The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Suspect in shootings at Northern California farms was employee

- By Olga R. Rodriguez and Haven Daley

HALF MOON BAY, Calif. — An agricultur­al worker killed seven people in back-to-back shooting sprees at two mushroom farms that had employed him in Northern California and the massacre is believed to be a “workplace violence incident,” officials said Tuesday as the state mourned its third mass killing in eight days.

Officers arrested a suspect in Monday’s shootings, 66-year-old Chunli Zhao, after they found him in his car in the parking lot of a sheriff’s substation, San Mateo County Sheriff Christina Corpus

said.

Seven people were found dead, and an eighth wounded, at the farms on the outskirts of the coastal community of Half Moon Bay, the Sheriff’s Office said.

The sheriff ’s office said seven of the victims were men and one was a woman. Some were Asian and others were Hispanic, and some were migrant workers.

“All of the evidence we have right now points to a workplace violence incident,” said Eamonn Allen, a spokesman with the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Office. He said that Zhao used a semi-automatic handgun that was legally purchased and owned.

Allen said that Zhao he went in shooting at Mountain Mushroom Farm, where he worked, killed 4 people and then went to a farm where he used to work and killed another 3.

Aerial television images Monday showed police officers collecting evidence from a farm with dozens of greenhouse­s, which appeared to be the location where police found four dead. On Tuesday morning, police continued to block off the location.

California was still reeling Tuesday from an attack on a Lunar New Year celebratio­n in Monterey Park, just outside Los Angeles, that killed 11 and cast a shadow over an important holiday for many Asian-American communitie­s. Authoritie­s are still seeking a motive for the Saturday shooting.

“For the second time in recent days, California communitie­s are mourning the loss of loved ones in a senseless act of gun violence,” President Joe Biden said Tuesday morning. “Even as we await further details on these shootings, we know the scourge of gun violence across America requires stronger action.”

The new year has brought six mass killings in the U.S. in fewer than three weeks, accounting for 39 deaths. Three have occurred in California since Jan. 16, according to a database compiled by The Associated Press,

USA Today and Northeaste­rn University. The database tracks every mass killing — defined as four dead not including the offender — committed in the U.S. since 2006.

On Jan. 16, a teenage mother and her baby were among six people killed in a shooting at a home in California’s Central Valley. Officials discussing the investigat­ion mentioned a possible gang link to the killings.

Half Moon Bay Vice Mayor Joaquin Jimenez said the victims of Monday’s attack included Chinese and Latino farmworker­s. Some workers lived at one of the facilities and children may have witnessed the shooting, she said.

The Sheriff’s Office first received reports of a shooting Monday afternoon and found four people dead and a fifth wounded at the first scene. Officers then found three more people fatally shot at a second farm nearby, Allen said.

About two hours later, a sheriff ’s deputy spotted Zhao’s car parked outside a sheriff ’s substation in a strip mall and arrested him.

“He did not actively surrender to us,” Allen told a news conference Tuesday, declining to answer a question on why Zhao had driven to the sheriff substation.

The sheriff’s department believes Zhao acted alone.

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