Don’t blame Guns for US Shooting – President Trump
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US
was in mourning Monday after a gunman wearing a bulletproof vest opened fire
with an assault rifle on the congregation of a small-town Texas church, killing
26 people and wounding 20 more in the nation’s latest shooting massacre. President
Donald Trump said the nation was living through “dark times” but guns were not
to blame for Sunday’s carnage, which came just five weeks after the worst mass
shooting in modern US history. “I think that mental health is your problem
here,” said the US president, speaking in Tokyo as part of his Asia tour.
“This was a very — based on preliminary reports — a very deranged individual.” “This
isn’t a guns situation,” Trump insisted, calling it “a mental health problem at
the highest level.” The victims, who ranged in age from five to 72, were gunned
down at First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, a rural community of some
400 people 30 miles (50 kilometers) southeast of San Antonio. The gunman,
widely identified as Devin Kelley, 26, was described by authorities as a young
white male who was found dead in his vehicle after being confronted by a local
resident. The Air Force said Kelley served at a base in New Mexico starting in
2010 before being court-martialed in 2012 for allegedly assaulting his wife and
child.
However,
He was sentenced to 12 months in confinement and received a “bad conduct”
discharge, Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek told AFP. He was discharged in
2014. Dressed all in black, Kelley fired outside the church before entering the
building and continuing to spray bullets, said Freeman Martin, regional
director of the Texas Department of Public Safety. “As he exited the church, a local
resident grabbed his rifle and engaged that suspect. The suspect dropped his
rifle, which was a Ruger AR assault-type rifle, and fled from the church. Our
local citizen pursued the suspect at that time,” Martin said. Law enforcement
later found Kelley dead in his car, which had crashed on the Wilson-Guadalupe
county line. It was not clear if he had killed himself or was shot by the
resident who had confronted him.
Meanwhile,
the multiple weapons were found in the car, which was processed by bomb
technicians. “We have multiple, multiple crime scenes. We have the church,
outside the church. We have where the suspect’s vehicle was located,” said
Martin. “We have been following up on the suspect and where he’s from. We have
Texas Rangers at all the hospitals locating those and interviewing those who
were injured.” “There’s so many families who have lost family members. Fathers,
mothers, sons, and daughters,” Governor Greg Abbott said, warning the toll
could rise. “The tragedy, of course, is worsened by the fact that it occurred
in a church, a place of worship, where these people were innocently gunned
down. We mourn their loss, but we support their family members.” The wounded
had been transported to various hospitals with “injuries that vary from minor
to very severe,” Martin said.
The
dead included the 14-year-old daughter of pastor Frank Pomeroy, the church
leader told ABC News. Annabelle Renee Pomeroy “was one very beautiful, special
child,” her father said. Frank Pomeroy had been in the neighboring state of
Oklahoma at the time of the shooting, and was driving back to Texas after the
tragedy. Other victims, some of whom were evacuated by helicopter, included a
six-year-old boy named Rylan who was in surgery after being shot four times,
his uncle told CBS News. A two-year-old was also shot and wounded, The Dallas
Morning News reported. A spokeswoman for Connally Memorial Medical Center in
nearby Floresville said the hospital received eight patients with gunshot
wounds. Four were transferred to San Antonio.
Furthermore,
Police formed a perimeter around the area while tearful relatives and neighbors
stood outside, nervously awaiting news from inside the traditional white-frame
church. Agents from the FBI and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and
Explosives were headed to Sutherland Springs, the agencies said. Trump called
the “horrific shooting” an “act of evil,” ordering flags be flown half-staff at
the White House and federal buildings. “Our hearts are broken but in dark times
— and these are dark times — such as these, Americans do what they do best: we
pull together,” he said. Though he said “it’s a little bit soon to go into it”
regarding renewed calls for gun control, the president promised his
administration’s “full support” for the investigation. As with many other
previous shootings, Democrats pointed to the latest tragedy to highlight the
need for gun control, a hot-button issue in a country that holds the right to
bear arms as almost sacred. In denouncing the “act of hatred,” Trump’s predecessor
Barack Obama said: “May God also grant all of us the wisdom to ask what
concrete steps we can take to reduce the violence and weaponry in our midst.” The
shooting comes just over a month after a gunman in Las Vegas fired down from a
hotel room on to an outdoor concert, killing 58 people and wounding hundreds.
It was the deadliest mass shooting in modern US history. A little more than two
years ago, white supremacist Dylann Roof entered a historically black church in
Charleston, South Carolina, and shot nine people to death.
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