| Shooter kills five people, wounds 
			eight at Ft. Lauderdale airport  Send a link to a friend
 
			
            
            [January 06, 2017] 
            FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (Reuters) 
			- By Zachary Fagenson
 A gunman with a U.S. military identification opened fire at a 
			baggage carousel at Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport 
			on Friday, killing five people before being taken into custody, 
			officials and witnesses said.
 
 Five people died and eight were wounded, Broward County Sheriff 
			Scott Israel told reporters at the airport, where air traffic was 
			shut down.
 
 The gunman had arrived on a flight with a checked gun in his bag, 
			Broward County Commissioner Chip LaMarca said on Twitter. The 
			shooter claimed his bag and went to the bathroom to load the gun 
			before coming out and firing, LaMarca said.
 
 Cellphone video posted on social media showed victims on the floor 
			next to a carousel, with people on their knees attempting to provide 
			aid. At least two victims had pools of blood from apparent head 
			wounds.
 
 The shooter was unharmed as law enforcement officers never fired a 
			shot, Israel said, adding it was too early to assign a motive.
 
 "At this point, it looks like he acted alone," Israel said.
 
 Nonetheless, he said "this scene is considered fluid and active" as 
			police searched the rest of the airport.
 
 The shooter was identified as Esteban Santiago, 26, and had a U.S. 
			military identification, according to a spokesman for U.S. Senator 
			Bill Nelson of Florida, who spoke with officials at the 
			Transportation Security Administration.
 
 A person by the name Esteban Santiago was discharged honorably from 
			the Army National Guard last year, ABC News reported, citing the 
			Army criminal investigation division.
 
 The shooter, who wore a "Star Wars" T-shirt, said nothing as he 
			fired, witnesses told MSNBC. He appeared to use a 9 mm handgun, 
			which he tossed aside upon running out of ammunition, surrendering 
			to police, MSNBC reported.
 
 The Florida attack was the latest in a series of mass shootings that 
			have plagued the United States in recent years, some inspired by 
			militants with an extreme view of Islam, others carried out by 
			loners or the mentally disturbed who have easy access to weapons 
			under U.S. gun laws.
 
 About 90 minutes after the attack, panic broke out anew with 
			passengers and police running frantically about at a separate 
			terminal, but Israel said there were no other reports of shots being 
			fired.
 
 John Schlicher, who told MSNBC he saw the attack, described the 
			shooter as a slender man who was "directly firing at us" while 
			passengers waited for their bags.
 
 "I put my head down and prayed," Schlicher said, adding that his 
			wife gave first aid to someone who had been shot in the head. His 
			mother-in-law used her sweater to tend to another victim but it 
			turned out that person was already dead, he said.
 
 Mark Lea, another eyewitness, told MSNBC "there was no rhyme or 
			reason to it."
 
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Travelers are evacuated out of the terminal and onto the tarmac after airport shooting at 
Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport in Florida, U.S., January 6, 
2017. REUTERS/Zachary Fagenson 
 
"He didn't say anything, he was quiet the whole time, he didn't yell anything," 
Lea said.
 Security officials corralled dozens of passengers in several groups.
 
 Fort Lauderdale-Hollywood International Airport is the second largest in South 
Florida, serving as an intercontinental gateway, with Miami International 
Airport known as the primary airport for international flights in the area.
 
 HISTORY OF SHOOTINGS
 
 Nearly two months ago a former Southwest Airlines worker killed an employee of 
the company at Oklahoma City's airport in what police called a premeditated act.
 
 The deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history took place last June, when a 
gunman apparently inspired by Islamic State killed 49 people and wounded 53 at a 
gay nightclub in Orlando, Florida.
 
 One of the most shocking was in 2012, when a man entered an elementary school 
in Newtown, Connecticut, and shot dead 20 first-graders and six adults.
 
 Attackers have exploited security officials' focus on preventing attacks on 
airplanes rather than inside airports. In Western Europe and the United States, 
terminals are easily accessible public spaces.
 
 But at Israel's Ben Gurion Airport, widely seen as a model for security, 
private companies trained by the national security agency use bomb-detectors, 
profile passengers and question travelers under the watch of police at the 
airport's entrance.
 
 (Reporting by Colleen Jenkins, Letitia Stein, Jeffrey Dastin, Joseph Ax, 
Jonathan Allen, Gina Cherelus and Laila Kearney; Writing by Daniel Trotta; 
Editing by James Dalgleish)
 
				 
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