The Morning Call

Man, 17, sought in bowling alley shooting

- — Associated Press

Authoritie­s say a 17-yearold is being sought in a shooting at a Montgomery County bowling alley that left one person dead and four injured.

Officers in East Norriton, about 45 miles south of Allentown, responded shortly after 6:30 p.m. Saturday to Our Town Alley and found five shooting victims.

The Montgomery County prosecutor’s office said 29-year-old Frank Wade of Philadelph­ia was found dead in the entrance to the bowling alley.

An autopsy Sunday concluded that he died of multiple gunshot wounds and his death was ruled a homicide.

Four relatives of Wade — ages 19, 21, 26 and 31 — were wounded. They were transporte­d to local hospitals and later listed in stable condition. Detectives recovered 15 fired .45-caliber cartridge casings and five projectile­s, one in the ceiling and four in the floor, prosecutor­s said.

County detectives and local police gathered video surveillan­ce and witness interviews and reported finding that three males, including the 17-year-old from Upper Darby, entered the bowling alley and three minutes later there was an altercatio­n between them and the victims.

Authoritie­s said the teenager pulled a firearm with an extended magazine from his jacket and began shooting. The three males then fled, leaving behind three cellphones, one of which belonged to the suspect.

An arrest warrant was issued for the 17-year-old charging him with first- and third-degree murder, attempted murder, aggravated assault, reckless endangerme­nt, possessing an instrument of crime and related counts. Detectives said he should be considered armed and dangerous.

Wade’s wife told WPVI-TV that he was a loving husband and father of two who wanted to be a chef.

“He was a good person. Frank had a lot of hopes and dreams. He was never a violent person. He was never in the streets. He wanted better,” Syreta Stanford said.

District Attorney Kevin Steele said 50-75 people, including young children, were in the bowling alley at the time, and some hid in a closet.

“You start hearing, ‘Pop pop pop pop pop.’ You hear them going off and everyone started panicking, running toward the back,” said Harry Delmar, who was there with his family, including his 2-year-old niece and 9-year-old nephew.

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