San Diego Union-Tribune

SHERIFF: CHURCH ATTACK HATE CRIME

Suspect believed to have political hatred against Taiwanese

- BY HANNAH FRY, RICHARD WINTON, ANH DO & LUKE MONEY

The suspect in the Laguna Woods church shooting Sunday appeared to be motivated by political hatred directed at the Taiwanese community, Orange County sheriff’s officials said Monday.

While investigat­ors provided few details, they said their investigat­ion suggests the deadly attack was a “politicall­y motivated hate incident.”

“We believe, based on what we’ve discovered so far, that he specifical­ly targeted the Taiwanese community, and this is one representa­tion of that Taiwanese community,” said Orange County Sheriff Don Barnes, referring to the Irvine

Taiwanese Presbyteri­an Church, which was the target of the attack.

The suspect in the shooting — which left one dead and five injured — has been identified as David Wenwei Chou, 68, of Las Vegas.

Among the evidence recovered, Barnes said, were notes written in Chinese that Chou left in his car showing he did not believe Taiwan should be an independen­t state from China.

Law enforcemen­t sources said investigat­ors recovered a handwritte­n note in his car setting out his motivation­s and thinking for the attack.

Chou was born in mainland China and at some point relocated to Taiwan before moving to the United States, according to Barnes. The sheriff said it appears Chou had an issue with Taiwanese people because of the way he said he was treated while living there.

It is not clear how long Chou lived in Taiwan, but Barnes said he has been in the United States for years and is a U.S. citizen.

The FBI has opened a federal hate crime investigat­ion into the shooting, according to Kristi Johnson, assistant director in charge of the bureau’s Los Angeles office. That would be in addition to any local charges filed in Orange County.

Chou was arrested Sunday

and is being held in lieu of $1 million bail at the Orange County Intake Release Center, jail records show. He is scheduled to appear in court today.

Sheriff’s spokespers­on Carrie Braun said he was booked on one count of murder and five counts of attempted murder.

The shooting occurred Sunday at the Geneva Presbyteri­an Church. The congregant­s in attendance were members of the Irvine Taiwanese Presbyteri­an Church, which has been holding services at Geneva for years.

The man killed in the shooting was identified Monday as John Cheng, 52, of Laguna Niguel. He leaves behind a wife and two children.

Five others — four men ages 66, 92, 82 and 75, and an 86-year-old woman — were shot and wounded. As of Monday afternoon, two of those individual­s were hospitaliz­ed in good condition, with two others in stable condition, according to the Orange County Fire Authority. The status of the fifth victim was not immediatel­y available.

Officials praised Cheng as a hero, saying his selfless actions gave other congregant­s the opportunit­y to subdue the shooter.

Cheng charged the suspect and attempted to disarm him, “which allowed other parishione­rs to then intercede,” Barnes said.

“He sacrificed himself so that others could live,” Orange County District Attorney Todd Spitzer said.

Officials alleged that the suspect secured church doors with chains and tried to disable locks with superglue. He also attempted to nail at least one door shut, Barnes said. Bags containing magazines of ammunition, as well as four Molotovcoc­ktail-like incendiary devices, were found at the scene.

Barnes praised the actions of parishione­rs, saying the shooting “could have been much, much worse.”

“The majority of the people in attendance were elderly, and they acted spontaneou­sly, heroically. And if not for their quick action, the way that this individual set up that environmen­t to kill many more people, there would have been many, many more lives lost if not for the concerted effort of the members of that church,” he said.

Louis M. Huang, director general at the Taipei Economic and Cultural Office in Los Angeles, said his office has reached out to family members of all victims.

Four of the five victims, including Cheng, held Taiwanese citizenshi­p, Huang said. The remaining victim was born in the Philippine­s but spoke Taiwanese because of their heritage, Huang said.

Cheng came to the United States at a very early age. Other victims were senior citizens who mostly came to the U.S. to study three or four decades ago, Huang said.

