Los Angeles Times

Gilroy killer turned rifle on himself, coroner says

Authoritie­s had said rampage was cut short by three officers who fatally shot gunman.

- By Matthew Ormseth and Richard Winton

The Gilroy Garlic Festival gunman killed himself, the county medical examiner concluded Friday, contradict­ing an earlier police account that three officers had shot him dead within a minute.

Santino William Legan, 19, opened fire at the popular food festival Sunday evening, killing three people and wounding 13 more. Police had previously said his rampage was cut short when three Gilroy police officers — outgunned by a rifle-wielding Legan — engaged him with handguns and killed him in less than a minute.

The Santa Clara County medical examiner, however, determined that Legan died of a self-inflicted “intra-oral” gunshot wound, a spokeswoma­n for the medical examiner said.

At a news conference following the medical examiner’s announceme­nt, Gilroy Police Chief Scot Smithee said Legan was shot several times by officers before killing himself. Three officers ran toward Legan and opened fire with their handguns, Smithee said, forcing the gunman to shift his line of fire from festival-goers to police. No officers were hit, Smithee said.

Legan was shot “multiple times,” Smithee said, falling to his knees and then to the ground, where “he was able to get a round off,” the chief said. The officers did not realize Legan had shot himself in the mouth with his rifle, Smithee said. He cautioned that the medical examiner’s finding is preliminar­y and didn’t describe the extent of the injuries Legan suffered from police gunfire.

Smithee said he didn’t know how many rounds his officers had fired at Legan, or where or how many times Legan was struck. No bystanders were hit by the rounds fired by police, the chief said.

Smithee said the medical examiner’s finding did nothing to diminish the bravery of the officers who engaged Legan. They were identified Thursday as Eric Cryar, Hugo Del Moral and Robert Basuino, all longtime law enforcemen­t veterans.

“I don’t think it contradict­s anything,” he said of the medical examiner’s determinat­ion. Smithee has called the officers heroes for averting what could have become an even bloodier scene at the Garlic Festival, Gilroy’s marquee event and a draw for families.

Legan killed three people, two of them children: Stephen Romero, 6; Keyla Salazar, 13; and Trevor Irby, 25.

Law enforcemen­t authoritie­s have not identified a motive. The FBI has seized from Legan’s residence what a law enforcemen­t source described as extremist materials, but John F. Bennett, special agent in charge of the bureau’s San Francisco office, pushed back Thursday on reports that Legan was motivated by extremist or white supremacis­t beliefs. Written materials taken from Legan’s residence in Nevada ran the ideologica­l gamut, Bennett said.

FBI profilers are interviewi­ng Legan’s relatives and associates, reviewing his presence on online platforms and combing through materials seized from a Ne

vada residence, which include several hard drives, a computer tower, books and a letter from a relative, according to a receipt of a search warrant released by Nevada authoritie­s.

Bennett said Thursday that there is no indication Legan targeted festival attendees of a particular race.

Before the attack, he promoted on Instagram a 19th century screed often championed by white supremacis­ts, and used a slur to refer to mixed-race people.

Legan, whose family lives in Gilroy, identified himself on Instagram as of Italian and Iranian heritage.

 ?? Nhat V. Meyer Bay Area News Group ?? VEHICLES DEPART the Gilroy Garlic Festival after Sunday’s shooting. The three officers who responded to the rampage were hailed by the chief as heroes.
Nhat V. Meyer Bay Area News Group VEHICLES DEPART the Gilroy Garlic Festival after Sunday’s shooting. The three officers who responded to the rampage were hailed by the chief as heroes.

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