Gunman shot at Charleston, S.C.,
restaurant; hostage rescued
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[August 25, 2017]
By Harriet McLeod
CHARLESTON, S.C. (Reuters) - A disgruntled
employee who fatally shot one person and held another hostage on
Thursday at a restaurant in downtown Charleston, South Carolina, was
shot by police, the city's mayor said.
Witnesses said the gunman brandished a pistol and said "There's a new
boss in town" as he entered Virginia's On King in the heart of the
city's commercial district, while about 15 to 20 people were having
lunch. Many of them fled.
The gunman was transported to a local hospital in critical condition and
the hostage was rescued, said Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg.
"A disgruntled employee came back to his place of employment... with a
gun and killed an individual in the restaurant, held another hostage for
some time," Tecklenburg told reporters at the scene.
"This was not a terrorist act. This was not a hate crime. This was a
tragic case of a disgruntled individual, I think with a history of some
mental health challenges, who took his anger into his own hands," he
said.
Executive Chef Anthony Shane Whiddon, 37, of Goose Creek, South
Carolina, was shot and killed during the incident.
Local television station WCSC-TV quoted a representative of the group
that owns the restaurant as saying that the gunman was a former
dishwasher.
Police helicopters had buzzed overhead and police SWAT team members had
closed several blocks of King Street, which is home to many restaurants,
bars and boutiques and is popular with residents and tourists.
Virginia's On King is an upscale restaurant serving traditional Southern
comfort food.
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Charleston Mayor John Tecklenburg, (L) and Interim Police Chief
Jerome Taylor brief news reporters regarding a restaurant shooting
in which police shot and wounded a disgruntled former employee
during a hostage taking incident in Charleston, South Carolina,
U.S., August 24, 2017. REUTERS/Harriet McLeod
The local Post and Courier newspaper quoted a couple, Tom and Patsy
Plant, who said they were eating lunch with their daughter Laura
when the gunman walked in from the kitchen, the newspaper reported.
The Plants, who said they fled with other customers through a back
door, described him as a black man in his late 50s. Patsy Plant told
the paper he looked like "an ordinary grandpa, but he had a crazy
look."
The restaurant is just a block and a half from the Emanuel African
Methodist Episcopal Church, where on June 17, 2015, a white
supremacist fatally shot nine members of a Bible study group in what
officials called a racially motivated hate crime.
The church shooter, Dylann Roof, has been sentenced to death in
federal court for the massacre. He pleaded guilty in April to
separate state murder charges.
(Additional reporting and writing by Gina Cherelus in New York and
Suzannah Gonzales in Chicago; Editing by Dan Grebler and Christian
Schmollinger)
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