Gulf News

Family devastated by mass shooting sues US government

TEXAS FAMILY LOST THREE GENERATION­S IN AN ATTACK ON A CHURCH IN NOVEMBER

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Afamily that lost three generation­s at a Texas church mass shooting in November filed a lawsuit on Friday against the US government, claiming it could have prevented the gunman from legally acquiring firearms.

Devin Patrick Kelley, who had a history of domestic abuse and mental health problems, killed 26 people and wounded 20 others at the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas.

The victims included oneyear-old Noah Holcombe and his aunt 36-year-old Crystal Holcombe, who was pregnant and died along with three of her five children. In all, the Holcombe family counted nine members who perished in the attack.

The lawsuit was filed by Joe and Claryce Holcombe, who are in their mid-80s and lost their children, grandchild­ren and great-grandchild­ren.

Kelley had legally purchased weapons even though convicted felons are usually not allowed to own guns. Licensed sellers are supposed to check national databases before completing a purchase.

But Kelley was able to slip through the background check system, because the US Air Force had not reported his two domestic violence conviction­s from five years earlier.

Reckless failures

“The utterly careless and reckless failures of the US Air Force to satisfy their reporting obligation­s ... resulted in numerous missed opportunit­ies for various local law enforcemen­t agencies to prevent further violence by Kelley,” the lawsuit claimed.

Kelley — killed by an armed bystander who engaged him in a firefight — was convicted by court-martial in 2012 of two charges of assault against his wife and stepson, and received a bad conduct discharge from the Air Force in 2014.

In a subsequent review, the Air Force found dozens of other cases in which criminal conviction­s had not been properly reported to law enforcemen­t databases.

The Pentagon’s Inspector General revealed in December that an evaluation of military police across all the services found that they often failed to update a federal database with the fingerprin­ts and outcomes of military criminal conviction­s.

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