- by foxnews
- 07 Nov 2024
A bank employee armed with a rifle shot dead four colleagues and wounded nine other people at his bank on Monday while livestreaming the attack in downtown Louisville, Kentucky, city officials said.
The shooter was fatally shot at the scene, the Louisville metro police department said on Monday afternoon, but it was unclear whether from police gunfire or a self-inflicted wound.
Officers had fired at the shooter, police chief Jacquelyn Gwinn-Villaroel told reporters.
Police identified the dead as Joshua Barrick, 40; Thomas Elliot, 63; Juliana Farmer, 45; and James Tutt, 64.
Andy Beshear, the governor of Kentucky, on the verge of tears, said during a news briefing that he knew some of the victims, including Elliot, a senior vice-president at the bank.
Paul Humphrey, the deputy chief of the Louisville metro police department (LMPD), told reporters that his officers were on the scene within three minutes of the first 911 call from the targeted bank and immediately confronted the shooter.
The department identified the shooter as Connor Sturgeon, 23, who joined the downtown branch of the Old National Bank as a full-time employee last year.
Two of those treated at the University of Louisville (UofL) hospital, including one of the wounded officers, were in critical condition, Humphrey added. The other officer suffered non-life-threatening injuries.
In addition, one of the police officers, a 26-year-old recent graduate of the police academy, was struck in the head and remained in critical condition after brain surgery on Monday, police said.
At least five gunshot sounds were audible in a tweet posted by an eyewitness.
The White House said Joe Biden was being kept abreast of developments.
The Republican Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, who represents Kentucky, tweeted condolences from him and his wife, Elaine Chao, the former US labor secretary.
The shooting took place at about 8.30am local time and the bank was not scheduled to open until 9am.
Calls for more substantial gun control in the US, including from the president, have increased amid a slew of recent mass shootings. Biden has consistently urged federal lawmakers to pass an assault weapons ban, but Congress has been unable to do so.
The Louisville mayor, Craig Greenberg, lamented what the Gun Violence Archive recorded as the 15th mass shooting in the US this month, and the deadliest since six people, including three nine-year-old students, were murdered at a church school in Nashville on 27 March.
He had no prior contact with Louisville police, the police chief said.
In a separate incident, a man was killed and a woman injured in a shooting outside a community college in Louisville hours after the bank attack, local CBS TV affiliate WLKY News reported, citing police.
Police said there were multiple suspects in the shooting at Jefferson Community and Technical College, about 2 miles from the bank, who fled the scene and remained at large.
The Louisville metro police department, meanwhile, is still reeling from a scathing justice department report last month which was produced in the aftermath of the 2020 killing of Breonna Taylor by officers.
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