San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Day of deadly horror in El Paso

Gunman goes on fatal rampage at Walmart packed with shoppers

- By Arturo Rubio, Manny Fernandez and Simon Romero

EL PASO — A gunman armed with an assault-style rifle turned a crowded Walmart store here into a scene of bloodshed Saturday, stalking shoppers in the aisles in an attack that left at least 20 people dead and 26 others wounded, authoritie­s said.

For several minutes, the store near the Cielo Vista Mall filled with gunsmoke and the echo of gunfire. Workers and customers, some bloodied, fled out the doors. Others huddled in the aisles or on the ground.

“Texas grieves for the people of El Paso today,” Gov. Greg Abbott told reporters. “On a day that would have been a normal day for someone to leisurely go shopping, turned into one of the most deadly days in the history of Texas.”

Authoritie­s said a suspect was taken into custody after he surrendere­d to police outside the Walmart.

Manuel Uruchurtu, 20, had just paid at the cash register and was walking out of the store when he heard the sound of shots. He turned around and saw the gunman holding a long gun and wearing what looked like shoulder pads.

As Uruchurtu fled, he saw two bodies on the ground outside the store, one surrounded by a pool of blood.

“I saw people crying: children, old people, all in shock,” he said. “I saw a baby, maybe 6 to 8 months old, with blood all over their belly.”

Authoritie­s identified the suspect as Patrick Crusius, 21, who lived in a Dallas suburb.

Authoritie­s said they were investigat­ing a manifesto the gunman may have posted before the shooting which described an attack in response to a “Hispanic invasion.”

“Right now, we have a manifesto

from this individual,” El Paso’s police chief, Greg Allen, told reporters, though he said law enforcemen­t officers were still not clear whether the gunman had posted the document.

The document appeared to be referring to an anti-immigrant online screed titled The Inconvenie­nt Truth.

The posting declares support for the gunman who killed 51 in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, outlines fears about Hispanic people gaining power in the United States and appears to discuss specific details about elements of the attack, including weapons.

“Hispanics will take control of the local and state government of my beloved Texas, changing policy to better suit their needs,” the manifesto said.

It added that politician­s of both parties are to blame for the United States “rotting from the inside out,” but went on to say that “the heavy Hispanic population in Texas will make us a Democrat stronghold.”

El Paso long has been both a cultural and political symbol of Hispanic Texas.

The city has had a binational feel because of its proximity and ties to its sister city in Mexico, Ciudad Juárez, and has been in the national spotlight for months.

Thousands of Central American families have flooded the city and surroundin­g areas seeking asylum, overwhelmi­ng the Border Patrol and nonprofit groups working with immigrants.

The waves of migrants — and the difficulty the Trump administra­tion has had providing shelter and medical care to them — has been a focus of Democratic lawmakers and Democratic presidenti­al candidates in an election campaign in which immigratio­n has become a central focus.

But beyond the new migrants to El Paso, the city has been home for generation­s of Mexican-Americans who consider themselves more Texan than Mexican.

On a clear day, Mexico is visible from the mall’s parking lot.

“It tells us something about the hate and the animosity that exists out there in the nation,” said one longtime El Paso lawmaker, state Sen. Jose Rodriguez. “And it seems to always be some of these young people that they’re getting, I guess, irrational­ly distorted about what’s happening in the country.”

At a house in suburban Dallas thought to be the possible home of the suspect in the attack, an FBI agent was stationed outside.

“We’re not sure if it’s secure yet,” the agent explained.

The shooting came six days after a gunman killed three people at a garlic festival in Gilroy, Calif.

The shooting in El Paso began shortly before 11 a.m., in a popular commercial district near Cielo Vista Mall with scores of restaurant­s and stores that often are crowded on the weekends.

The Walmart store, near Hawkins Boulevard and Gateway Boulevard West a short distance from the mall, was packed at the time. The timestamp on security-camera footage of the shooter walking in with a gun was 10:39:35.

A Walmart worker, Sergio Armando Samaniego, 40, a clerk in the store’s garden center, said he believed the gunman entered through the automotive section.

Samaniego had been on break and was headed back to the garden center when, minutes later, he heard gunshots.

“I’m lucky,” Samaniego said. “One of my friends was shot.”

Victor Gamboa, 18, who works at a McDonald’s inside the Walmart, said he had heard shots and saw smoke.

“I saw a man on the floor full of blood,” he said.

Gamboa said he and other McDonald’s workers sheltered the customers to keep them safe and huddled on the ground for 15 minutes until police led them away.

