Daily News

Restaurant siege ends in shooting

Chef killed, hostage freed

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AFIRED dishwasher shot dead a chef and held a person hostage for about three hours before he was killed by police at a crowded restaurant in Charleston yesterday, authoritie­s and one of the restaurant’s owners said.

The hostage was freed unharmed, Mayor John Tecklenbur­g said. The shooting took place at Virginia’s restaurant on the usually crowded King Street, in South Carolina’s largest and most historic city.

Tecklenbur­g said the shooting was “the act of a disgruntle­d employee” and not a terrorist attack or a hate crime in a city where nine black church members were killed by a white man two years ago.

“This was a tragic case of a disturbed individual, I think, with a history of some mental health challenges,” Tecklenbur­g said.

Authoritie­s did not release the names of the gunman or the employee he killed. They initially said they believed there were “a couple” or a “small number” of hostages.

The shooting was reported just after noon yesterday.

Peter Siegert IV and his family had just been served fried chicken at the restaurant when he noticed waitresses and kitchen workers leaving hurriedly through the front door.

Then he saw a man in a cap and an apron enter the dining room from the back of the restaurant.

“He said, ‘ There’s a new boss in town’,” Siegert said. “I don’t think anybody realised he had a gun until after he locked the door. And then he turned around and had a revolver in his hand. He never pointed it at any of the patrons. He held it by his side.”

The man told all the customers to get on to the floor, Siegert said, then directed them to crawl to the back of the restaurant – where the rear exits remained unlocked.

“He told everybody to get out,” he said.

“Everybody started running for the doors.”

The restaurant was packed with a lunchtime crowd and the first officers to arrive were able to get the man who was shot and a number of diners out safely, police said.

The site is a few blocks away from Emanuel AME church, where nine black members of a church were killed by a white man during a June 2015 Bible study. Dylann Roof was sentenced to death in the case.

It is also just several blocks from where more than 100 cruise ships dock in Charleston each year. – ANA-AP

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