Marin Independent Journal

Employee’s motive for rampage part of investigat­ion

- By Rick Hurd, Robert Salonga, Julia Prodis Sulek and John Woolfolk

SAN JOSE » In one of the Bay Area’s worst mass shootings, a Valley Transporta­tion Authority employee known for nursing grievances and a hot temper opened fire early Wednesday morning at a VTA light rail yard building, killing eight people and wounding others before taking his own life, authoritie­s said.

Rochelle Hawkins, a VTA mechanic, said when she heard shots she dropped her phone.

“I was running so fast, I just ran for my life,” she said. “I would hope everyone would just pray for the VTA family. Just pray for us.”

The gunman was identified by multiple sources as Samuel Cassidy, a 57-year-old VTA maintenanc­e worker. Authoritie­s would not say what might have led to the rampage, what type of weapon was used or whether he obtained it legally.

Sheriff Laurie Smith, whose office headquarte­rs are near the rail yard, said deputies entered the building as shots were still being

fired, but did not exchange gunfire with the gunman.

“We have some very brave officers and deputies,” Smith said

There was a heavy police presence at Cassidy’s house in San Jose, where a fire erupted before the shooting and was reported shortly after. Bomb squad technician­s were at the scene throughout the day. Authoritie­s would not say how the fire might have started.

Explosive devices also were reported in the VTA building, and bomb dogs alerted to the devices, Smith said. Bomb squads were there as well.

About 100 VTA workers, mostly men and some family members, were escorted from the Sheriff’s Office to a larger auditorium across the street in the county administra­tion. Inside the auditorium, screams and wailing broke out.

Workers said they were told not to talk to news reporters, but one worker said he was shaken to the core.

“The whole crew is gone, the whole shift is gone,” the worker, who didn’t want to be identified, said. “It’s horrible.”

Another VTA worker who didn’t want to be identified said that a woman had just learned her son was one of the fatalities.

“I just witnessed someone’s mom who just found out her son died,” the VTA worker said. “It was ugly.”

President Biden also was briefed, and later called on Congress “to help end this epidemic of gun violence in America.”

Gov. Gavin Newsom visited San Jose in the afternoon and had similar remarks. “There’s a sameness to this, and a numbness I think is something we’re all feeling,” Newsom said in San Jose. “It begs the damn question, ‘what the hell is going on in the United States of America?’”

What the Associated Press counted as the 15th U.S. mass shooting this year renewed cries for more laws to reduce gun violence. Among others were eight people fatally shot April 15 by a former employee at an Indianapol­is FedEx facility, a former NFL player shot six people April 7 in Rock Hill, South Carolina, a gunman killed 10 on March 22 in Boulder, Colorado, and another shooter killed eight on March 16 at three Atlanta-area massage businesses.

California has a “red flag” law that lets family members and law enforcemen­t ask a judge to temporaril­y confiscate guns from a threatenin­g person. Legislatio­n

by Assemblyma­n Phil Ting, D-San Francisco, expanded the “gun violence restrainin­g order” law in September to allow employers and coworkers also to make such requests.

But there were no immediate indication­s of home or workplace strife that might have triggered the deadly rampage. Santa Clara County District Attorney Jeff Rosen said Wednesday he does not believe the law was used in regard to the VTA shooter.

“It only takes one incident,” Rosen said. “We have to be perfect to stop all of these killings and we try our very best.”

One worker who sat sobbing on the phone with his wife afterward said he knew of no bad feelings among coworkers.

“I come to work and have a good time and enjoy my job,” he said.

Even so, Cassidy’s dark side unnerved those around him.

Doug Suh, who lives across the street from Cassidy, described him as “lonely” and “strange” and said he never saw friends or family visit.

“I’d say hello and he’d just look at me without saying anything,” Suh said. “One day I was backing out of his driveway and he yelled at me, ‘Don’t even go on my driveway!’ After that, I never talked to him again.”

The reported shooting first reported at 6:34 a.m. occurred in the rail yard area in the 100 block of W. Younger Avenue and San Pedro Street.

Suh’s security video shows Cassidy leaving his home at 5:39 a.m. with a large black duffel bag that he put in the passenger seat of his white Ford F-150 pickup truck.

According to Sheriff’s Office spokesman Russell Davis, some of the shooting victims are VTA employees. KTVU reported that it spoke to the mother of an employee who reported that the shooting happened at a union meeting. It was not known immediatel­y if the shooting happened inside or outside, Davis said.

The VTA provides bus, light rail, and paratransi­t services and is a funding partner in regional rail service including Caltrain, Capital Corridor, and the Altamont Corridor Express. The mass shooting occurred in the VTA maintenanc­e yard, where vehicles are dispatched — not in the organizati­on’s operations center, according to the board chair. The VTA will suspend its light rail service at noon today, but continue bus service.

San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said the city is in a “very dark moment,” but that he is “heartened by the response of the VTA family to come together and help their coworkers.” A vigil for the victims is planned for 6 p.m. Thursday at City Hall Plaza. “This is a moment for us to come together and grieve after today’s horrific tragedy.”

One VTA employee who did not want to be identified said workers were told, “Run outside the building now! There’s an active shooter!” Another said he saw people scattering around the maintenanc­e yard as shots rang out.

Two male shooting victims were transferre­d to Valley Medical Center in San Jose, one person was dead on arrival and another is in critical condition, Valley Medical spokeswoma­n Joy Alexiou said. There were no further details on their condition.

“We’d be the closest to get the most seriously injured patients,” Alexiou said. “People with lesser injuries can be transferre­d to other hospitals.”

 ?? PHILIP PACHECO — GETTY IMAGES ?? Tactical law enforcemen­t officers move through the Valley Transporta­tion Authority lightrail yard in San Jose where an employee opened fired there, killing eight.
PHILIP PACHECO — GETTY IMAGES Tactical law enforcemen­t officers move through the Valley Transporta­tion Authority lightrail yard in San Jose where an employee opened fired there, killing eight.

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