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		Gunman in California UPS shooting 
		targeted co-workers for slayings 
		
		 
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		 [June 24, 2017] 
		By Steve Gorman 
		 
		(Reuters) - The UPS employee who shot three 
		coworkers to death last week inside a United Parcel Service facility in 
		San Francisco before killing himself appears to have singled out his 
		victims deliberately, but a motive remains unknown, police said on 
		Friday. 
		 
		Investigators have yet to examine the contents of computers, cell phones 
		and a journal seized from the gunman's home in their search for clues to 
		the June 14 attack, San Francisco Police Commander Greg McEachern said 
		at a news conference. 
		 
		McEachern also revealed the murder weapon was a MasterPiece Arms 
		"assault-type pistol" that he said was "commonly known as a MAC-10," 
		equipped with an extended 30-round magazine. He said such weapons are 
		outlawed in California. 
		 
		That gun and a second, semiautomatic pistol recovered from the scene 
		were both listed as stolen weapons - the MAC-10 from Utah and the other 
		handgun in California, McEachern said. 
		
		  
		
		Police offered few new details about how the shooting itself unfolded. 
		 
		The gunman, Jimmy Lam, 38, was attending a morning briefing with fellow 
		employees at the UPS package-sorting and delivery center in San 
		Francisco when he pulled out a gun and "without warning or saying 
		anything" opened fire on four co-workers, the police commander said. 
		 
		The first two victims, identified as Wayne Chan, 56, and Benson Louie, 
		50, were killed. 
		 
		In the ensuing pandemonium, Lam walked calmly outside the building, 
		approached another co-worker, Michael Lefiti, 46, and shot him dead 
		without uttering a word, then reentered the facility. 
		 
		
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			A police patrol car blocks a street outside a United Parcel Service 
			(UPS) facility after a shooting incident was reported in San 
			Francisco, California, U.S. June 14, 2017. REUTERS/Stephen Lam 
            
			  
			Moments later, as police closed in, Lam put a gun to his head and 
			pulled the trigger, McEachern said, adding that Lam fired about 20 
			rounds in all before the bloodshed ended. Police never fired a shot. 
			 
			While no motive has been established, McEachern said interviews of 
			various witnesses have led investigators to believe that the three 
			slayings were "purposeful and targeted," based on actions observed 
			that day. 
			 
			He said surveillance video also showed that during the rampage, Lam 
			appeared to pass by other co-workers "without there being any 
			interactions," suggesting those he did shoot were intentionally 
			singled out. 
			 
			It was less clear whether the two surviving gunshot victims were 
			deliberately targeted, he said. 
			 
			News of the carnage in San Francisco was largely overshadowed that 
			day by an unrelated shooting hours earlier in the Virginia suburbs 
			of Washington that left a congressman and several others wounded 
			before police killed the assailant. 
			 
			(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Bill Rigby) 
			
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