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		Gunman kills one and then himself at Tennessee supermarket, 12 wounded
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		 [September 24, 2021] 
		By Peter Szekely 
 (Reuters) -A gunman killed one person, 
		wounded 12 and then apparently killed himself at a Tennessee supermarket 
		on Thursday, pursuing panicked shoppers and employees as they fled down 
		the aisles while some took refuge in store freezers, police said.
 
 Of the 12 wounded, one was in surgery and another in intensive care 
		after the shooting in the Memphis suburb of Collierville, Police Chief 
		Dale Lane told reporters. A 13th person was treated for an anxiety 
		attack, he said.
 
 Police arrived on the scene almost immediately after the shooting at the 
		Kroger grocery in Collierville, a town of about 50,000 some 30 miles (50 
		km) east of Memphis in southwestern Tennessee.
 
 
		
		 
		"We found people hiding in freezers and in locked offices. They were 
		doing what they had been trained to do - run, hide, fight," Lane told 
		reporters, calling the gun violence "the most horrific event that has 
		occurred in Collierville history."
 
 Lane withheld information about the shooter while investigators 
		attempted to determine if anyone else may have assisted him in the 
		attack, although he did say there was no evidence of terrorism.
 
 WREG-TV reported the shooter was an employee who had been fired on 
		Thursday, citing an unnamed law enforcement source.
 
 Brignetta Dickerson, a Kroger employee, told WREG that she instructed 
		fellow employees and customers when the shooting broke out to follow her 
		to the back of the store and closed the door behind them, but the gunman 
		followed.
 
 "He kept on shooting and shooting and shooting. He shot one of my 
		co-workers in the head and then shot one of the customers in the 
		stomach," Dickerson said, adding that the shooter appeared to have a 
		military-style rifle.
 
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			Emergency personnel respond to a shooting at a Kroger supermarket in 
			suburban Memphis, Tennessee, U.S., September 23, 2021. Joe Rondone/The 
			Commercial Appeal/USA Today via REUTERS. 
            
			
			 
            "I'm a little shaky but I'm OK. I got God on my 
			side," Dickerson said.
 There were 44 employees and an undetermined number of customers at 
			the store when the shooting broke out, Lane said.
 
 Thursday's violence was the latest in a string of deadly workplace 
			mass shootings that have erupted in U.S. cities, claiming dozens of 
			lives and leaving many more wounded this year.
 
 Ten people were killed in March when a gunman opened fire at a King 
			Soopers supermarket owned by Kroger Co in Boulder, Colorado.
 
 Kroger spokeswoman Teresa Dickerson said the Collierville store 
			would be closed until further notice.
 
 "It is an emotional roller coaster, as you can imagine," Dickerson 
			told reporters. "And we, of course, have provided counseling for 
			every associate, who's here today, and we will continue to do that."
 
 (Reporting by Peter Szekely; Additional reportint by Barbara 
			Goldberg, Steve Gorman and Daniel Trotta; Writing by Steve Gorman 
			and Daniel Trotta; Editing by Sonya Hepinstall and Peter Cooney)
 
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