The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

Firemen’s killer left chilling note

Missing sister’s body found in home

- By GEORGE M. WALSH and MARY ESCH

WEBSTER — An ex-con killed two firefighte­rs with the same caliber and make military-style rifle used in the Connecticu­t school massacre after typing a note pledging to burn down his neighborho­od and “do what I like doing best, killing people,” police said Tuesday as another body, believed to be the gunman’s missing sister, was found.

William Spengler, 62, who served 17 years in prison for manslaught­er in the 1980 hammer slaying of his grandmothe­r, set his house afire before dawn Christmas Eve before taking a revolver, a shotgun and a semiautoma­tic rifle to a sniper position out- side, Police Chief Gerald Pickering said.

The death toll rose to three as police revealed that a body believed to be the killer’s 67- year- old sister, Cheryl Spengler, was found in his fire- ravaged home.

Authoritie­s say he sprayed bullets at the first responders, killing two firefighte­rs and injuring two others who remained hospitaliz­ed Tuesday in stable condition, awake and alert and expected to survive.

He then killed himself as seven houses burned on a sliver of land along Lake Ontario.

Police recovered a military- style .223- caliber semiautoma­tic Bushmaster rifle with flash suppressio­n, the same make and caliber weapon used in the elementary school mas- sacre in Newtown, Conn., that killed 26, including 20 young children, Pickering said.

The chief said it was believed the firefighte­rs were hit with shots from the rifle given the distance, but the investigat­ion was incomplete.

“He was equipped to go to war, kill innocent people,” the chief said.

The two- to three- page typewritte­n rambling note left by Spengler did not reveal what set off the killer or provide a motive for the shootings, Pickering said.

He called the attack a “clear ambush on first responders.”

He declined to reveal the note’s full content or say where it was found. He read only one chilling line: “I still have to get ready to see how much of the neighborho­od I can burn down, and do what I like doing best, killing people.”

Pickering said it was unclear whether the person believed to be Spengler’s sister died before or during the fire.

“It was a raging inferno in there,” Pickering said.

A next- door neighbor said Spengler hated his sister and they lived on opposite sides of the house.

Roger Vercruysse said Spengler loved his mother, Arline, who died in October after living with her son and daughter in the house in a neighborho­od of seasonal and yearround homes across the road from a lakeshore popular with recreation­al boaters.

Spengler had been charged with murder in his grandmothe­r’s death but pleaded guilty to a reduced charge of manslaught­er, apparently to spare his family a trial.

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