Albuquerque Journal

Police: Georgia shooting suspect blames sex addiction, not race

Robert Long, 21, is accused of killing 8 people at 3 spas

- BY ALEXIS STEVENS AND SHADDI ABUSAID

ATLANTA — The 21-year-old man accused of killing eight people at three metro Atlanta spas said it was a sexual addiction — and not the race of victims — that led him on the alleged crime spree, police said Wednesday.

Robert Aaron Long, accused in three shootings about an hour apart Tuesday in Cherokee County and northeast Atlanta, told investigat­ors he frequented the types of businesses he allegedly targeted: massage parlors. And though six of those killed were Asian, investigat­ors said it’s too early to call the shootings hate crimes.

”During his interview, he gave no indicators that this was racially motivated,” Cherokee Sheriff Frank Reynolds said Wednesday. “We asked him that specifical­ly and the answer was ‘no.’ ”

But Long did take responsibi­lity for the shootings, Capt. Jay Baker with the Cherokee sheriff’s office said. Long, according to Baker, said the massage parlors represente­d a “temptation he wanted to eliminate.”

Long also told investigat­ors his plan was to drive to Florida and commit similar crimes. But he was caught late Tuesday about 150 miles south of Atlanta, thanks in part to his parents, according to police.

On Wednesday, the Cherokee sheriff’s office and Atlanta police confirmed Long was charged with eight counts of murder and one count of aggravated assault. Though the FBI was assisting with the investigat­ion, police said it was too early to say whether Long would be charged with committing hate crimes.

Investigat­ors continued to piece together the string of crimes that ended late Tuesday when Long was arrested roughly 150 miles south of Atlanta.

Earlier Tuesday, Long bought a gun from Big Woods Goods in Holly Springs, an employee told The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on. The store is cooperatin­g with law enforcemen­t. A 9mm firearm, believed to be the murder weapon, was found when Long was arrested.

The string of crimes started shortly before 5 p.m. near Acworth at Youngs Asian Massage Parlor, according to police. Surveillan­ce cameras captured a man believed to be Long entering the business, then leaving after shots were fired. Four people died from their injuries, according to police.

They were identified Wednesday as Ashley Yaun, 33, of Acworth; Paul Andre Michels, 54, of Atlanta; Xiaojie Tan, 49, of Kennesaw; and Daoyou Feng, 44, of an unknown address. A fifth victim, Elcias Hernandez-Ortiz, 30, of Acworth, was in stable condition Wednesday. Tan was the owner of the business, according to records on the Georgia Secretary of State’s website.

About an hour later, Atlanta police responded to a report of a robbery at the Gold Spa on Piedmont Road.

In the first of two 911 calls within 11 minutes, a woman inside the business said she was reporting a robbery. Speaking softly, she said she was hiding inside the business and that she needed police on Piedmont Road.

”They have a gun,” she tells the dispatcher. “Please just come, OK?”

When officers arrived, they found three women shot to death inside the business. While police were investigat­ing those deaths, shots were fired at the Aromathera­py Spa across the street. There, investigat­ors found a fourth woman dead.

The names of the four killed in Atlanta were not released Wednesday pending notificati­on of family members, according to police.

While Atlanta officers were investigat­ing the back-to-back shootings, the Cherokee sheriff’s office quickly released surveillan­ce images of the suspect. Long’s parents contacted investigat­ors after seeing the photos, Baker said.

“We are really appreciati­ve of the family,” he said. “Certainly, this has been difficult on them.”

Cherokee and Atlanta investigat­ors were immediatel­y in contact to discuss similariti­es in the shootings, Atlanta interim Chief Rodney Bryant said. From there, investigat­ors tracked Long by his cellphone, Reynolds said.

Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said during a Wednesday morning press conference that investigat­ors believe Long may have been attempting to drive to Florida and possibly commit additional crimes. But he didn’t make it that far.

Crisp County deputies, along with the Georgia State Patrol, were waiting for Long as he entered the county. After a PIT maneuver, a method used by state troopers use to stop a vehicle, Long was arrested without incident. He was later returned to Cherokee, where he was being held without bond late Wednesday.

While law enforcemen­t leaders said the investigat­ion into Long’s motives was in the early stages, Bottoms and others condemned the crimes while expressing condolence­s.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? Mallory Rahman and her daughter Zara place flowers near a makeshift memorial outisde the Gold Spa in Atlanta on Wednesday. Police say they have begun extra patrols in and around Asian businesses there after eight people died in three shootings.
ALYSSA POINTER/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON Mallory Rahman and her daughter Zara place flowers near a makeshift memorial outisde the Gold Spa in Atlanta on Wednesday. Police say they have begun extra patrols in and around Asian businesses there after eight people died in three shootings.
 ??  ?? Robert Aaron Long
Robert Aaron Long

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