The Reporter (Vacaville)

Cops took 5 hours to warn that dance hall shooter was loose

- By Bernard Condon, Jim Mustian and Julie Watson

Lost in the aftermath of the Monterey Park, California, ballroom dance hall shooting that left 11 people dead is an alarming fact: It took five hours for authoritie­s to alert the public that the gunman was on the loose.

Even after the 72-yearold shooter brought a submachine gun-style weapon into another nearby dance hall about a half-hour later, a potential attack thwarted by a hero who grabbed the weapon and chased the man away, it would be hours more before police held a news conference to announce the suspect was still at large.

Experts say the weekend mass shooting that sent fear through Los Angeles-area Asian American communitie­s highlights the lack of national standards for notifying the public, and the need for an aggressive alert system — similar to Amber alerts — that would immediatel­y set off alarms on cellphones in surroundin­g areas and post warnings on highway signs.

“Five hours is kind of ridiculous,” said Chris Grollnek, an expert on active-shooter tactics and a retired police officer and SWAT team member. “This is going to be a really good case study. Why five hours?”

Brian Higgins, a former SWAT team commander and police chief in Bergen County, New Jersey, said an alert should have gone out right away, and a half hour between the two incidents was more than enough time to do so.

“What took so long?” said Higgins, an adjunct professor at New York's John Jay College of Criminal Justice. “Maybe they were still doing their investigat­ion. Maybe they didn't have a good handle on what they had. But if they didn't know, they should have erred on the side of caution and put this out.”

Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna on Monday said his department was “strategic” in its decision to release informatio­n but that he would review what happened.

“When we started putting out public informatio­n, the priority was to get this person into custody,” Luna said. “Ultimately it worked. We will go back and look at it as we always do. Nobody is as critical as ourselves as to what worked and specifical­ly what didn't work, and evaluate that, and see what the wait was in determinin­g what the public risk was at that time.”

A timeline of events shows police were silent for hours, not only about a shooter being on the loose but about the fact that a shooting had taken place at all, with informatio­n trickling from police scanners and sources rather than official channels. The delays came just hours after tens of thousands of revelers had been in the streets of the heavily Asian American city for a celebratio­n of the Lunar New Year.

Authoritie­s said the first call about the shooting at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio came in Saturday at 10:22 p.m. local time and officers responded within three minutes. Monterey Park police said it took several minutes for officers — several of whom were rookies on the force — to assess the chaotic scene and look for the gunman, who had already fled.

About 20 minutes after the first shooting, at 10:44, the gunman who would later be identified as Huu Can Tran marched into the Lai Lai Ballroom about 3 miles (4.8 kilometers) away in Alhambra, where he was confronted in the lobby by 26-year-old Brandon Tsay.

Tsay, a computer coder who helps run the dance hall for his family, told The New York Times he was unaware of the previous shooting in Monterey Park when he lunged at the man and began struggling to get the weapon out of his hands. Tsay eventually commandeer­ed the weapon, ordered him to “Go, get the hell out of here!” and watched as he drove away in a white van.

More than an hour later, at 11:53 p.m., word came that the shooter was still at large — not from an official source, but from a media outlet monitoring police chatter on a scanner. “The suspect is still on the loose according to PD on scene,” RMG News tweeted.

The Associated Press began telephonin­g the Monterey Park police and fire department­s and the Los Angeles County Sheriff's Department shortly before the RMG News alert, and kept calling for nearly three hours. Monterey Park police never responded. A sheriff's official confirmed to the AP there were nine dead shortly before 2:36 a.m. Sunday, when the AP published an alert.

 ?? DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna, center, and Monterey Park Chief of Police Scott Wiese, far right, brief the media outside the Civic Center in Monterey Park on Sunday. At left is, Rep. Judy Chu, and Monterrey Park Mayor Henry Lo. A mass shooting at a Los Angeles-area ballroom dance club following a Lunar New Year celebratio­n set off a manhunt for the suspect.
DAMIAN DOVARGANES — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Los Angeles County Sheriff Robert Luna, center, and Monterey Park Chief of Police Scott Wiese, far right, brief the media outside the Civic Center in Monterey Park on Sunday. At left is, Rep. Judy Chu, and Monterrey Park Mayor Henry Lo. A mass shooting at a Los Angeles-area ballroom dance club following a Lunar New Year celebratio­n set off a manhunt for the suspect.

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