Los Angeles Times

Rampage began at home

Shooter killed wife and neighbor before randomly attacking victims across town.

- By Paige St. John, Joseph Serna, Ruben Vives and Hailey Branson- Potts

RANCHO TEHAMA, Calif. — The shooter’s wife was nowhere to be found.

In the wake of a rampage in which Kevin Janson Neal had already killed four adults and sprayed bullets into an elementary school, authoritie­s pinged his wife’s cellphone, to no avail. They assumed something had happened to her.

When detectives searched the couple’s residence on Bobcat Lane late Tuesday night, their fears were conf irmed. The wife’s car was still there. Her body, shot several times, was hidden beneath the f loor.

“We believe that’s what probably started this whole event,” Tehama County Assistant Sheriff Phil Johnston told reporters Wednesday.

The death of Neal’s wife, who has not been named by authoritie­s, brings to five the number of people fatally shot in this rural Northern California town. At least nine others were injured, including seven children, one of whom remains in critical condition, Johnston said. Neal was fatally shot by officers pursuing him on a country road.

At a news conference Wednesday, Johnston held up a prior booking photo of Neal, his hair wild, his eyes wide, his mouth agape. Johnston called him a “madman on the loose.”

Sheriff ’s officials said

Neal, 44, killed his wife — probably on Monday — cut a hole in his f loor, placed her body inside and covered it up.

At 7: 54 a. m. the next day, authoritie­s said, Neal went on a 25- minute tear through the community of 1,500 and killed four people, including a female neighbor he had previously been accused of attacking during an ongoing dispute.

Tuesday’s assault started just down the gravel road from Neal’s home, where he killed the neighbor and two men, then stole a Ford F- 150 pickup truck, Johnston said. He drove north, f iring a semiautoma­tic rif le at random from the vehicle.

Neal f ired eight rounds into a Ford F- 250 occupied by a mother and her son who were headed to school. The boy suffered non- life- threatenin­g wounds, but the mother was seriously injured, Johnston said. The mother, who had a concealed carry permit, pulled out her handgun but was unable to f ire it before Neal drove away, Johnston said.

By the time Neal arrived at Rancho Tehama Elementary School, authoritie­s said, teachers had already placed students and staff on lockdown after hearing gunshots a quarter- mile away when Neal began shooting.

Determined to get onto the property, Neal barreled the stolen truck through the school’s front gates and steered into the quad. He stepped out and f ired randomly at the rooms around him.

One bullet pierced a wall and hit a boy, who is expected to survive. The boy, Johnston said, was the only student shot at the school.

Aly Monroy of Corning told The Times that the boy was her cousin, 6- year- old Alejandro Hernandez. On Wednesday morning, he was at UC Davis, awaiting surgery to remove a bullet from his chest.

Other children were injured by broken glass, Johnston said.

Johnston, who said he had watched video of the shooting at the school, said Neal appeared agitated that he could not get inside the school.

“He became frustrated. ‘ I’m here too long.’ There’s no doubt that he did not want to give up,” Johnston said. “So he elected to f ind other targets.”

Back on the road, according to the Sheriff ’s Office, Neal focused on a couple in another car, chasing them down and deliberate­ly crashing into their vehicle. Neal shot them when they got out of their car, Johnston said. The woman was killed, but the man survived.

A man who saw the crash pulled over to help, Johnston said. Neal shot at that man, who ran off, then stole his car

Neal was chasing another vehicle and f iring at it when two police officers spotted him. They began pursuing Neal, who fired at them. The officers rammed the car, forcing it off the road, then engaged in a shootout with Neal.

By 8: 19 a. m., Neal was dead.

Neal was well- known to local authoritie­s. His neighbors had on multiple occasions reported shots coming from his house. At least twice, Johnston, said, officers had put the house under surveillan­ce.

“We can’t anticipate what people are going to do,” Johnston said. “We don’t have a crystal ball…. We wanted to make contact. He is not law enforcemen­t friendly, and he [ knew] not to come to his door.”

Authoritie­s, Johnston said, believe f ighting between Neal and his wife was “a very common thing with this couple.”

A woman told The Times that she had summoned officers a week ago after hearing screaming, followed by gunfire, from near his house.

At the time of Tuesday’s shootings, Neal was out on bail for charges stemming from a January attack in which he was accused of stabbing a female neighbor in the abdomen. The charges — which included assault with a deadly weapon and second- degree robbery — were pending, and the neighbor was among the first to be killed Tuesday.

Leo Barone, a Red Bluff attorney who said he was hired by Neal after his arrest in the stabbing case, said Neal and the neighbor would often call the authoritie­s on each other. Barone said Neal frequently made strange comments but never hinted at violence.

“He was making bizarre statements, and I confronted him about it, and he didn’t like being confronted,” said Barone, who stopped representi­ng Neal several months ago.

According to court records, the neighbor, 33- yearold Hailey Suzanne Poland, in February sought a civil restrainin­g order against Neal, writing that he “attacked me and my mother- in- law stabbing me with a knife and beating her and myself.”

Neal, she wrote, threatened the household with a gun. She described being stabbed with a 7- inch knife and being punched in the face.

A Tehama County judge then ordered Neal to surrender all f irearms. Court records show that he turned in one gun in February and claimed he didn’t own any more.

Court records show that Neal and his wife, Barbara Glisan, obtained a protective order against a male neighbor, whom they accused of threatenin­g them with a gun and manufactur­ing methamphet­amine.

Authoritie­s this week said that Neal was armed with one semiautoma­tic assault- style rif le and two handguns and that a second rif le was later discovered during a search.

He did not legally own any of the guns, Johnston said. The two rif les were “manufactur­ed illegally by him in his home” and unregister­ed, and the pistols were registered to another per- son, he said.

Johnston gave a grim directive to residents of the rural town: Check on your neighbors. Because Neal was “literally going up and down the road shooting at random,” he said, there could be victims who have not yet been found by authoritie­s.

On Wednesday morning, the doors to Rancho Tehama Elementary were locked. Classes have been canceled until after Thanksgivi­ng.

“Our beautiful little school,” said Jayne BarnesVins­on, whose grandchild­ren attended. “Just babies…. I have never loved a school more in all my life.”

She showed a reporter a photograph of children taken at the school last year. They stood with their teachers in a heart shape, forming small hearts with their hands. They stood on the same spot on the playground where Neal had stood and f ired into their classrooms.

 ?? Randall Benton Sacramento Bee ?? I NVESTIGATO­RS comb through Rancho Tehama Elementary School on Tuesday after a gunman opened f ire there, striking one boy. Authoritie­s said a lockdown frustrated the shooter, who moved on to other targets.
Randall Benton Sacramento Bee I NVESTIGATO­RS comb through Rancho Tehama Elementary School on Tuesday after a gunman opened f ire there, striking one boy. Authoritie­s said a lockdown frustrated the shooter, who moved on to other targets.
 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? THE BODY of the shooter’s wife was found hidden beneath the f loor of their home, above. Officials believe he killed her Monday before his assault on the town.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press THE BODY of the shooter’s wife was found hidden beneath the f loor of their home, above. Officials believe he killed her Monday before his assault on the town.
 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? SCHOOL district employees at a news conference the day after a shooting at Rancho Tehama Elementary.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press SCHOOL district employees at a news conference the day after a shooting at Rancho Tehama Elementary.

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