A gunman
who opened fire on students at Umpqua Community College in Oregon and has
been identified as 26-year-old Chris Harper-Mercer according to law enforcement
sources.
Kortney
Moore, 18, told the News-Review she was in her Writing 115 class in Snyder Hall
when a shot came through the window. Moore said she saw her teacher get shot in
the head. The shooter then reportedly told the students to get on the ground
before asking people to stand up and state their religion. He then began
firing. If you said you were Christian, you got shot in the head, if you said
you were a non-Christian, you got shot ion the leg.
'He
appears to be an angry young man who was very filled with hate,' one source
told The New York Times. According to his profile on a dating site,
Harper-Mercer is 'mixed race,' a 'conservative Republican,' and 'not
religious.'
Harper-Mercer
also wrote in a post in August how much he admired Vester Flanagan,
the Roanoke shooter who killed a cameraman and newscaster at the station
where he had been employed.
Moore
said she was lying on the ground with people who had been shot.
As
soon as the shooting started, students started to call 911, the police arrived
almost immediately and engaged in a gun fight with the suspect and he ended up
getting killed by the Police.
Mercer
was said to have had 4 guns and lots of ammunition.
The
shooting took place in classroom 15 in a building called Snyder, where English
and writing classes are held, a student, Cassandra Welding, said.
Ms.
Welding, 20, was in classroom 16 — next to the shooting — when the violence
began.
She
was working on a short class paper when she heard several loud bursts, like
balloons popping.
There
were about 20 people in the classroom. A woman seated behind her rose to shut
the classroom door, she said, and was struck in the stomach by several bullets.
“He
was just out there, hanging outside the door,” Ms. Welding said of the gunman,
“and she slumped over, and I knew something wasn’t right. And they’re like,
‘She got shot, she got shot.’ And everyone is panicking.”
A
friend of the injured woman dragged the woman into the room and began
administering CPR, Ms. Welding said. Someone clicked the door shut. Someone
shut off the lights, and the students huddled in the corner, blocking
themselves with desks and backpacks. “I heard more shooting,” she said. “It was
horrific.”
“My
whole body was shaking, a chill was going down my spine. We called 911,” said
Ms. Welding. “I was on the phone with my mom pretty much the entire time. I
knew this could have been the last time I talked to her.”
John
Hanlin, the Douglas County sheriff who appeared at two news conferences to
provide updates on the victims and police investigation, was one of hundreds of
sheriffs in 2013 who argued against new gun laws, according to Mother
Jones.
“Gun
control is NOT the answer to preventing heinous crimes like school shootings,”
he wrote in the letter to Vice President Joseph R. Biden, dated January 15,
2013.
He
said he agreed with the sheriff of Linn County, Ore., Tim Mueller, and included
a quotation from him:
“In
the wake of recent criminal events, politicians are attempting to exploit the
deaths of innocent victims by advocating for laws that would prevent honest,
law abiding Americans from possessing certain firearms and ammunition
magazines. We are Americans. We must not allow, nor shall we tolerate, the
actions of criminals, no matter how heinous the crimes, to prompt politicians
to enact laws that will infringe upon the liberties of responsible citizens who
have broken no laws.”
Oregon
Sen. Jeff Merkley also released a statement on the shooting.
"I
am absolutely heartbroken by today's news," Merkley said. "I have
been in touch with local officials to express my deepest condolences and offer
my assistance in any way possible and I will continue to monitor this tragedy
and its response.
"The
hearts and thoughts of all Oregonians are with the victims, their families and
the entire UCC and Roseburg communities."
"It's
extremely concerning and sad," said Endi Hartigan, spokeswoman for the
Oregon Higher Education Coordinating Commission".
"I
am absolutely heartbroken by today's news," Merkley said. "I have
been in touch with local officials to express my deepest condolences and offer
my assistance in any way possible and I will continue to monitor this tragedy
and its response.
"The
hearts and thoughts of all Oregonians are with the victims, their families and
the entire UCC and Roseburg communities."
"It's
extremely concerning and sad," said Endi Hartigan, spokeswoman for the
Oregon Higher Education Coordinating Commission".
Two
of the patients were treated and four people went to the operating room with
three of those patients stable now and one in critical condition.
One
person died in the emergency room.
Of
the three female victims at PeaceHealth Sacred Heart Medical Center at
RiverBend in Springfield, two were in serious condition and one in critical.
Gov.
Brown’s spokeswoman Kristen Grainger confirmed that the shooter was a student
at the school to ABC News.
The
station KATU reported, citing a school official, that gunfire erupted at
Snyder Hall located in the English building on campus, which is comprised of
about 16 auxiliary buildings.
Authorities
said that there doesn’t appear to be a link with international terrorism.


No comments:
Post a Comment