Santa Monica gunman killed father, brother, sources say
UPDATE: Police say five, not seven, dead in shooting; gunman acted alone
The two bodies found in a burning Santa Monica house – the starting point in a shooting rampage – are believe to be the brother and father of the suspected gunman, law enforcement sources told The Times.
Six people were killed in the rampage, and police say the suspect used an AR-15 assault rifle.
He was killed by officers at Santa Monica College. Police don’t have a motive for the shootings. The shooting and fire appear to have stemmed from some type of family dispute, but the sources said police are still are from sure what happened.
Santa Monica College remained closed. And police were converging on an apartment in Mar Vista as part of the shooting investigation.
Santa Monica Police Chief Jacqueline Seabrooks described a violent shooting rampage that appears to have begun in the 2000 block of Yorkshire Avenue just before noon.
The gunman then moved west along Pico Boulevard, firing at cars and other targets.
One person died at Cloverfield and Pico boulevards; two died at 19th Street and Pico Boulevard. Another woman died at a hospital.
Seabrooks said the gunman may not have acted alone. A second “person of interest” is in custody.
“We are not convinced 100% that the suspect who was killed operated in solo or a lone capacity,” Seabrooks said.
The suspect fled into Santa Monica College, where he was pursued by police. He shot a woman on campus and ran into the library, where he continued to fire rounds from an assault rifle.
Authorities shot and killed the gunman on campus. He has not yet been identified, but police described him as being 25 to 30 years old.
Santa Monica College and all schools in the city were placed on lockdown.
The shooting rampage sent Santa Monica into chaos -- just as President Obama was attending a fundraiser a few miles away.
Many college students were on campus studying -- or taking finals.
Stephen Bell and his classmates were preparing for their final tap dance performance when two women ran into their classroom next to the campus library.
They said they’d just seen a woman getting shot in the library.
“When she said that word -- shot! -- we immediately shut the door, laid down on the floor and shut the lights,” Bell said.
“I was thinking, ‘Oh my god, Columbine High School,” he said. “First thing that crossed my mind.”
Joey Letteri, the tap instructor, was running a few minutes late and was walking to class from his office upstairs. When he got to class, the door was shut and the lights were off.
“I thought it was a surprise and that the class got a cake for me or something,” he said, shaking his head at the innocent thought that had crossed his mind at the time.
Letteri led the class through a meditation and told them to stay quiet. They tried to calm the two female students down. One couldn’t stop throwing up, Letteri said, and the other was crying and shaking.
Finally, a SWAT team arrived. Letteri told them to slide their badges under the door. Each person in the classroom had to come out individually with their hands up, he said, and they were searched before they were all escorted off campus. Officers took the two witnesses from the library aside.
ALSO:
Santa Monica shooting: two dead, six transported to hospitals
Santa Monica College students describe moments of terror in library
Santa Monica College shooting prompts Obama motorcade rerouting
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