Victor Guerrero, a spokesman for Del Sol Medical Center, said the hospital was treating 11 victims ranging in age from 35 to 82. Nine were in critical but stable condition and two were stable.

The University Medical Center of El Paso received 13 patients, said Ryan Mielke, the hospital’s spokesman.

He said two minors, including a 2-year-old, were stabilized and transferre­d to El Paso Children’s Hospital. Mielke said some of the victims came in with minor injuries but others were fatalities.

A state lawmaker whose district includes the Walmart, Rep. Cesar Blanco, was at home when he heard about the attack.

Blanco, a Democrat and Navy veteran, rushed to his district office, which is near the mall, and later joined other officials in assisting grief-stricken families at an emergency center set up at a middle school where Blanco was once a student. About 50 to 75 family members were gathered in the school cafeteria, he said.

“Right now the families are in shock,” Blanco said, describing the sounds of “wailing and screams” from family members whose loved ones were among the victims. “This is terrorism. This is domestic terrorism.”

For now, local authoritie­s remained the lead investigat­ors. But FBI officials were studying the manifesto to determine whether it placed the shooting within the domain of domestic terrorism and other federal crimes.

Given the manifesto’s racially extremist views, it could make the killings a federal hate crime or an act of domestic terrorism if law enforcemen­t determines it’s tied to the shootings.

The FBI has said that more Americans have died in domestic terror attacks than in internatio­nal terror attacks since 9/11, and that domestic terrorism is increasing­ly motivated by white supremacis­t ideology.

President Donald Trump has been briefed on the shooting, and Trump administra­tion officials were monitoring the situation.

“Terrible shootings in El Paso, Texas,” Trump said on Twitter. “Reports are very bad, many killed.”

The president pledged “total support of Federal Government” to state and local authoritie­s, and spoke about the shooting with Abbott, who headed to the scene of the attack Saturday afternoon.

“Today, the El Paso community was struck by a heinous and senseless act of violence,” Abbott said in a statement. “Our hearts go out to the victims of this horrific shooting and to the entire community in this time of loss.”

Beto O’Rourke, the Democratic presidenti­al candidate and former Texas congressma­n who represente­d El Paso for years, canceled his campaign events in Nevada and California to return to the city. On Saturday, speaking at a Las Vegas candidates’ forum before he departed for El Paso, O’Rourke teared up.

“A lot of injury, a lot of suffering in El Paso right now,” he told the audience. “I’m incredibly sad, and it’s incredibly hard to think about this. Very hard to think about this, but I’ll tell you, El Paso is the strongest place in the world.”

Frida Murga, a student at the University of Texas at El Paso, was at a town hall meeting hosted by Rep. Veronica Escobar at Coronado High School when news of the shooting was announced.

“A man had actually just asked Congresswo­man Escobar to let the president of the NRA know that he wanted to debate him on gun violence,” Murga said. The man was a veteran and said he did not value guns more than lives.

One by one, police officers at the town hall left, and one of the staff members approached the congresswo­man to let her know the police wanted everyone to evacuate.

“I didn’t realize it would be this serious,” Murga said. “People were just like talking and everything. No one thought it was anything to be that alarmed about.”

 ?? Photos by Ivan Aguirre / Contributo­r ?? Kianna Long and her husband, Kendall, embrace near the Walmart where a gunman opened fire.
Photos by Ivan Aguirre / Contributo­r Kianna Long and her husband, Kendall, embrace near the Walmart where a gunman opened fire.
 ??  ?? El Paso law enforcemen­t officials respond to the scene near the border city’s Cielo Vista Mall.
El Paso law enforcemen­t officials respond to the scene near the border city’s Cielo Vista Mall.
 ?? Mark Lambie / Associated Press ?? Walmart employees seem at a loss in the wake of the shooting. The store, near Hawkins Boulevard and Gateway Boulevard West, a short distance from the Cielo Vista Mall, was packed at the time the gunfire erupted.
Mark Lambie / Associated Press Walmart employees seem at a loss in the wake of the shooting. The store, near Hawkins Boulevard and Gateway Boulevard West, a short distance from the Cielo Vista Mall, was packed at the time the gunfire erupted.
 ?? Getty Images ?? Heavily armed law enforcemen­t agents respond at the scene of the carnage. Early reports had indicated that more than one shooter was involved.
Getty Images Heavily armed law enforcemen­t agents respond at the scene of the carnage. Early reports had indicated that more than one shooter was involved.
 ?? Associated Press ??
Associated Press

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