The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

THE INVESTIGAT­ION

Deputy chief unsure whether victims were specifical­ly targeted.

- By Alexis Stevens, Joshua Sharpe and Shaddi Abusaid

■ The suspect in Tuesday’s shootings had visited the Atlanta businesses in the past, investigat­ors said,

The suspect in Tuesday’s spa shooting spree that left eight dead across the metro area visited both northeast Atlanta locations in the past, investigat­ors said Thursday.

“I can say that he had f requented both of those locations,” Deputy police Chief Charles Hampton Jr. told reporters, referencin­g Gold Spa on Piedmont Road, where three women were shot to death, and Aromathera­py Spa across the street, where officers discovered a fourth woman dead.

The suspect, 21- year- old Robert Aaron Long, was arrested in South Georgia on Tuesday night following the shooting spree that began at an Acworth- area spa and continued in Atlanta at similar businesses. Six of the eight people he’s accused of killing were Asian women.

“Unfortunat­ely, they were at that location,” Hampton said of the Atlanta victims. “I can’t say that he specifical­ly targeted those individual­s.”

Authoritie­s have not released the names of the four women gunned down at the Atlanta spas during the spree that rattled two metro communitie­s and shook the nation. The Fulton County Medical Examiner’s Office said investigat­ors have positively identified three of the victims, but are waiting to identify the fourth woman before releasing any of their names.

“I was hoping we would be able to release the names of the victims, but we are not able to do that at this time,” Hampton said at the news conference. “We need to make sure we have a true verificati­on of their identities and that we make a proper next- ofkin notificati­on.”

Atlanta police said they are working with the Korean consulate to accurately ID their four victims.

“We had four Asian females that were killed, and so we are looking at everything to make sure that we discover and determine what the motive of our homicides ( was),” Hampton said.

Five people were shot during the Cherokee County incident and four of those victims died. They were identified Wednesday as Delaina Ashley Yaun, 33, of Acworth; Paul Andre Michels, 54, of Atlanta; Xiaojie Tan, 49, of Kennesaw; and Daoyou Feng, 44, of an unknown address. The fifth victim, Elcias Hernandez- Ortiz, 30, of Acworth, was injured. He remains at Wellstar Kennestone Hospital, according to his family.

Greg Hynson, 54, is a longtime customer of the Acworth business who got to know owner Xiaojie Tan, whom he and many others called Emily, as a friend.

“It was almost instantane­ous,” he said Thursday. “She was a really sweet, kind person. She treated everybody fairly, equally. She was very unselfish. There’s a whole list of things.”

Hynson, a former bodybuilde­r who has long used massage therapy, said he also just liked to stop by the shop and say hello. He

recalled often seeing Paul Andre Michels, 54, a constructi­on worker who did work on the store for Tan and was killed in the shooting.

“During down time, we’d sit around and talk,” Hynson said.

Hynson said he wished he could have gotten to know Daoyou Feng, 44, better. She’d been working there only a short time. Hynson said he could tell she was a warm person and easy to get along with.

While Cherokee County investigat­ors said Long told them the shootings were not racially motivated, Atlanta police haven’t ruled out charging the Woodstock man with a hate crime.

“Nothing is off the table ,” Hampton said. ” On March 16, a total of eight innocent lives were violently taken by the hands of one lone killer. The Atlanta Police Department continues to offer our support to the Asian American and Pacific Islander communitie­s.”

He said most homicide cases take time to solve, especially when there are multiple victims, and that he expects a “lengthy investigat­ion” into the spa shootings.

On Wednesday, Cherokee investigat­ors said Long had a sex addiction and regularly patronized the types of businesses targeted in Tuesday’s shootings, reportedly calling them a “temptation he wanted to eliminate.” Cherokee County District Attorney

Shannon Wallace released a statement Thursday evening echoing the APD’S stance.

“You can be assured that once this case has been thoroughly investigat­ed and the facts all ascertaine­d, we will charge the defendant appropriat­ely based on the evidence in this case and the existing laws,” Wallace said. “We will prosecute this case to the fullest extent of the law.”

The first shootings occurred about 5 p.m. at Young sA si an Massage Parlor, according to authoritie­s. Surveillan­ce cameras captured a man entering the Acworth business, then leaving after shots were fired. Investigat­ors say Long then drove to northeast Atlanta in a Hyundai SUV, where he fatally shot four more women at two spas.

According to the APD’S incident reports, Long is suspected of having alcohol in his system at the time of the two shootings on Piedmont Road. It is not clear from the report how many shots were fired in the two spas, but three of the four women suffered gunshot wounds to the head or face.

About two hours later, he was arrested by deputies and state troopers in Crisp County, about 150 miles south of Atlanta. During interviews with detectives, he said he planned to drive to Florida, possibly to continue the shooting spree, Cherokee County Sheriff

Frank Reynolds said. The gun used in the shootings was purchased hours earlier at a gun store in Holly Springs.

The violence forced police across metro Atlanta to step up patrols in Asian American communitie­s and around Asian- owned businesses.

On Thursday, five Asian American lawmakers and others said the shootings were another example of rising violence against Asian Americans amid the coronaviru­s pandemic. They called for background checks for gun purchases, better mental health services and additional measures aimed at combating violence and racism.

Atlanta police called the shootings “two despicable acts of violence” and said their investigat­ion into the slayings is far from over.

“It is hard to comprehend what could lead someone to commit such a heinous crime and how someone could show such disregard for life,” the department said in a statement. “These deaths impacted all of our first responders as well as our communitie­s, but, more importantl­y, they impacted the victims’ families and friends in a way most of us can only imagine. Our thoughts and prayers are with the victims’ families and friends who had their loved ones taken from them in such a senseless and untimely manner.”

 ?? Deputy Chief Charles Hampton Jr. addresses the media Thursday at Atlanta Police Department headquarte­rs. REBECCA WRIGHT FOR THE AJC ??
Deputy Chief Charles Hampton Jr. addresses the media Thursday at Atlanta Police Department headquarte­rs. REBECCA WRIGHT FOR THE AJC
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? Flowers, cards and signs are displayed Wednesday at a makeshift memorial outside the Gold Spa.
ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM Flowers, cards and signs are displayed Wednesday at a makeshift memorial outside the Gold Spa.

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