Ten killed in mass shooting at Colorado grocery store, injured suspect
in custody
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[March 23, 2021]
By Alyson McClaran and Keith Coffman
BOULDER, Colo. (Reuters) - A man seen
bloodied and limping as he was led away by police in handcuffs has been
arrested on suspicion of killing 10 people, including a police officer,
at a Colorado grocery store, marking America's second fatal mass
shooting in a week.
The gunman, who was not publicly identified, opened fire at a King
Soopers outlet in Boulder, about 28 miles (45 km) northwest of Denver,
in the late afternoon on Monday, sending panicky shoppers and employees
scurrying for cover as hundreds of police officers converged on the
area.
Media reports said the suspect, who police said was believed to have
acted alone, was armed with a rifle.
Authorities gave few details and offered no possible motive for the
bloodshed, which came six days after a gunman went on a killing spree in
the Atlanta area, shooting eight people to death at three day spas
before he was arrested.
Like those shootings, Monday's violence in Colorado unfolded in a place
of business at the hands of a single armed assailant.
"We were at the checkout, and shots just started going off," said Sarah
Moonshadow, 42, a shopper who was in the store with her adult son,
Nicholas, when the gunfire began.
"And I said, 'Nicholas get down.' And Nicholas ducked. And we just
started listening and there, just repetitive shots ... and I just said,
'Nicholas, run.'"
Moonshadow said she tried to attend to a victim she saw lying on the
pavement just outside the store, but her son pulled her away, telling
her, 'We have to go.'" The woman broke down in sobs recounting their
ordeal, adding, "I couldn't help anybody."
Boulder Police Chief Maris Herold, her voice choking with emotion, said
10 people perished at the scene. Among them was 51-year-old officer Eric
Talley, an 11-year veteran of the Boulder police force, who Herold said
was the first to arrive at the store. Talley had seven children, and had
been looking for a less dangerous job, according to his father.
Police said the accused gunman was taken to a hospital for treatment of
injuries he sustained in the violence but did not explain how he was
hurt. There was no word on when he might face an initial court
appearance.
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First responders stand in salute as a procession of law enforcement
vehicles drive past in honor of fallen Boulder police officer Eric
Talley, who was shot and killed by a gunman at a King Soopers
grocery store in Boulder, Colorado, U.S. March 22, 2021.
REUTERS/Kevin Mohatt
Video footage broadcast by television stations showed a shirtless,
bearded man in boxer shorts being led away from the store limping
and in handcuffs, before he was placed on a stretcher and loaded
into an ambulance. One of his legs appeared covered in blood.
The killings added to a long line of mass shootings in Colorado
accounting for some of the most shocking episodes of gun violence in
modern U.S. history.
In 2012, a young man dressed in tactical gear burst into a movie
theater in the Denver suburb of Aurora during a midnight screening
and sprayed the audience with gunfire, killing 12 and wounding 70.
In 1999, a pair of students went on a shooting rampage at Columbine
High School near Littleton, Colorado, murdering 12 classmates and a
teacher before taking their own lives.
Video captured by an onlooker, apparently while the shooting was
still in progress, was posted to social media and aired on TV
stations. It showed two bodies lying in the grocery store parking
lot, before the person with the camera walks inside and films a
third body, as three shots are heard in the background.
The United Food and Commercial Workers International Union, Local 7,
which represents 32 employees at the King Soopers outlet, credited
some of the grocery workers with helping customers escape through a
rear exit.
It also thanked customers and emergency responders who "acted
swiftly to prevent even greater loss of life."
The shooting occurred about 2 miles from the flagship campus of the
University of Colorado, in the Table Mesa area of the city that is
home to a residential neighborhood and the hilltop laboratory of the
National Center for Atmospheric Research.
(Reporting by Alyson McClaran in Boulder, Colo., and Keith Coffman
in Denver; Additional reporting by Kevin Mohatt in Boulder, Sharon
Bernstein in Sacramento, Calif., and Dan Whitcomb in Los Angeles;
Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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