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A man with an AR-15-style rifle opened fire inside a Target store in Omaha, sending panicked shoppers and employees scrambling for safety before he was fatally shot by police Tuesday afternoon, authorities said.
Omaha Police Chief Todd Schmaderer said the man had “plenty of ammunition” and that evidence suggests he fired multiple rounds, but it wasn’t immediately known if he fired at anyone.
Schmaderer said no wounded people were found, and police had searched through the store “because there were some people hiding in there.”
Cathy Mahannah, a customer, said the scene inside the store was “sheer panic.”
The 62-year-old was near the store’s entrance picking out Valentine’s Day gifts for her young grandchildren when she heard a banging sound. She thought something had fallen, then saw a mass of people running for the exit.
A shopper told her there was an active shooter, and she fled. She heard at least one more shot in the store and a few more when she was outside.
Mahannah was so rattled she initially couldn’t find her car and jumped into a vehicle with a stranger.
“The moments in that parking lot were terrifying when I heard the shots and thought, ‘Where do I hide? I don’t know what to do.’” she said.
The police chief said there were several 911 calls shortly before noon, and officers were at the store within minutes.
“The first arriving officers went into the building, confronted the suspect and shot him dead,” Schmaderer said, speaking at news conference about an hour after the shooting. “He had an AR-15 rifle with him and plenty of ammunition.”
Target spokesperson Brian Harper-Tibaldo said in a statement all guests and team members were safely evacuated from the store, which would remain closed indefinitely.
Lt. Neal Bonacci, a police spokesperson, said officers are trained to enter such scenes quickly to prevent mass casualties.
“We’ve learned a lot from other jurisdictions, other areas, other cities that have unfortunately experienced this,” he said. “We enter right away. We’re trained to do so. Whether it’s one officer or 10, we go inside and neutralize the threat.”
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A suspect is in custody after a “shooting incident with multiple victims” in the coastal city of Half Moon Bay, California, according to messages posted on social media by the San Mateo Sheriff’s Office.
The sheriff’s office said it responded to a shooting with multiple victims near Highway 92 in Half Moon Bay, about 30 miles south of San Francisco. It later added that a suspect was in custody and that there was “no ongoing threat to the community at this time.”
The shooting comes a day after a deadly mass shooting in Monterey Park, in southern California, that left at least 11 people dead.
“Gun violence has come to our district today and I will do whatever I can to support the San Mateo County Sheriff’s Department and Half Moon Bay city officials during this tragic event,” Josh Becker, a state representative from the area, wrote on Twitter. “We will continue to monitor this situation. My thoughts go out to all affected.”
This is a developing story and will be updated.
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Protesters damaged property at numerous locations on Peachtree Street in downtown Atlanta Saturday in the wake of a shooting earlier this week near the Atlanta Public Safety Training Center — a controversial future law enforcement training site — in which a Georgia state trooper was wounded and a man was killed. No one was hurt, authorities said.
In a news conference Saturday evening, Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum said that at least six people were arrested in the violence.
Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens said “some” of those arrested “were found with explosives on them,” adding that a police patrol vehicle was set ablaze.
No protesters or officers were hurt during the ordeal, Schierbaum confirmed.
R.J. Rico / AP
Three local businesses were damaged during the violence, which was limited to a roughly two-block radius, Schierbaum said.
“We can tell now, early in this investigation, this was not, the folks tonight, just to damage windows on three buildings and set a police car on fire,” Schierbaum told reporters. “The intent was to continue to do harm. And that did not happen.”
Masked activists dressed in all black threw rocks and lit fireworks in front of a skyscraper that houses the Atlanta Police Foundation, shattering large glass windows, according to the Associated Press.
Over the past several months, the tension between protestors and law enforcement over the future training site has been rising, until it came to a boil on Wednesday.
A Georgia state trooper was shot and wounded Wednesday morning, and a man identified by police as 26-year-old Manuel Esteban Paez Teran was fatally shot during a planned multi-agency operation to remove protesters from the property, according to the Georgia Bureau of Investigation (GBI).
The trooper was rushed to Grady Memorial Hospital in Atlanta and immediately taken into surgery, said officials. He was in stable condition as of Thursday, Georgia State Patrol said. The trooper’s identity has not yet been released.
Georgia Department of Public Safety
On Friday, GBI released a photo of a handgun it said Teran was carrying at the time of the shooting. It said a ballistic analysis of the round which wounded the trooper was a match to Teran’s Smith & Wesson M&P Shield 9mm.
Activists have questioned officials’ version of events, calling it a “murder,” and demanding an independent investigation, according to the Associated Press. According to the GBI, the incident was not recorded on body cameras.
For months, protesters have allegedly destroyed property, committed arson and carjackings and thrown rocks, bottles and other items at police, GBI said.
In December, five people were arrested and charged with domestic terrorism and other charges after allegedly throwing rocks and bottles at the training center, officials said. Another seven people were also arrested Wednesday, on the day of the shooting incident, on charges of domestic terrorism and criminal trespass, GBI said.
Schierbaum noted that all those who were arrested prior to Saturday’s violence were not Georgia residents. He could not immediately confirm whether the six arrested Saturday were also from out of state.
“I don’t know which news group it was…we saw a great graphic from everyone that was arrested this past week, not a single Georgia resident in there,” Schierbaum said. “It was from across the country.”
The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, the FBI and GBI will assist in the investigation into Saturday’s events, officials said.
“These are not acts of peaceful protest. These are criminal acts to destabilize communities and endanger citizens,” Michael Register, director of the GBI, said earlier this week. The agency is investigating the trooper shooting.
For months, police have been sending officers to the site due to the high “threat of safety,” Register said.
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The parents of a 6-year-old boy in Virginia who shot his first-grade teacher in class earlier this month are speaking out about their son and the violent incident, saying they were responsible gun owners who kept firearms out of children’s reach.
“The firearm our son accessed was secured,” the parents said in a statement to BuzzFeed News via their attorney, James Ellenson. The statement didn’t explain how the child gained access to the weapon and managed to bring it to school.
The gun had been legally purchased by the child’s mother, police have said. Newport News police Chief Steve Drew told CNN earlier that charging the parents “is certainly a possibility.”
The parents said the boy who shot teacher Abby Zwerner has an “acute disability” and was under a care plan that required at least one of his parents to be in his classroom every day.
The shooting happened during the first week neither parent accompanied the child in class, according to the statement.
“We will regret our absence on this day for the rest of our lives,” the parents said.
The parents also expressed sympathy for Zwerner, 25, who was released from the hospital Thursday, according to Norfolk CBS affiliate WTKR-TV. .
“Our heart goes out to our son’s teacher and we pray for her healing in the aftermath of such an unimaginable tragedy as she selflessly served our son and the children in the school,” the parents said.
Zwerner, a first-grade teacher at Richneck Elementary in Newport News, was shot in the chest and hand by the student on Jan. 6 after he pulled a handgun from a backpack during class, police said.
A GoFundMe account in Zwerner’s name has raised more than $228,000 for medical expenses.
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