Man in yoga class fought off gunman
TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — A man trying to stop a shooting attack on a Florida yoga studio said Sunday that he wrestled with the attacker after his gun jammed, a move credited with giving others time to flee the rampage that killed two people and wounded six others.
Yoga student Joshua Quick told ABC’s “Good Morning America” on Sunday that he grabbed Scott Paul Beierle’s gun after it jammed and hit him.
Tallahassee police have identified Beierle as the man who posed as a customer to get into the studio Hot Yoga Tallahassee during a Friday night class and started shooting. Police said Beierle, 40, then turned the gun on himself, and authorities have offered no motive in the attack.
Quick said Beierle was able to grab the gun back and pistol-whipped him.
“I jumped up as quickly as I could,” said Quick, whose clear was wounded. “I ran back over, and the next thing I know I’m grabbing a broom, the only thing I can, and I hit him again.”
It gave some in the studio time to flee.
“Thanks to him I was able to rush out the door,” Daniela Garcia Albalat told “Good Morning America.” She was in the class and thought she was going to die. “He saved my life.”
Two women — a 61-yearold faculty member at Florida State University and a 21-year-old FSU student — were fatally shot.
Dr. Nancy Van Vessem was an internist who also served as chief medical director for Capital Health Plan, the area’s leading health maintenance organization. She was also a faculty member at Florida State and a mother.
Maura Binkley, who grew up in Atlanta and was a double major in English and German, was set to graduate in May.