Albuquerque Journal

Victims were seeking relaxation

Airport shooting cut short lives of vacationer­s

- BY TAMARA LUSH, JEFF MARTIN AND DAVID PITT

FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. — Many of the five people killed in the Fort Lauderdale airport shooting were on vacation, headed for cruises that promised sun, sand and fun. Three were collecting their luggage when a gunman opened fire in the baggage claim area of Terminal 2 at the airport — a hub for cruisers headed to Port Everglades.

An official list of victims had not been released by Saturday afternoon. But family and friends of some of the victims confirmed the identities and shared their stories.

Members of Olga Woltering’s church in suburban Atlanta circulated news of her death. She’d been an active part of the Catholic Church of the Transfigur­ation in Cobb County since 1978.

“Olga was one of the most joyful, loving, caring and committed people I have ever met,” a church statement said.

“This is a horrible tragedy for everyone here at Transfigur­ation, especially because Olga was so loved.”

Funeral arrangemen­ts are not yet scheduled, said Cat Doyle, a church spokeswoma­n. Parishione­rs said she was in her 80s, but no exact age was given.

Woltering and her husband flew to Fort Lauderdale for a cruise, parishione­rs said.

Friends said she was originally from England. Ralph Woltering had served in the U.S. Air Force, parishione­r Alvin Connolly said.

“From what I understand, their sons are in Florida with her husband right now,” Connolly said. “He’s 90 or more himself, so it’s kind of a fragile situation for him as well.”

The couple lived in a retirement community and were socially active.

Woltering was active in the ladies auxiliary of the Knights of Columbus, a Catholic charity affiliated with her church, said Roger Heil, the grand knight of the local Knights of Columbus group. Her husband was involved in the Knights of Columbus, he said.

Heil informed other members of the group that Woltering had died. He said he learned of her death from a past grand knight of the local group.

Michael Oehme was a frequent traveler who loved to cruise with his wife, and the couple was about to head out to sea again, his sister told The Associated Press on Saturday.

“They were supposed to leave today,” Elizabeth Oehme-Miller, 52, said by phone from Council Bluffs, also the couple’s hometown. “They were happy to be going on another trip.”

Oehme, 57, was a land surveyor and owned his own business, Boundaryli­ne Surveys, his sister said.

His wife, Kari Oehme, is hospitaliz­ed with injuries from a gunshot wound to the shoulder and is expected to recover, with a family member flying to Fort Lauderdale to help her return home, her sister-in-law said. Kari Oehme is a clerical worker at a local office, Oehme-Miller said.

She said she learned that the couple was at the airport during the shooting through a text message from her daughter.

“I still can’t believe it’s true,” Oehme-Miller said. “It hasn’t hit yet. I’m kind of in shock right now.”

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