Imperial Valley Press

Chief defends delay telling public of mass shooter at-large

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MONTEREY PARK, Calif. (AP) — The police chief in the California city where 20 people were shot — 11 fatally — at a ballroom dance hall defended his decision not to warn the public for hours that a killer was on the loose, saying Wednesday he didn’t have enough informatio­n to effectivel­y alert residents.

Monterey Park Chief Scott Wiese said police in the region were alerted and it didn’t make sense to send out a warning at night to residents in the predominan­tly Asian American city even after learning the suspect may have targeted a nearby dance club after the massacre.

“I’m not going to send my officers door to door waking people up and telling them that we’re looking for a male Asian in Monterey Park,” Wiese told The Associated Press. “It’s not going to do us any good.”

The shooting at Star Ballroom Dance Studio at 10: 22 p. m. Saturday occurred just an hour or so after tens of thousands of people attended Lunar New Year festivitie­s in the city. The public wasn’t notified of the mass shooting for five hours, raising questions about why an alert wasn’t sent to people in the area.

Huu Can Tran, 72, who was said to frequent the dance hall and fancied himself as an instructor, carried out the shooting with a submachine gunstyle semi- automatic weapon with large capacity magazine, authoritie­s said.

Tran fled in a white van before officers arrived at the scene of chaotic carnage and about 20 minutes later he entered another dance hall in nearby Alhambra, where an employee confronted and disarmed him during a brief struggle.

Chris Grollnek, an active shooter expert, said police never should have waited so long to warn the public about the possible threat posed by a gunman at large. The city had access to an automated alert system and even putting out a little informatio­n would have been better than nothing.

“They should have gotten the word out sooner,” Grollnek said. “I think everybody’s lucky he didn’t make it to a third location.”

Wiese, who had been sworn in as chief two days before Saturday’s shooting, said he quickly learned about the second incident at the Lai Lai Ballroom but it wasn’t immediatel­y clear the two were connected.

Patrol officers in Monterey Park and Alhambra traded details of their two incidents, prompting investigat­ors to look into a potential connection, Wiese said.

“We put that together pretty quickly but we still had very limited informatio­n,” he said.

Wiese said they were piecing together informatio­n from some 40 witnesses — many of whom didn’t speak English — and didn’t want to broadcast incorrect informatio­n. He said that notifying other local, state and federal agencies gave them the ability to get the word out.

A sheriff ’s official confirmed the fatalities to the AP shortly before 2: 36 a.m. Sunday but it wasn’t until roughly an hour later — some five hours after the shooting — that law enforcemen­t first mentioned a suspect was atlarge.

Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna said his department’s decision to release informatio­n was “strategic” but promised a review of the timeline.

“When we started putting out public informatio­n, the priority was to get this person into custody,” Luna said Monday. His department, which is handling the investigat­ion, hasn’t released informatio­n about the shooting since Monday.

The first news conference about the shooting was held Sunday morning by a sheriff ’s captain. Several hours later, Tran was found dead in his van from a self-inflicted gunshot, authoritie­s said. A handgun was found in the vehicle.

The slayings during what should have been joyful Lunar New Year celebratio­ns sent ripples of fear through Asian American communitie­s that were already dealing with increased hatred and violence directed at them.

Less than 48 hours later, a gunman in Northern California shot eight fellow farmworker­s — killing seven — at mushroom farms in Half Moon Bay. The shooter was of Chinese descent and most of the victims were Asian.

Outside the locked gates of Star Dance Studio, a popular venue for older Asian Americans, a memorial grew higher Wednesday with mounds of bouquets and balloons.

Sabine Slome, who works as a pharmaceut­ical representa­tive in the city, wept after paying her respects and leaving behind flowers.

“I just pray that we will learn from this,” she said.

“It’s just heartbreak­ing. How many more shootings?”

Hearts were scribbled in pink and red chalk in the parking lot where the first victim was killed in her car.

“Monterey Park I hope you know how loved you are,” a message read.

Large photos of seven of the victims were propped up and framed by white roses. Flowers framed names of the other four dead.

“This is the place where we go out to eat,” said Ryan Yamada, who was with his 74-year-old mother. “We can’t just pretend this is some other people’s problem.”

Pope Francis was among those offering condolence­s, saying in a message to the Los Angeles archbishop that he “implores the divine gifts of healing and consolatio­n upon the injured and bereaved.”

Vice President Kamala Harris was scheduled to meet with the families of victims in Monterey Park later Wednesday.

Wiese said he’s seen a lot during his three decade career, but some of the first officers on the scene were rookies who had never faced such carnage and the trauma will be hard to forget.

Paramedics were loading the wounded into ambulances and treating others inside when the chief arrived. There were bodies every 10 feet: some slumped over tables, others sprawled on the dance floor.

“It’s hard to put words to it,” he said. “It takes your breath away when you see it. And it kind of burns the image into your brain.”

 ?? AP PHOTO/ASHLEY LANDIS ?? A man holds a sign during a vigil outside Monterey Park City Hall, blocks from the Star Ballroom Dance Studio, late on Tuesday in Monterey Park, Calif.
AP PHOTO/ASHLEY LANDIS A man holds a sign during a vigil outside Monterey Park City Hall, blocks from the Star Ballroom Dance Studio, late on Tuesday in Monterey Park, Calif.

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