Police search for motive in Florida mass
shooting
Send a link to a friend
[August 27, 2018]
(Reuters) - Police searched on
Monday for a motive in the third mass shooting in Florida in two years,
which left two people dead and 11 wounded in Jacksonville, before the
gunman killed himself at a video game tournament.
Witnesses told local media that the gunman, identified by police as
David Katz, 24, of Baltimore, was a disgruntled gamer, angry because he
lost Sunday's tournament. It was not clear if he knew his victims.
While police have not identified the victims, family members told
Jacksonville CBS television station WJAX that the two people killed were
Eli Clayton and Taylor Robertson, both were video game contestants.
The Miami Herald also identified the victims: Robertson, 27, of Ballard,
West Virginia, and Clayton, 22, of Woodland Hills, California.
Robertson, a husband and father, was the winner of the tournament last
year and Katz won it the year before, the Herald reported, citing family
and friends posting on the Internet.
The Jacksonville Sheriff's office said 11 other people were wounded by
gunfire and at least two others were injured while fleeing the scene of
Sunday's shooting.
Police say Katz killed himself and his body was found near the bodies of
the two shot dead at The Landing, a popular riverside shopping and
restaurant spot in Jacksonville.
Jacksonville Sheriff Mike Williams declined Sunday to comment on
possible reasons for the attack.
Police and FBI agents swarmed Katz's upscale townhouse in South
Baltimore late on Sunday, multiple media accounts said, including the
Baltimore Sun.
Police also seized Katz's vehicle parked nearby the tournament site.
The shooting took place during a regional qualifier for the Madden 19
online game tournament at the GLHF Game Bar inside a pizza restaurant,
according to the venue's website.
The winners of the contest go forward to the video game finals in Las
Vegas and compete for $165,000.
The latest rampage occurred amid a debate over U.S. gun laws that was
given fresh impetus by the massacre in February of 17 people at a high
school in Parkland, Florida.
Two years ago a gunman killed 49 people at the Pulse nightclub in
Orlando.
President Donald Trump has been briefed and is monitoring the situation
in Jacksonville, the White House said.
[to top of second column]
|
Police officers cordon off a street outside The Jacksonville Landing
after a shooting during a video game tournament in Jacksonville,
Florida August 26, 2018. REUTERS/Joey Roulette
GAME LIVESTREAMED
The bar was livestreaming a football video game competition when the
gunfire started, according to video shared on social media. In the
video, players can be seen reacting to the shots and cries can be
heard before the footage cuts off.
Taylor Poindexter and her boyfriend, Marquis Williams, had traveled
from Chicago to attend the tournament, and they fled when the
gunfire erupted. She said she saw Katz take aim at his victims.
"We did see him, two hands on the gun, walking back, just popping
rounds," Poindexter told reporters. "I was scared for my life and my
boyfriend's."
Another gamer, Chris "Dubby" McFarland, was hospitalized after a
bullet grazed his head. "I feel fine, just a scratch on my head.
Traumatized and devastated," he wrote on Twitter.
The sheriff's office said many people were transported to hospital,
and its deputies found many others hiding in locked areas at The
Landing.
A spokesman for Jacksonville's Memorial Hospital said it was
treating three victims, all of whom were in stable condition. The
conditions of other patients was not available early Monday.
Reacting to news of the shooting during the tournament involving its
game, Madden 19 maker Electronic Arts Inc said it was working with
authorities to gather facts.
"The tragic situation that occurred Sunday in Jacksonville was a
senseless act of violence that we strongly condemn," a company
spokesperson said to Reuters late on Sunday. "Our most heartfelt
sympathies go out to the families of the victims whose lives were
taken today and those who were injured."
(Reporting by Joey Roulete in Jacksonville Fla., Suzannah Gonzales
in Chicago, Devika Krishna Kumar, Maria Caspani in New York, Donna
Owens in Baltimore and Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by Alison
Williams)
[© 2018 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.]
Copyright 2018 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content. |