The Morning Journal (Lorain, OH)

Gunman attacks synagogue, killing 11

- By Mark Scolforo and Mark Gillispie

A gunman who’s believed to have spewed anti-Semitic slurs and rhetoric on social media barged into a Pittsburgh synagogue on Saturday and opened fire, killing 11 people in one of the deadliest attacks on Jews in U.S. history.

The 20-minute attack at Tree of Life Congregati­on in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od left six others wounded, including four police officers who dashed to the scene, authoritie­s said.

The suspect, Robert Bowers, traded gunfire with police and was shot several times. Bowers, who was in fair condition at a hospital, was expected to face federal hate-crime charges.

“Please know that justice in this case will be swift and it will be severe,” Scott Brady, the chief federal prosecutor in western Pennsylvan­ia, said at a late-afternoon news conference, characteri­zing the slaughter as a “terrible and unspeakabl­e act of hate.”

The shooting came amid a rash of high-profile attacks in an increasing­ly divided country, and one day after a Florida man was arrested and charged with mailing a series of pipe bombs to prominent Democrats.

The shooting also immediatel­y reignited the longstandi­ng national debate about guns: President Donald Trump said the outcome might have been different if the synagogue “had some kind of protection” from an armed guard, while Pennsylvan­ia’s Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf noted that once again “dangerous weapons are putting our citizens in harm’s way.”

Trump said he planned to travel to Pittsburgh, but offered no details.

The shooting began just before 10 a.m. after authoritie­s say Bower entered the large synagogue with an assault-style rifle and three handguns. Three separate Jewish congregati­ons were conducting Sabbath services in different areas of the large building at the time of the attack, according to Michael Eisenberg, the immediate past president of the Tree of Life. The Pennsylvan­ia attorney general’s office said it was told by victims that a brit milah — a ritual circumcisi­on ceremony at which a baby boy also receives his Hebrew name — was also taking place, though law enforcemen­t officials later said no children were among the dead or wounded.

“It is a very horrific crime scene,” said a visibly moved Wendell Hissrich, the Pittsburgh public safety director. “It’s one of the worst that I’ve seen.”

The mass shooting raised immediate alarm in Jewish communitie­s around the country. Authoritie­s in New York City, Chicago and elsewhere increased security at Jewish centers.

Bob Jones, head of the FBI’s Pittsburgh office, said that worshipper­s “were brutally murdered by a gunman targeting them simply because of their faith,” though he cautioned the shooter’s full motive was not yet known. In a statement, Attorney General Jeff Sessions said the Justice Department would file hate crime and other charges against Bowers.

Bowers, who had no apparent criminal record, expressed virulently anti-Semitic views on a social media site called Gab, according to an Associated Press review of an archived version of the posts made under his name. The cover photo for his account featured a neo-Nazi symbol, and his recent posts included a photo of a fiery oven like those used in Nazi concentrat­ion camps used to cremate Jews during World War II. Other posts referenced false conspiracy theories suggesting the Holocaust — in which an estimated 6 million Jews perished — was a hoax. He also wrote of a Jewish “infestatio­n,” using a slur for Jews.

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 ?? MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People hold candles as they gather for a vigil in the aftermath of a deadly shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue, in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od of Pittsburgh, Saturday.
MATT ROURKE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People hold candles as they gather for a vigil in the aftermath of a deadly shooting at the Tree of Life Synagogue, in the Squirrel Hill neighborho­od of Pittsburgh, Saturday.

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