20 dead & 26 wounded in yet another Mass Shooting – Texas, USA
With the rattle of gunfire and the collapse of bodies, America on Saturday veered again into what both alarms and numbs it: A gunman with alleged racist sentiments opened fire in this border city, killing 20 people in a shopping center and leaving blood and bullet casings scattered in aisles where families were searching for back-to-school bargains on a scorching Texas morning.
El Paso became this nation’s latest site of tragedy, trimmed in yellow police tape, littered with gurneys and blared across media outlets. It was the rampage of a man in khakis brandishing an assault rifle in a Walmart. Media reports identified the suspect as Patrick Crusius, a 21-year-old white man from Allen, Texas, whom authorities plan on charging with a hate crime.
In addition to those killed, at least 26 others were wounded.
El Paso Police Chief Greg Allen said the suspect surrendered to approaching officers. “We have a manifesto from this individual that indicates a potential nexus to a hate crime,” he said. “We have to validate for certain that this was a manifesto from this individual we arrested.”
The manifesto, a document appearing on the online message board 8chan before the shooting rampage, spoke about an “invasion” of Latino immigrants and noted that the writer agreed with the shooter who killed scores of Islamic worshipers in March at a mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand. The document was uploaded by an anonymous user who posted another document under the file name “P._Crusius.” That file was taken down, and it is not clear what it contained.
Police were investigating photographs of the suspect with an assault-style rifle that were posted on social media. A Twitter account that appeared to belong to Crusius was shut down Saturday evening. Tweets on the account had praised President Trump and, in particular, his effort to build a wall along the U.S.- Mexico border.
“The manifesto narrative is fueled by hate, and it’s fueled by racism, bigotry and division,” U.S. Rep. Veronica Escobar, a Democrat who represents El Paso, said at a news conference. “This is someone that came from outside of our community to do us harm.”
As the dead were mourned and the wounded tended to, the mass shooting quickly brought new calls for gun control and prayer for the victims. Trump tweeted (“very bad, many killed”), and Democratic presidential candidates, including former Rep. Beto O’Rourke, an El Paso native, sent condolences. It all had the ring of the familiar; only the location, a town a short walk from the hardscrabble Mexican city of Ciudad Juarez, was different.
That arid, gritty landscape is in many ways a distillation of America’s singularities and complexities, its promises and perils. El Paso is a largely Latino liberal town in a conservative state. It hosts a college campus and a military base. One can openly carry a weapon here. Cross-border traffic propels the city at a time when the Trump administration is pushing to build a wall to keep out migrants, including many fleeing violence in Central America and seeking asylum in the U.S.
Less than a week after three people were killed by a shooter at a garlic festival in Gilroy, Calif., El Paso became the scene of the latest vigil — in the wake of the deadliest mass shooting in the country since 2017.
The gunfire in a Walmart sent shoppers fleeing at the nearby Cielo Vista Mall. Priscilla Zavala and her husband had brought their four children — ages 11, 9, 6 and 4 — to shop for toys at Build-A-Bear when the shooting erupted.
“We heard one shot and everybody was running towards Dillard’s, and it was crazy,” said Zavala, 32. “The men went to go check it out while the women were all scared and grabbed all the babies.”
She said store employees closed the front gate, turned off overhead music and gave each child a teddy bear for reassurance as they sheltered in a back room.
“I knew they were terrified,” she said. “I could see it in their face.”
“My son was like, ‘Is the bandit out there?’” Zavala said. “We could hear the SWAT team telling them, ‘Get down, put your hands up!’ I think they were trying to figure out who’s the good guys, who’s the bad guys…. We had to hold our hands up. That way they knew we were safe.”
As they left the mall, Zavala heard police shout, “We’re letting the victims out,” and she started to cry.
“What hit me the hardest was being called a victim. Because I didn’t realize we were victims in the whole thing,” she said. “That’s what we are. People don’t realize that what they’re doing is hurting all of us in all of this. It’s sad that my babies are growing up in this world. I hate it. I hate living like this.”
Witnesses posted shaky video online in which repeated gunshots could be heard. Analisa Sonora Flores, 44, had arrived at the Walmart, crowded with 3,000 shoppers and 300 employees, shortly before 11 a.m. to pay a bill when she heard gunshots that she said sounded like an automatic rifle.
“It’s not the Fourth of July,” she said she was thinking. “These aren’t fireworks.”
That’s when she began yelling, in English and Spanish, “Run, run, run!”
“The place was more packed than usual because school is starting soon,” she said. Flores and others bolted through a back door and up a hill passing a movie theater where a woman was hyperventilating, saying, “There are many, many, many.”
As ambulances carried the wounded to hospitals and SWAT teams roamed the parking lot, Trump, in a tweet, pledged “total support of the federal government” to Texas authorities.
Source: latimes