Tuesday, 17 September 2013
The deadly attack at the Washington Navy Yard was carried out by one of the military's own..12 killed.
A defense contract employee
and former Navy reservist who used a valid pass to get onto the
installation and started firing inside a building, killing 12 people
before he was slain in a gun battle with police.
The motive for
the mass shooting — the deadliest on a military installation in the U.S.
since the tragedy at Fort Hood, Texas, in 2009 — was a mystery,
investigators said. But a profile of the lone gunman, a 34-year-old
Aaron Alexis, was coming into focus. He was described as a Buddhist who
had also had flares of rage, complained about the Navy and being a
victim of discrimination and had several run-ins with law enforcement,
including two shootings.
Monday's onslaught at a single building
at the highly secure Navy Yard unfolded about 8:20 a.m. in the heart of
the nation's capital, less than four miles from the White House and two
miles from the Capitol.
It put all of Washington on edge. Mayor
Vincent Gray said there was no indication it was a terrorist attack, but
he added that the possibility had not been ruled out.
"This is a horrific tragedy," Gray said.
Alexis
carried three weapons: an AR-15 assault rifle, a shotgun, and a handgun
that he took from a police officer at the scene, according to two
federal law enforcement officials who spoke on condition of anonymity
because they were not authorized to discuss the investigation. The AR-15
is the same type of rifle used in last year's mass shooting at a
Newtown, Conn., elementary school that killed 20 students and six women.
The weapon was also used in the shooting at a Colorado movie theater
that killed 12 and wounded 70.
For much of the day, authorities
said they were looking for a possible second attacker who may have been
disguised in an olive-drab military-style uniform. But by late Monday
night, they said they were convinced the shooting was the work of a lone
gunman, and the lockdown around the area was eased.
"We do now
feel comfortable that we have the single and sole person responsible for
the loss of life inside the base today," Washington police Chief Cathy
Lanier said.
President Barack Obama lamented yet another mass
shooting in the U.S. that he said took the lives of American "patriots."
He promised to make sure "whoever carried out this cowardly act is held
responsible."
The FBI took charge of the investigation.
The
attack came four years after Army psychiatrist Maj. Nidal Hasan killed
13 people at Fort Hood in what he said was an effort to save the lives
of Muslims overseas. He was convicted last month and sentenced to death.
In
addition to those killed at the Navy Yard, eight people were hurt,
including three who were shot and wounded, according to the mayor. Those
three were a police officer and two female civilians, authorities said.
They were all expected to survive.
The dead ranged in age from 46
to 73, according to the mayor. A number of the victims were civilian
employees and contractors, rather than active-duty military personnel,
the police chief said.
At the time of the rampage, Alexis was an
employee with The Experts, a company that was a Defense Department
subcontractor on a Navy-Marine Corps computer project, authorities said.
Valerie
Parlave, head of the FBI's field office in Washington, said Alexis had
access to the Navy Yard as a defense contractor and used a valid pass.
Alexis
had been a full-time Navy reservist from 2007 to early 2011, leaving as
a petty officer third class, the Navy said. It did not say why he left.
He had been an aviation electrician's mate with a unit in Fort Worth.
A
convert to Buddhism who grew up in New York City, Alexis had had
run-ins with the law over shooting incidents in 2004 and 2010 in Fort
Worth and Seattle and was portrayed in police reports as seething with
anger.
The Washington Navy Yard is a sprawling, 41-acre labyrinth
of buildings and streets protected by armed guards and metal detectors,
and employees have to show their IDs at doors and gates. More than
18,000 people work there.
The rampage took place at Building 197,
the headquarters for Naval Sea Systems Command, which buys, builds and
maintains ships and submarines. About 3,000 people work at headquarters,
many of them civilians.
Witnesses on Monday described a gunman
opening fire from a fourth-floor overlook, aiming down on people on the
main floor, which includes a glass-walled cafeteria. Others said a
gunman fired at them in a third-floor hallway.
Patricia Ward, a logistics-management specialist, said she was in the cafeteria getting breakfast.
"It
was three gunshots straight in a row — pop, pop, pop. Three seconds
later, it was pop, pop, pop, pop, pop, so it was like about a total of
seven gunshots, and we just started running," Ward said.
Todd
Brundidge, an executive assistant with Navy Sea Systems Command, said he
and co-workers encountered a gunman in a long hallway on the third
floor. The gunman was wearing all blue, he said.
"He just turned and started firing," Brundidge said.
Terrie Durham, an executive assistant with the same agency, said the gunman fired toward her and Brundidge.
"He
aimed high and missed," she said. "He said nothing. As soon as I
realized he was shooting, we just said, 'Get out of the building.'"
As
emergency vehicles and law enforcement officers flooded the streets, a
helicopter hovered, nearby schools were locked down and airplanes at
Reagan National Airport were grounded so they would not interfere with
law-enforcement choppers.
Security was tightened at other federal
buildings. Senate officials shut down their side of the Capitol. The
House remained open.
In the confusion, police said around midday
that they were searching for two accomplices who may have taken part in
the attack — one carrying a handgun and wearing a tan Navy-style uniform
and a beret, the other armed with a long gun and wearing an olive-green
uniform. Police said it was unclear if the men were members of the
military.
But as the day wore, police dropped one person and then
the other as suspects. As tensions eased, Navy Yard employees were
gradually released from the complex, and children were let out of their
locked-down schools.
Adm. Jonathan Greenert, chief of naval
operations, was at the base at the time the shooting began but was moved
unharmed to a nearby military installation.
Anxious relatives and friends of those who work at the complex waited to hear from loved ones.
Tech
Sgt. David Reyes, who works at Andrews Air Force Base, said he was
waiting to pick up his wife, Dina, who was under lockdown in a building
next to where the shooting happened. She sent him a text message.
"They
are under lockdown because they just don't know," Reyes said. "They
have to check every building in there, and they have to check every room
and just, of course, a lot of rooms and a lot of buildings."
___
Associated Press writers Jesse Holland, Stacy A. Anderson, Brian Witte and Ben Nuckols in Washington contributed to this report.
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