Texas gunman who killed seven had previously failed background check for
firearm
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[September 03, 2019]
By Alex Dobuzinskis
(Reuters) - The gunman who killed seven
people and wounded 23 others in a rolling rampage across West Texas
obtained an assault-style rifle despite failing a background check,
state and law enforcement officials said on Monday.
The gunman, identified by police as Seth Aaron Ator, 36, carried out the
shooting spree in the neighboring cities of Midland and Odessa on
Saturday, a short time after he was fired from his trucking job. He
called local emergency 911 responders and then an FBI tip line to make
rambling statements, officials said.
In those calls, Ator did not threaten to commit violence, they said.
But he would soon go on to open fire on civilians and police officers in
a roving series of shootings, at one point hijacking a U.S. Postal
Service truck before dying in an exchange of gunfire with law
enforcement, police said.
It was the second mass shooting in Texas in four weeks, and the state's
Republican governor, Greg Abbott, expressed frustration on Monday the
suspect had a firearm.
"We must keep guns out of criminals' hands," Abbott said on Twitter.
Ator was rejected when he tried to buy a gun and his name was run
through the National Instant Criminal Background Check System, John
Wester, assistant special agent in charge of the Dallas office of the
U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, told a news
conference.
Authorities could not immediately say how he obtained a firearm, Wester
added.
It also was not immediately clear when or why he had failed the
background check. Online court records showed Ator had convictions in
2002 for criminal trespass and evading arrest.
But Odessa Police Chief Michael Gerke told a news conference on Monday
that Ator's past interactions with police in that area, where the gunman
lived, were not serious enough to have legally prevented him from having
a firearm.
President Donald Trump over the weekend called the Odessa-Midland
shooter "a very sick person," but said increased background checks on
gun buyers would not have prevented many mass shootings in the United
States in the past few years.
Democrats in Congress want to close loopholes that under federal law,
allow certain people to sell firearms without requiring background
checks, such as in sales conducted online, at gun shows or out of their
homes.
Trump said last month he had spoken to the National Rifle Association
gun rights group about closing loopholes in background checks but he did
not want to take away the constitutional right to own guns.
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People gather for a vigil following Saturday's shooting in Odessa,
Texas, U.S. September 1, 2019. REUTERS/Callaghan O'Hare
PULLED OVER
Hours after he was fired from his trucking job and 15 minutes after
he called the FBI tip line, Ator was pulled over in a sedan by Texas
state troopers on Interstate 20 in Midland for failing to use a turn
signal, police said.
Armed with an AR-type rifle, Ator fired out the back window of his
gold-colored car, wounding one trooper. Then he drove away spraying
gunfire indiscriminately, the Texas Department of Public Safety
said.
At one point, Ator abandoned his car and hijacked a U.S. postal van,
mortally wounding the letter carrier, identified by officials as
Mary Grandos, 29.
He shot seven people to death, leaving behind a trail of 15 crime
scenes with 23 other people wounded in the rampage, officials said.
Three police officers were shot and wounded - one from Midland, one
from Odessa and one state trooper - all in stable condition at
hospitals.
Ator was later cornered by officers in the parking lot of a cinema
complex in Odessa where he was shot and killed.
The FBI has scoured Ator's home, Christopher Combs, special agent in
charge of the FBI office in San Antonio, told a news conference on
Monday.
"I can tell you the conditions reflect what we believe his mental
state was going into this," Combs said.
"He was on a long spiral of going down. He didn’t wake up Saturday
morning and walk into his company and then it happened. He went into
that company in trouble. He's probably been in trouble for a while,"
Combs said.
The rampage came about a month after a gunman from the Dallas area
killed 22 people on Aug. 3 at a Walmart store about 255 miles (410
km) west of Midland in El Paso, Texas.
(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Additional reporting
by Keith Coffman in Denver and Rich McKay in Atlanta; Editing by
Bill Tarrant and Peter Cooney)
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