The Niagara Falls Review

Neighbours: Brewery gunman a ‘gentleman’

Gunman enjoyed building his own guns with mail-order parts

- GRETCHEN EHLKE AND TODD RICHMOND

MILWAUKEE — A Milwaukee electricia­n who police identified as the man who fatally shot five co-workers at one of the nation’s largest breweries enjoyed building guns, according to neighbours.

Authoritie­s said 51-year-old Anthony Ferrill opened fire at the Molson Coors Brewing Co. complex on Wednesday, killing five male employees before turning his gun on himself. His motive remains a mystery; police say the case is still under investigat­ion.

Milwaukee police Chief Alfonso Morales said during a news conference that the victims were all from the Milwaukee area. The victims are identified as 60-year-old Dale Hudson; 61- year-old Gennady Levshetz; 57year-old Dana Walk; 33-yearold Jesus Valle Jr.; and 33-yearold Trevor Wetselaar.

Ferrill’s neighbours said he was a married father of two adult children and one younger daughter. They said he had worked at the brewery for about 15 years as an electricia­n. The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported he served in the U.S. Coast Guard from 1987 to 1991 and was honourably discharged.

Ferrill's motive remained unknown Friday.

His brother, Benjamin Ferrill, of The Colony, Texas, told The Associated Press: “It’s a tragic loss to everybody. We’re still trying to digest it.”

Erna Roenspies, who lived next door to Ferrill, described him as a nice guy and helpful neighbour who enjoyed building guns with mail-order parts.

Several years ago Ferrill slipped off or fell off a ladder at the brewery and hurt his shoulder, forcing him to miss work. He told Roenspies that “spies” from the brewery were lurking in the neighbourh­ood, watching his activities to make sure he wasn’t faking the injury. Once he pointed out the spies’ car to her, she said. The spying “irritated” him, she said.

Still, Roenspies, 82, said Ferrill was a “gentleman” who checked up on her to make sure she was all right.

“I considered him a son,” she said. “He wasn’t violent. He wasn’t a drunk. He was a gentleman. I just can’t believe it.”

Another neighbour, Elizabeth LaPine, described Ferrill as a quiet person who walked his Doberman pinscher every day, and would sometimes throw a ball around for his dog in the street. She said she lived across the street from Ferrill for 11 years.

“It’s heartbreak­ing,” she said. LaPine said Ferrill had several cars and always kept them shiny. She said that the last time she saw Ferrill was Sunday, and he had polished up his burgundy Chrysler, which she called his “Sunday car,” and took it for a ride.

The shooting happened at an 82-acre (33-hectare) complex that includes a mix of corporate offices and brewing facilities and employs more than 1,000 people. It’s widely known in the Milwaukee area as “Miller Valley,” a reference to the Miller Brewing Co. that is now part of Molson Coors. Molson Coors CEO Gavin Hattersley said the victims all worked together as electricia­ns and machinists in the complex’s powerhouse.

“They were a part of the fabric of our company and community and we will miss them deeply,” Hattersley said. Hudson’s Facebook page states that he was married and attended Elkhorn Area High School.

A woman who answered the phone at his home had no comment.

Walk’s Facebook page states that he attended Kettle Moraine High School and contains photos of fishing and sailing.

Wetselaar’s LinkedIn page says he graduated from UW Madison and he worked as an engine room operator with Miller Coors since 2018. Before that he served as a nuclear reactor operator in the U.S. Navy.

Levshetz’s obituary identified him as married with two children and two grandchild­ren. It said he would be remembered as a “kind, caring, and giving person who always put his family’s needs before his own.” A woman who answered a call to a possible listing for Valle said she was his sister. She declined to give her name, but said he leaves behind a wife and two small children. She was crying and the sounds of others crying in the background could be heard. She declined further comment.

The Molson Coors complex features a 160-year-old brewery, a packaging centre that fills thousands of cans and bottles every minute and a distributi­on centre the size of five football fields.

 ?? ANDY MANIS NYT ?? Officers near the scene of a shooting at the Molson Coors campus in Milwaukee on Wednesday. The authoritie­s in Milwaukee were working to piece together how and why a 51-year-old gunman killed five of his co-workers at the facility.
ANDY MANIS NYT Officers near the scene of a shooting at the Molson Coors campus in Milwaukee on Wednesday. The authoritie­s in Milwaukee were working to piece together how and why a 51-year-old gunman killed five of his co-workers at the facility.
 ??  ?? Anthony Ferrill
Anthony Ferrill

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