Northern California shooting death toll
reaches five after wife's body found
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[November 16, 2017]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - The death toll in a shooting
spree in rural Northern California rose to five after police discovered
the body of the gunman's wife hidden in the couple's house, an assistant
sheriff said on Wednesday.
The body of the wife of the gunman, Kevin Neal, was discovered late on
Tuesday, hidden under a hole in the floor, Tehama County Assistant
Sheriff Phil Johnston said.
Authorities believe Neal, 44, killed his wife on Monday, the day before
he went on a rampage at multiple sites around the small community of
Rancho Tehama, about 120 miles (193 km) north of Sacramento, killing
four other people. Neal also opened fire at an elementary school before
he was slain by police.
Johnston said many more people might have been killed if staff at the
Rancho Tehama School had not locked Neal out. One child there was shot
but survived, and others were hurt by flying glass and other debris from
the hail of bullets.
"I really, truly believe that we would have had a horrific bloodbath in
that school if that school hadn't taken the action when they did,"
Johnston told a news conference.
School employees locked the doors when they heard gunfire in the
distance.
The employees ushered children inside from the playground, according to
Sacramento television station KCRA, which cited details from the school
district superintendent.
Neal, who was driving a pickup truck, rammed open a school gate, before
a custodian leaned out from behind a building and distracted him,
according to KCRA. Employees finished locking the doors seconds before
Neal walked up and opened fire, the station reported.
Neal, frustrated at not being able to enter the school, drove off and
was shot to death on the road by police, Johnston said.
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An undated booking photo of Kevin Neal of Rancho Tehama, California,
involved in a shooting spree at multiple sites in rural northern
California, provided November 15, 2017. Tehama County Sheriff's
Office/Handout via REUTERS
Neal was armed with two rifles he illegally manufactured and two
handguns registered to someone else, Johnston said, noting that he
was prohibited from having firearms under a court-issued restraining
order.
Authorities did not discover Neal's wife had been killed until
Tuesday, after Neal shot his neighbors and drove around Rancho
Tehama, killing four adults during a 25-minute shooting spree,
Johnston said.
Authorities did not provide a possible motive for the rampage and
did not identify those killed, citing the need to notify relatives.
On Wednesday, one adult injured in the shooting was hospitalized in
critical condition, and a child and three other adults were in
stable condition, Johnston said.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Editing by Leslie
Adler)
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