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When Powell asked Allman what the gun was for, Allman said: "'There's some racist people at my job. They're messing with me,'" Powell recalled. "We started laughing, so I didn't think he was serious," Powell told the AP in a phone interview Thursday. He added, "He wouldn't hurt nobody. He's not that type of person. He must have snapped." Powell said he had not contacted authorities but would be willing to speak with them. Sheriff's spokesman Lt. Rick Sung said Thursday that he was not aware of Powell's claims. He added that any information regarding Allman's motive would be part of the ongoing investigation. According to authorities, Allman became upset around 4 a.m. Wednesday during the meeting at the quarry. He left briefly and returned with a handgun and rifle and started shooting people, Lt. Sung said. About 15 workers were at the meeting. The dead were identified as Manuel Pinon, 48, of Newman, Calif., and John Vallejos, 51 and Mark Munoz, 59, both of San Jose. Six others at the quarry were wounded and taken to hospitals, where some were in critical condition, Smith said. Carmen Rodriguez went to the intersection about a mile from the quarry where families were gathered awaiting word of relatives on Wednesday. She said she was looking for her sister, who is married to Munoz. She held a box of tissues as she spoke to reporters about her brother-in-law, Mark Munoz. "I just got word that he was one of the ones shot," she said. "It's just devastating to me." Rodriguez said Munoz was a father and grandfather and cared for his elderly mother. In his free time, he liked to restore old Volkswagen Beetles. He worked at the quarry for 20 years and was looking forward to retirement. "He was very loving, very caring, and he couldn't wait to retire," she said. The carjacking victim, a Hewlett-Packard contract employee, was in fair condition at Santa Clara Valley Medical Center, hospital spokeswoman Joy Alexiou said. During the ensuing manhunt for Allman, schools were locked down in Cupertino, home of Apple Inc., and in nearby communities. Authorities went door to door with guns drawn and residents were warned to stay indoors. "The SWAT stormed in like ninjas, and they took a position in our front bedroom," said Jenny Martin, a resident of the neighborhood searched by authorities Wednesday and where man believed to be Allman was killed. Authorities said they found Allman's car, and collected a shotgun, a handgun and two rifles believed to belong to the suspect.
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