Gunman who killed 8 at Texas shopping mall had 'neo-Nazi ideation,'
officials say
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[May 10, 2023]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -The man who shot eight people to death at a Dallas-area
shopping mall over the weekend harbored neo-Nazi sympathies but appeared
to have targeted his victims at random, without regard for race, age or
sex, Texas law enforcement officials said on Tuesday.
Authorities also disclosed new details about the gunman's background.
They said he was discharged from U.S. Army basic training 15 years ago,
had once worked as a private security guard and suffered from an
unspecified mental illness.
The suspect, previously identified as Mauricio Garcia, 33, opened fire
with an AR-15-style rifle on Saturday at the crowded Allen Premium
Outlets mall in Allen, Texas.
The carnage ended about four minutes later when a lone police officer
confronted and fatally shot Garcia in a swift response that "undoubtedly
saved countless lives, said Hank Sibley, a regional director of the
Texas Department of Public Safety.
The officer was not publicly identified.
The eight people slain in the attack included three children - two young
sisters as well as a 3-year-old boy from a different family whose
parents were also killed. In addition, 10 other people, ages 5 to 61,
were wounded.
Investigators recovered three firearms, including the murder weapon,
from the gunman's possession, and five more from his vehicle, and Garcia
had legally obtained all eight guns, according to Sibley.
"The big question we're dealing with now is: what's his motive? Why did
he do this? We don't know," Sibley said at an afternoon press
conference, adding investigators believe Garcia acted alone.
From evidence reviewed so far, including clothing patches and tattoos,
"we do know that he had neo-Nazi ideation," but it was too early in the
investigation to say whether the shooting could be considered an act of
domestic terrorism, Sibley told reporters.
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Officers with the Allen Police
Department man the mobile command post the day after a gunman shot
multiple people at the Dallas-area Allen Premium Outlets mall in
Allen, Texas, U.S. May 7, 2023. REUTERS/Jeremy Lock
"To me, it looks like he targeted the location rather than a
specific group of people," Sibley said. "He was very random in the
people he killed. It didn’t matter the age, race or sex. He just
shot people, which is horrific in itself."
The assailant had enlisted in the Army in 2008 but was discharged
before completing basic training over "some questions about his
fitness for duty," Sibley said.
Garcia, who had no criminal history before Saturday's shooting, also
had once obtained a state security license, since expired, and
worked as a security guard for several firms some time ago, Sibley
said.
Authorities have given few details about the nature and extent of
Garcia's neo-Nazi sympathies.
Multiple news outlets have reported in recent days that the gunman
left behind a social media profile filled with white-supremacist
ideology, praise for Hitler and diatribes vilifying racial
minorities and women.
At the time of the shooting, Garcia also wore a patch bearing an "RWDS"
insignia, a symbol associated with violent right-wing extremists,
including the Proud Boys, according to news media organizations.
RWDS is an acronym known to stand for "Right Wing Death Squad."
The author behind some of the posts under investigation repeatedly
suggested he was of Hispanic heritage and as recently as last month
included a post saying that "white people and Hispanics have a lot
in common," the New York Times reported.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Additional reporting by
Daniel Trotta and Dan Whitcomb; Editing by Will Dunham and David
Gregorio)
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