The Borneo Post

Nine injured in Houston shooting, suspect killed

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CHICAGO: A gunman wearing military attire with Nazi emblems opened fire in Houston on Monday just before daybreak, authoritie­s said, wounding nine people before dying in a shootout with police.

The shooter was a Houston-area lawyer, the Texas city’s police chief Martha Montalvo told a news conference.

Butauthori­tieswouldn­otidentify the man by name, pending further investigat­ion and notificati­on of his family.

Authoritie­s and witnesses described a harrowing scene at approximat­ely 6.30am (1130 GMT), in which the shooter stood next to his car — using a tree for cover — and fi red a rifle and a handgun indiscrimi­nately at passing cars and at responding officers.

“The shots were coming almost non-stop. Four, five, six at a time,” said Jaime Zamora, a cameraman for Houston television station KTRK, who witnessed some of the shooting. He estimated that between 30 and 50 shots were fi red.

Local stations broadcast images of multiple cars with bullet holes and broken windows.

Of the nine people injured, six were sent to hospitals, while three were treated and released near the scene of the incident. One person was in critical condition and another in serious condition.

“We have high hopes that all these folks are going to survive their injuries,” said David Persse, Houston’s medical director.

When police responded to reports of gunfi re, they engaged in a shootout with the suspect while approximat­ely 25 yards (23 metres) apart, police said. No officers were injured.

The shots were coming almost non-stop. Four, five, six at a time.

“Multiple officers engaged the suspect, who was shooting randomly at passersby,” Captain Dwayne Ready of the Houston Police Department told a lateaftern­oon news conference.

Federal authoritie­s were assisting in the investigat­ion. Houston police said they have found no connection to terrorism.

The shooter was wearing what appeared to be historic military clothing with Nazi emblems, and employed at least one gun that was popular among gangsters during America’s prohibitio­n era of the 1920s and 1930s, police said.

He used a .45 caliber semiautoma­tic handgun, a .45 caliber semi- automatic Thompson Carbine rifle, and had 2,600 rounds of live ammunition, police said. Both weapons were purchased legally, and the shooter had a concealed- carry license, the ATF said.

Authoritie­s were unsure of the significan­ce of the Nazi emblems, especially because they said they found other historic military parapherna­lia in the shooter’s apartment dating back to the Civil War.

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner told KTRK that it appeared the shooter may have been disgruntle­d over his law firm, which ‘went awry’.

But law enforcemen­t said they were not yet ready to ascribe a motive to the gunman’s actions.

“We are looking at everything. We are not closing the door on anything,” Ready said.

Police were still in search of bullet entry points in cars and inside homes on Monday afternoon, within the residentia­l area of southwest Houston where the incident took place. — AFP

Jaime Zamora, KTRK television station cameraman

 ??  ?? This video frame grab courtesy of KHOU TV in Houston,Texas shows emergency vehicles at the scene of a shooting. — AFPphoto
This video frame grab courtesy of KHOU TV in Houston,Texas shows emergency vehicles at the scene of a shooting. — AFPphoto

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