Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Multiple people killed at Colorado supermarke­t

- Patty Nieberg, James Anderson and Colleen Slevin

BOULDER, Colo. – A shooting at a Colorado supermarke­t killed multiple people Monday, including a police officer, and a suspect was in custody, authoritie­s said.

Boulder police Cmdr. Kerry Yamaguchi said at a news conference that the suspect was being treated but didn’t give more details on the shooting or how many people were killed. Officers escorted a shirtless man with blood running down his leg out of the store in handcuffs but authoritie­s would not say if that was the suspect.

Boulder County District Attorney Michael Dougherty said authoritie­s know how many people were killed and suggested they are not releasing the number because they need to notify families of the victims.

Yamaguchi said police were still investigat­ing and didn’t have details on motive.

A man who had just left the store in Boulder, Dean Schiller, told The Associated Press that he heard gunshots and saw three people lying face down, two in the parking lot and one near the doorway. He said he “couldn’t tell if they were breathing.”

Video posted on YouTube showed one person on the floor inside the King Soopers store and two more outside on the ground, but the extent of their injuries wasn’t clear.

What sounds like two gunshots are also heard at the beginning of the video.

One person was taken from the shooting scene to Foothills Hospital in Boulder, said Rich Sheehan, spokesman for Boulder Community Health, which operates the hospital.

Sheehan said he could not provide additional details but did say that “we have been notified we will not be receiving any additional patients.”

Law enforcemen­t vehicles and officers massed outside the store, including SWAT teams, and at least three helicopter­s landed on the roof in the city that’s home to the University of Colorado and is about 25 miles northwest of Denver.

Some windows at the front of the store were broken. At one point, authoritie­s over a loudspeake­r said the building was surrounded and that “you need to surrender.” They said to come out with hands up and unarmed.

Sarah Moonshadow told the Denver Post that two shots rang out just after she and her son, Nicolas Edwards, finished buying strawberri­es. She said she told her son to get down and then “we just ran.”

Once they got outside, she said they saw a body in the parking lot. Edwards said police were speeding into the lot and pulled up next to the body.

“I knew we couldn’t do anything for the guy,” he said. “We had to go.”

James Bentz told the Post that he was in the meat section when he heard what he thought was a misfire, then a series of pops.

“I was then at the front of a stampede,” he said.

Bentz said he jumped off a loading dock out back to escape and that younger people were helping older people off of it.

Colorado Gov. Jared Polis tweeted a statement that his “heart is breaking as we watch this unspeakabl­e event unfold in our Boulder community.” He called it “very much an active situation” and said the state was “making every public safety resource available to assist the Boulder County Sheriff ’s Department as they work to secure the store.”

Boulder police had told people to shelter in place amid a report of an “armed, dangerous individual” about 3 miles away from the grocery store but later lifted it and police vehicles were seen leaving the residentia­l area near downtown and the University of Colorado. They had said they were investigat­ing if that report was related to the shooting at the supermarke­t but said at the evening news conference that it wasn’t related.

White House press secretary Jen Psaki tweeted that President Joe Biden had been briefed on the shooting.

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