USA TODAY International Edition

Walmart gunman bought 9mm that morning

- Grace Hauck USA TODAY and Paul Bibeau Contributi­ng: Christine Fernando, Jorge L. Ortiz and Claire Thornton, USA TODAY; The Associated Press. Bibeau reported from Chesapeake, Virginia. Hauck reported from Chicago.

CHESAPEAKE, Va. – The man accused of fatally shooting six people and wounding multiple others at a Walmart in Virginia late Tuesday legally purchased the gun that morning, police said Friday.

Officers also found a note on the man’s phone that may help investigat­ors determine motive in what was the nation’s second high- profile mass shooting in less than a week.

The gunman, identified as Andre Bing, legally purchased the 9mm handgun used in the shooting “from a local store” early Tuesday, police said. He had no criminal history and died of a self- inflicted gunshot wound, police said.

Like the large majority of U. S. states, Virginia does not require a waiting period between the time of purchase and the actual physical transfer of a firearm, according to the nonprofit Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence.

Early Friday, rain fell steadily on six white crosses at the site of a makeshift memorial next to the Walmart parking lot. The store was still closed, with first responders moving around the site.

Maria Pulley, 60, a bank manager who lives in the area, came back in the rain to put red bows on the crosses.

“I just wanted ( them) to know that they’re remembered,” Pulley told USA TODAY. “And we’re a community and that when they hurt ... we all hurt.”

The city of Chesapeake said Thursday that two of the injured people remained hospitaliz­ed, one in critical condition and the other one in fair/ improving condition.

Note found on gunman’s phone

Detectives conducted a forensic analysis of Bing’s phone, which was found at the scene, and discovered a note labeled “Death Note” on the device, police said.

In the note, which police shared publicly with redactions, the author claimed he was “harassed” and “laughed” at by people, later referencin­g a “management team” and “associates.” The note makes numerous references to “God” and “murder.”

Police on Friday said officers executed a search warrant of Bing’s home and found a box of ammunition and “various items” related to the handgun, including a box, receipt and other paperwork.

Bing, 31, had been a Walmart employee since 2010, the company said.

Who were the victims?

Walmart confirmed all those killed – who ranged in age from 16 to 70 – were employees.

The victims were identified Wednesday as Brian Pendleton, 38; Kellie Pyle, 52; Lorenzo Gamble, 43; and Randy Blevins, 70, who were all from Chesapeake; and Tyneka Johnson, 22, of Portsmouth.

Police initially withheld the name of the 16- year- old who was killed, but identified him Friday as Fernando Chavez- Barron of Chesapeake.

Many had been longtime Walmart employees, and one planned to retire next year.

Chavez- Barron had just started working at the store and used his first paycheck on gifts for his mom, WTVRTV reported. “I’m out of words, and speechless that it was him,” Joshua Trejo- Alvarado, 17, a friend, told WTVR.

“I was hoping everything was a dream until today. I wish he was still standing here with me.”

A crowdfundi­ng drive from Victims First is among the efforts for victims and survivors. GoFundMe verified the authentici­ty of the campaign.

Community vigil planned

Chesapeake Mayor Rick West was expected to hold a community candleligh­t vigil Monday to honor the victims.

Before the vigil, the Chesapeake City Council will hold a special meeting where city leaders are expected to confirm an emergency declaratio­n to “free up funding to support recovery following the Walmart shooting,” the council announced. If city leaders agree on the measure, the state of emergency will continue through Dec. 5.

Brenton Holloman, 41, assistant manager at an Edible Arrangemen­ts store near the Walmart, called the shooting “senseless.”

“( It’s) the way of the world now,” he told USA TODAY. “Anything can happen.”

Malarie Madden, 30, visited a mall near the Walmart on Friday. She lives in North Carolina but shops in the area all the time. She said safety is something she’s always concerned about, and the shooting “hit a little bit harder now that it was this close to home.”

But she said it wasn’t going to stop her from getting out.

The FBI’s Norfolk field office is assisting Chesapeake police.

The incident came amid a wave of deadly gun violence in the U. S. Days before, a gunman attacked Club Q, an LGBTQ+ nightclub in Colorado Springs, killing five people. The week before that, three students at the University of Virginia were fatally shot.

 ?? PAUL BIBEAU FOR USA TODAY ?? Six white crosses sit in the parking lot to honor victims of a shooting at Walmart in Chesapeake, Va., on Friday.
PAUL BIBEAU FOR USA TODAY Six white crosses sit in the parking lot to honor victims of a shooting at Walmart in Chesapeake, Va., on Friday.

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