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Page's former stepmother said she was devastated to learn of the bloodshed. "He was a precious little boy, and that's what my mind keeps going back to," said Laura Page, of Denver, who was divorced from Page's father around 2001. In Wisconsin, Page responded to a recent online ad seeking a roommate in Cudahy, a small city outside Milwaukee. He rented a room in Kurt Weins' house in June, telling Weins he had recently broken up with his girlfriend and needed a place to stay. Weins said Page stayed in that room all the time, declining invitations to watch TV with him. Page explained that he wanted to bring some belongings out of storage, so he rented an apartment several weeks later in a duplex owned by Weins across the street. "We talked, but it was really about nothing," Weins said. "He seemed pretty calm. He didn't seem like the type to raise his voice." After the FBI searched the apartment in the duplex, Weins returned and found only a computer desk, chair and an inflatable mattress. Suburban Milwaukee police had no contact with Page before Sunday, and his record gave no indication he was capable of such intense violence. The FBI was leading the investigation because the shooting was considered domestic terrorism. The agency said it had no reason to believe anyone other than Page was involved. Page entered the temple as several dozen people prepared for Sunday services. He opened fire without saying a word. The president of the temple died defending the house of worship he founded. Satwant Singh Kaleka, 65, managed to find a simple butter knife in the temple and attempted to stab the gunman before being shot twice, his son said Monday. Amardeep Singh Kaleka said FBI agents hugged him, shook his hand and told him his father was a hero. "Whatever time he spent in that struggle gave the women time to get cover" in the kitchen, Kaleka said. With their turbans and long beards, Sikhs are often mistaken for Muslims or Arabs, and have inadvertently become targets of anti-Muslim bias in the United States. Federal officials said the gun used in the attack had been legally purchased. Page had been licensed to own weapons since at least 2008, when he paid $5 each for five pistol-purchase permits in North Carolina. The six dead ranged in age from 39 to 84 years old. Three people were critically wounded, including a police officer. Online records show Page had a brief criminal history in other states, including pleading guilty to misdemeanor criminal mischief after a 1994 arrest in El Paso, Texas, for getting drunk and kicking holes in the wall of a bar. He received six months' probation. Page also pleaded guilty to driving under the influence in Colorado in 1999 but never completed a sentence that included alcohol treatment, records show. He was arrested on suspicion of drunken driving again in 2010 in North Carolina after running his car off the side of a highway. The case was dropped a year later for lack of evidence, according to court records.
[Associated
Press;
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