Oklahoma gunman killed 4 people, including surgeon who treated him
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[June 03, 2022] By
Michael Noble Jr.
TULSA, Okla. (Reuters) - A man who fatally
shot five people including himself at an Oklahoma medical building,
after buying an assault-style rifle on the same day, had gone there to
kill a doctor who he blamed for back pain he felt after surgery,
authorities said on Thursday.
The suspect, identified as Michael Louis, entered a building on Tulsa's
St. Francis Health System campus with a semi-automatic weapon on
Wednesday and opened fire at anyone he encountered, Tulsa Police Chief
Wendell Franklin said at a news briefing. Two doctors, a receptionist
and a patient were killed.
Dr. Preston Phillips, 59, the orthopedic surgeon who treated the gunman,
was killed along with Dr. Stephanie Husen, a 48-year-old sports medicine
specialist.
The suspect "came in with the intent to kill Dr. Phillips and anyone who
came in his way," Franklin said. Authorities found a letter on the
gunman that made it clear the attack was targeted.
Authorities named two other fatalities: Amanda Glenn, a receptionist,
and William Love, a patient. The receptionist was initially identified
as Amanda Green, but police later corrected the name on the department's
Facebook page.
"They stood in the way and (the suspect) gunned them down," Franklin
said.
The gunman, who police said lived in Muskogee, Oklahoma, about 50 miles
(80 km) from Tulsa, had been released from the hospital on May 24 after
back surgery, the police chief said. Afterwards, the man called several
times complaining of pain.
The shooting comes on the heels of two other mass killings that have
stunned Americans and reopened a long-standing debate over tightening
controls on firearms ownership and the role of mental health in the
epidemic of gun violence plaguing the United States.
"Enough is enough. This must stop. Hospitals are
pillars of our communities," Chip Kahn, chief executive of the
Federation of American Hospitals, said in a statement.
The gunman purchased the rifle he brought to the hospital at a local gun
shop earlier on Wednesday, authorities said. He also bought a pistol at
a pawn shop three days earlier.
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Emergency personnel work at the scene of a shooting at the Saint
Francis hospital campus, in Tulsa, Oklahoma, June 1, 2022.
REUTERS/Michael Noble Jr./File Photo
The suspect parked on the second floor of the garage attached to the
Natalie building, a five-story medical office building with numerous
offices, rooms and hallways. He entered through the second-floor
entryway and worked his way into the building, Franklin said.
Police arrived at the scene three minutes after receiving a call at
4:53 p.m. CDT (2053 GMT) of a shooting at the hospital.
Officers raced into the building and followed the sound of gunfire
up to the second floor, and made contact with the victims and the
suspect five minutes later, the chief said.
Officers at the scene said they heard a gunshot five minutes later,
which Franklin said was the gunman taking his own life.
“When we get that call, we are going to disregard any safety
measures that we might have for ourselves and we are going to go in
the building to deal with the threat. Our philosophy is that we will
stop the threat and we will do that by any means necessary,"
Franklin said. "That's how we train."
The police chief appeared to be comparing the performance of his
force with that of officers last week in Uvalde, Texas, who waited
about an hour before storming a classroom where the gunman in the
school shooting had barricaded himself. Police have faced growing
criticism that the delay may have cost some of the students their
lives.
(Reporting by Michael Noble Jr.; Writing by Frank McGurty; Editing
by Jonathan Oatis)
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