him.

For many of those inside, there was a grim benefit to being young in America during an age of massacres: They knew exactly what this was, and they knew exactly what to do, in the way that past generation­s knew how to hide from tornadoes or nuclear bombs.

“They ran out of back doors, they broke windows, they went through windows, they hid up in the attic, they hid in the bathroom,” Ventura County Sheriff Geoff Dean said. “Unfortunat­ely,

our young people, people at nightclubs, have learned that this may happen. They think about that.”

Witnesses said some victims stayed, protecting friends, and in doing so sacrificed their lives.

The carnage added Thousand Oaks to the seemingly endless list of American cities that have experience­d a mass shooting. The violence came just days after11peo­ple were gunned down in a Pittsburgh synagogue, months after 17 students and staff were massacred in a Parkland, Fla., high school, and a year after rampages at a Las Vegas country music festival and in a Sutherland Springs, Texas, church took the lives of a combined 84 people.

At least one survivor of the Las Vegas shooting was in the bar Wednesday — again trying to enjoy country music while on a night out — his second mass shooting in 13 months.

Like in Las Vegas and in Sutherland Springs, the shooter in California died of an apparent suicide before providing any explanatio­n for the attack. At the Borderline on Wednesday, Long was found dead inside an office at the bar.

Witnesses said Long did not utter a word to explain why he had chosen this place, this night, these people, this obscene and wasteful end.

When asked by a reporter what it looked like inside the venue, Dean responded: “Like hell.”

On Thursday, police identified the deceased officer as Sgt. Ron Helus, a 29-year veteran of the Ventura force. Family members identified several other victims, many of whom were in their late teens or early 20s.

Cody Coffman was 22. His father, Jason Coffman, said Thursday that he had last spoken to his son as the younger man left for the night.

“I said, ‘don’t drink and drive,’ ” Jason Coffman recalled, his voice breaking with emotion. “The last thing I said was, ‘Son, I love you.’ ”

Police said that as many as 15 other people were injured in the attack, mostly with cuts from diving under tables. At least one suffered a nonfatal gunshot wound.

Police said they weren’t sure why the gunman, who lived in nearby Newbury Park, Calif., was drawn to the bar.

Long grew up in the area, played high school varsity baseball, and joined the Marine Corps in 2008, the year he graduated. He served as a machine-gunner in Afghanista­n from November 2010 to June 2011 and became a corporal two months later. He left the Marine Corps in 2013, and attended California State University at Northridge between 2013 and 2016 and did not graduate.

A former roommate said that Long was quiet and prone to unusual behavior — like dancing alone in his garage to “trance” music, a kind of electronic dance music.

In recent years, police said they had “several contacts” with Long, mostly for minor events including traffic accidents. In April, deputies were called to the home Long shared with his mother for a reported disturbanc­e, Dean said. Neighbors described that incident as looking like a standoff, with police cars blocking the street and officers taking cover with rifles.

“They went to the house, they talked to him,” Dean said. “He was somewhat irate, acting a little irrational­ly. They called out our crisis interventi­on team, our mental health specialist, who met with him, talked to him and cleared him.”

On Wednesday evening, there were at least 100 people inside the Borderline bar — which describes itself as Ventura County’s largest country dance hall and live music venue. The city of 130,000, northwest of Los Angeles, was ranked “third safest,” based on FBI crime data.

Many of the patrons were drawn by the “college country night” promotion. Six off-duty police officers from other agencies were inside, Dean said. It appeared they were there as patrons, not working paid security details.

 ?? APU GOMES | AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? MOURNERS gather outside the Los Robles Medical Center in Thousand Oaks, Calif., on Thursday to pay tribute to Ventura County sheriff Sgt. Ron Helus, who was among 12 people killed at the Borderline Bar the night before. Helus, responding to the scene, was killed as he rushed inside.
APU GOMES | AFP/GETTY IMAGES MOURNERS gather outside the Los Robles Medical Center in Thousand Oaks, Calif., on Thursday to pay tribute to Ventura County sheriff Sgt. Ron Helus, who was among 12 people killed at the Borderline Bar the night before. Helus, responding to the scene, was killed as he rushed inside.
 ?? DAVID MCNEW | GETTY IMAGES ?? THE BORDERLINE Bar & Grill in Thousand Oaks, Calif., west of Los Angeles, was the scene of a mass shooting on Wednesday.
DAVID MCNEW | GETTY IMAGES THE BORDERLINE Bar & Grill in Thousand Oaks, Calif., west of Los Angeles, was the scene of a mass shooting on Wednesday.
 ?? MARK J. TERRILL | ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? THE BODY of Ventura County Sheriff’s Department Sgt. Ron Helus is transporte­d from the Los Robles Regional Medical Center Thursday in Thousand Oaks, Calif. Helus was a 29-year veteran of the Ventura force.
MARK J. TERRILL | ASSOCIATED PRESS THE BODY of Ventura County Sheriff’s Department Sgt. Ron Helus is transporte­d from the Los Robles Regional Medical Center Thursday in Thousand Oaks, Calif. Helus was a 29-year veteran of the Ventura force.
 ??  ?? Sgt. Helus
Sgt. Helus
 ??  ?? Long
Long

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