Regarding the evidence recovered by law enforcemen­t indicating the shooter was motivated by the political divide between China and Taiwan, Huang demurred, saying he was just hearing the informatio­n as well. But he strongly defended Taiwan as a free, democratic country.

“I want to call on anyone, anywhere, any people in this country to respect the core values of freedom,” Huang said. “Freedom of speech is something that we have to respect, but we have to abide by the law.”

“Anyone sharing different views have to respect each other. Simply, that’s what democracy is all about,” he said. “People might hold different views, but it doesn’t mean they have the right to attack anyone.”

The shooting occurred during a lunch in a hall after a worship service. The event was honoring Billy Chang, who had served as pastor for 21 years until leaving in 2020 to head a congregati­on in Taiwan.

The 100 or so members of Irvine Taiwanese Presbyteri­an Church, most of whom are senior citizens, worship in their native language — not Mandarin but Taiwanese, a dialect that was once suppressed by the Kuomintang regime.

Before Sunday’s service, members greeted the suspect — whom they had never seen before — and welcomed him. He told them he had attended services several times, but the members were doubtful because no one recognized him, churchgoer Jerry Chen said.

Chen, who was inside the church at the time of the shooting, said the suspect spoke to parishione­rs in Taiwanese.

In an account relayed by his son, Stanley, Billy Chang said he “was confused at first. At first he thought it was a balloon popping or a joke, that it was just meant to scare people. But after seeing that everyone had crouched down, he knew something was wrong.”

“He thought, ‘I have to do something,’ so while the gunman was not looking, he sneaked on the side of the room, grabbed a chair and was able to hit the gunman while he was reloading,” Stanley Chang wrote in a text message. “He’s not sure if the gun fell out of the shooter’s hand at that point or after the gunman lost his balance after being hit. My dad pinned him on the floor before asking for help restrainin­g his arms and legs from other members.”

The gunman “didn’t say anything before he started shooting during the luncheon,” Stanley Chang added, “so there was a lot of confusion.”

Authoritie­s said other members of the congregati­on tackled the suspect and hogtied him with an extension cord, a move officials think likely saved many lives.

Officials recovered two firearms at the scene. According to an official with the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, both were 9 mm semiautoma­tic pistols purchased lawfully in Las Vegas in 2015 and 2017.

Shortly after Sunday’s attack, authoritie­s reached out to the Metropolit­an Police Department and federal agents in Las Vegas to help with the investigat­ion. Investigat­ors were searching Chou’s Las Vegas home Monday, according to law enforcemen­t sources.

Beneath a church sign promoting Sunday worship, small blooms emerged — a token from grieving residents. Irvine resident Ilene Feng stopped by Monday afternoon to add a bouquet of sunflowers to the mix.

“I was shocked, torn apart that this would touch our community, the Taiwanese community,” she said. “We want the church members to know we’re mourning with them.”

Atop the stems, one of Feng’s three daughters had written: “To our Taiwanese family: We love you.”

Feng, who has been scrolling through TV and newspaper websites to absorb the twists and turns of the shooting, said she talked to her own family about its implicatio­ns. “We’ve been trying to teach our children about their heritage and to be proud of it. This is a time for standing together.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG AP ?? Joanna Garcia leaves flowers outside Geneva Presbyteri­an Church on Monday to honor victims in Sunday’s shooting at the church in Laguna Woods in Orange County.
JAE C. HONG AP Joanna Garcia leaves flowers outside Geneva Presbyteri­an Church on Monday to honor victims in Sunday’s shooting at the church in Laguna Woods in Orange County.
 ?? JAE C. HONG AP ?? A crime scene investigat­or enters a building past an Orange County sheriff ’s deputy Monday at Geneva Presbyteri­an Church in Laguna Woods.
JAE C. HONG AP A crime scene investigat­or enters a building past an Orange County sheriff ’s deputy Monday at Geneva Presbyteri­an Church in Laguna Woods.

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