Gunman kills 3 in factory before dying in shootout
Many victims were coworkers and attacker appears to have opened fire at random, police say
A gunman killed three people on Thursday at a manufacturing plant in central Kansas where he worked, and wounded 14 others in a shooting spree spanning several miles that ended when a lone officer killed the suspect, authorities said.
While many of his victims were coworkers, overall the attacker appears to have opened fire at random, said Harvey County Sheriff T. Walton of the mass killing that struck fear in Hesston and the town's major employer, a lawnmower manufacturing company.
"This is a horrible situation, my friends, just terrible," Walton said at a news conference, adding that at least five of the 14 wounded were in critical condition.
Some of the shooter's motives had emerged, but the sheriff declined to provide more details except to say the attack was "not terrorism".
"There were some things that triggered this particular individual," he said.
The Kansas shootings come after a Michigan man who worked as a driver for car-hailing service Uber was charged with killing six people during a shooting rampage this past weekend.
In December, a husband and wife shot to death 14 people at a workplace holiday party in San Bernardino, California. The couple, who died in a shootout with police, were inspired by the militant group Islamic State, FBI officials said.
Campaign issue
A number of mass shootings in the US have elevated gun control as a campaign issue in the US presidential election in November.
The Kansas attacker, who was armed with a .223-caliber assault-style rifle and a pistol, was driving a car when he began his attack about 14 kilometers southeast of Hesston in the town of Newton, where he shot a man in a truck, Walton said.
The suspect then drove to a nearby intersection and shot another driver in the leg, before stealing that victim's car and driving over to Excel Industries, his work site, where he shot a person in the parking lot, Walton said.
The gunman entered the plant, where he had been scheduled to work and where more than 100 employees were beginning the day's second shift, and he opened fire on his co-workers, killing three, the sheriff said. Other employees fled in panic.
The first responding officer traded fire with the gunman near the building's paint room, striking him dead, Walton said.
"Even though (the officer) took fire, he went inside of that place and saved multiple lives - a hero, as far as I'm concerned," the sheriff said.
Reuters - AFP
Police guard the front door of Excel Industries in Hesston, Kansas, where a gunman killed three people and injured many others on Thursday. Fernando Salazar / Tns Via Getty Images |