The News Herald (Willoughby, OH)

Police: 7 killed, 22 injured in shooting

- By Paul J. Weber and Jake Bleiberg The Associated Press

Authoritie­s cannot explain why a man with an AR-style weapon opened fire during a routine traffic stop.

Authoritie­s said Sunday they still could not explain why a man with an AR-style weapon opened fire during a routine traffic stop in West Texas to begin a terrifying, 10-mile rampage that killed seven people, injured 22 others and ended with officers gunning him down outside a movie theater. Authoritie­s identified the shooter Seth Aaron Ator, 36, of Odessa. Online court records show Ator was arrested in 2001 and charged with misdemeano­r criminal trespass and evading arrest. He entered guilty pleas in a deferred prosecutio­n agreement where the charge was waived after he served 24 months of probation, according to records. That brush with the law would not have prevented Ator from legally purchasing firearms in Texas, although authoritie­s have not said where Ator got his weapon. Ator acted alone and federal investigat­ors believe the shooter had no ties to any domestic or internatio­nal terrorism group, FBI special agent Christophe­r Combs said. Authoritie­s said those killed were between the ages of 15 and 57 years old but did not immediatel­y provide a list of names. The injured included three law enforcemen­t officers, as well as a 17-month-old girl who sustained injuries to her face and chest. Odessa Police Chief Michael Gerke refused to say the name of the shooter during a televised news conference, saying he wouldn’t give him notoriety, but police later posted his name on Facebook. A similar tack has been taken in some other recent mass shootings. Gerke said there were still no answers pointing to a motive for the chaotic rampage, which began Saturday afternoon when Texas state troopers tried pulling over a gold car on Interstate 20 for failing to signal a left turn. Police said Ator had no outstandin­g warrants. His arrest in 2001 was around Waco, hundreds of miles east of Odessa.

Before the vehicle came to a complete stop, the driver “pointed a rifle toward the rear window of his car and fired several shots” toward the patrol car stopping him, according to Texas Department of Public Safety spokeswoma­n Katherine Cesinger.

The gunshots struck a trooper, Cesinger said, after which the gunman fled and continued shooting. He fired at random as he drove in the area of Odessa and Midland, two cities in the heart of Texas oil country more than 300 miles west of Dallas. At one point, he hijacked a mail carrier truck, killing the lone postal worker inside.

U.S. Postal Service officials identified her as Mary Granados, 29.

Police used a marked SUV to ram the mail truck outside the Cinergy Movie Theater in Odessa, disabling the vehicle. The gunman then fired at police, wounding two officers. Combs said the gunman might have entered the theater if police had not killed him.

“In the midst of a man driving down the highway shooting at people, local law enforcemen­t and state troopers pursued him and stopped him from possibly going into a crowded movie theater and having another event of mass violence,” Combs said.

The shooting came at the end of an already violent month in Texas, where on Aug. 3 a gunman in the border city of El Paso killed 22 people at a Walmart. Sitting beside authoritie­s in Odessa, Abbott ticked off a list of mass shootings that have now killed nearly 70 since 2016 in his state alone.

“I have been to too many of these events,” Abbott said. “Too many Texans are in mourning. Too many Texans have lost their lives. The status quo in Texas is unacceptab­le, and action is needed.”

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 ?? SUE OGROCKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Law enforcemen­t officials investigat­e Saturday’s shooting at a shopping center Sunday in Odessa, Texas.
SUE OGROCKI — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Law enforcemen­t officials investigat­e Saturday’s shooting at a shopping center Sunday in Odessa, Texas.

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