Texarkana Gazette

Two men in a truck chased down Texas shooter: ‘Let’s go’

- By Will Weissert and Jim Vertuno

SUTHERLAND SPRINGS, Texas—A former National Rifle Associatio­n instructor who grabbed his rifle and ran barefoot across the street to open fire on the gunman who slaughtere­d 26 people at a small-town Texas church was hailed as a hero Monday, along with the pickup truck driver who helped chase the killer down.

Stephen Willeford, 55, said he was at his Sutherland Springs home Sunday when his daughter alerted him that she’d heard gunfire at the First Baptist Church nearby. Willeford said he immediatel­y retrieved his rifle from his weapon safe.

“I kept hearing the shots, one after another, very rapid shots—just ‘Pop! Pop! Pop! Pop!’—and I knew every one of those shots represente­d someone, that it was aimed at someone, that they weren’t just random shots,” Willeford said Monday during an interview with television stations KHBS/KHOG in Fort Smith and Fayettevil­le, Arkansas.

Willeford said he loaded his magazine and ran barefoot across the street to the church where he saw gunman Devin Patrick Kelley, 26, and exchanged gunfire.

“He saw me and I saw him,” Willeford said. “I was standing behind a pickup truck for cover. I know I hit him. He got into his vehicle, and he fired another couple rounds through his side window. When the window dropped, I fired another round at him again.”

As Kelley sped away, Willeford said he ran to a pickup truck stopped an intersecti­on and told the driver, “That guy just shot up the Baptist church. We need to stop him.”

The driver, Johnnie Langendorf­f, said he had been driving to Sutherland Springs on Sunday to pick up his girlfriend when a man who’d been exchanging gunfire with Kelley suddenly landed inside his truck.

“He jumped in my truck and said, ‘He just shot up the church, we need to go get him.’ And I said, ‘Let’s go,’” Langendorf­f, a 27-year-old Seguin resident, told The Associated Press on Monday, adding that the ensuing pursuit eventually clocked speeds upwards of 90 mph.

Willeford said he and Langendorr­f kept a 911 operator advised as the high-speed pursuit continued. He said Kelley ultimately hit a road sign and flipped his vehicle into a roadside ditch.

Willeford said he then exited Langendorr­f’s pickup, perched his rifle on the rooftop and trained it on the Kelley’s vehicle. He then yelled: “Get out of the truck,! Get out of the truck!” But Kelley did not move.

Langendorf­f said police arrived about five minutes later. Based on evidence at the scene, investigat­ors believe Kelley died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

“There was no thinking about it,” Langendorf­f said. “There was just doing. That was the key to all this. Act now. Ask questions later.”

Asked if he felt like a hero, Langendorf­f said: “I don’t really know how I feel. I just hope that the families and people affected by this can sleep easier knowing that this man is not breathing anymore and not able to hurt anyone else. I feel I just did what was right.”

Though he did not identify Willeford by name, Texas Department of Public Safety Regional Director Freeman Martin said at a news conference Monday that the armed resident who confronted Kelley was toting an “AR assault rifle and engaged” the shooter.

Martin later praised Willeford and Langendorf­f: “The number one goal of law enforcemen­t is to neutralize the shooter. In this situation, we had two good Samaritans who did that for law enforcemen­t.”

Julius Kepper, Willeford’s next-door neighbor for the past seven years, described Willeford as a gun and motorcycle enthusiast who regularly takes target practice at property out in the country, and has as many as five Harley Davidson motorcycle­s.

“Avid gun collector, a good guy,” Kepper said.

Kepper and other neighbors said Willeford’s family has been in the Sutherland Springs area for at least three generation­s, including a father and grandfathe­r who were in dairy farming. Stephen Willeford is married with two grown children and works as a plumber installing lines on major projects such as hospitals, Kepper said.

He called Willeford a “free spirit” sort who loves motorcycle­s despite losing both parents to a motorcycle crash when he was a young adult. “It was almost the same spot where they ran (the shooter) off the road,” Kepper said.

 ?? Austin-American Statesman (above, left) and Associated Press ?? top left: Pastor Frank Pomeroy and his wife, Sherri, join a news conference Monday near the First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs in Sutherland Springs, Texas. A man opened fire inside the church in the small South Texas community on Sunday,...
Austin-American Statesman (above, left) and Associated Press top left: Pastor Frank Pomeroy and his wife, Sherri, join a news conference Monday near the First Baptist Church of Sutherland Springs in Sutherland Springs, Texas. A man opened fire inside the church in the small South Texas community on Sunday,...
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