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    Thursday, May 09, 2024

    California gunman leaves 4 dead

    California Highway Patrol officers help police clear the Santa Monica College campus in Santa Monica, Calif. Police shot to death a gunman in the college library Friday after he killed four people.

    Santa Monica, Calif. - Police say a gunman who killed four people in Santa Monica before officers shot him dead acted alone, and investigators have released a man who had been detained as a "person of interest."

    Sgt. Richard Lewis, a Santa Monica police spokesman, said at a news conference Friday night that the man was questioned and released, and he is not a suspect.

    The violence began when the gunman, dressed in all black and wearing what appeared to be a ballistic jacket, opened fire on a house where two bodies were found.

    Two officials briefed on the investigation say those two victims were the gunman's father and brother.

    The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to publicly discuss the case.

    Police said earlier that seven people were killed, including the gunman. But they corrected that to a total of five people late Friday.

    Dressed in black

    Several students in the library reported hearing gunfire, and one witness said he heard a woman scream.

    "The officers came in and directly engaged the suspect and he was shot and killed on the scene," Police Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks said.

    She identified the gunman as 25 to 30 years old and dressed all in black, wearing what appeared to be a ballistic jacket.

    The campus was searched for a second shooter, and a man dressed entirely in black, with the words "Life is a Gamble" on the back of his sweatshirt, was seen being taken into custody by law enforcement officers. He did not appear to be wounded.

    All of this unfolded about 3 miles from where President Barack Obama was attending a fundraising luncheon.

    Three women with gunshot wounds were admitted to Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, said Dr. Marshall Morgan, the chief of emergency medicine. One died, another was in surgery, and the third was in serious condition but doing well, he said.

    Three other women went to UCLA Medical Center Santa Monica with relatively minor injuries, Morgan said. One has shrapnel-type injuries and the two others had injuries not related to gunfire, he said.

    Jeff Furrows of the Santa Monica Fire Department said there was extensive fire damage inside the home where two bodies were found, and one of the wounded women was found with a gunshot wound in a car nearby.

    Jerry Cunningham Rathner, who lives near the house, said she heard gunshots and came out onto her porch to see a man shooting at the residence. Soon, the building erupted in flames and was billowing smoke.

    The gunman, dressed in black and wearing an ammunition belt, went to the corner and pointed a rifle at a woman in a car and told her to pull over, Rathner said. He then signaled to a second car, also driven by a woman, to slow down and began firing into the vehicle.

    'Boom, boom, boom'

    "He fired three to four shots into the car - boom, boom, boom, right at her," said Cunningham, who went to the woman's aid and saw she was wounded in the shoulder.

    "I can't believe she didn't have worse injuries," Cunningham said.

    She said the gunman then abducted the woman in the first car and drove away.

    From there, the scene shifted to Santa Monica College, located in a neighborhood of strip malls and homes more than a mile inland from the city's famous Santa Monica Pier, Third Street Promenade and its expansive, sandy beaches.

    Jimes Gillespie, 20, told The Associated Press he was in the college's library studying when he heard gunfire, and he and dozens of other students began fleeing the three-story building.

    "As I was running down the stairs I saw one of the gunmen," said Gillespie, who described the shooter as a white man in his 20s, wearing cornrows in his hair and black overalls. He said the man was carrying a shotgun.

    Gillespie believed there were two shooters because he heard two kinds of gunfire - a shotgun and a handgun - but only saw one person.

    "The shotgun blast was first. It was either him or the partner who shot eight to 10 handgun shots," Gillespie said. "Then after I saw the gunman I heard more shots and I ran out of the library through the emergency exit."

    As Gillespie ran across campus, he said he saw a car in front of the English building that was riddled with bullet holes, had shattered windows and a baby's car seat in the back.

    Another student, Khwanfa Wilepananon, said he and a friend were on the library's third floor when they heard a loud bang and a woman's scream coming from the first floor. As he and a friend fled downstairs, he said they heard two shots.

    "It was so scary," said Wilepananon. "It was so dark and I was scared. We didn't know what to do."

    Santa Monica police Sgt. Rudy Flores said numerous witnesses called to report that the shooting near the college began with a man on a street corner near the college firing shots at vehicles, including a bus.

    California Highway Patrol Officer Vince Ramirez said his agency began receiving 911 calls just minutes before noon.

    The two-year college, with about 34,000 students, was in the midst of final exams Friday. It was quickly locked down by police, and students were told to leave.

    Hands held above their heads, students and staff evacuate to the north side of campus as police swarm Santa Monica College on Friday looking for a gunman who killed several people.

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