Authorities were warned that gunman was planning to attack Yellowstone
facility
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[September 20, 2024]
By MEAD GRUVER
CHEYENNE, Wyo. (AP) — Hours before a gunman opened fire at an entrance
to a Yellowstone National Park employee dining hall, injuring one
ranger, authorities had been warned he planned to carry out a mass
shooting at the facility, officials said Thursday.
The revelation came as authorities released videos and other new details
about the July 4 shooting in which rangers stationed to protect the
facility at Canyon Village killed Samson Lucas Bariah Fussner, 28, of
Milton, Florida, after he opened fire with a semiautomatic rifle.
Authorities had been looking for Fussner for hours before the shooting
after a security guard called 911 just after midnight on July 4, saying
that Fussner had just held a woman hostage and told her he was going to
attack the employee dining hall.
The videos from park rangers' body-worn cameras show a chaotic scene
during and right after the shootout in the world's first national park,
a place millions of people enjoy every year for its wild nature and
tranquility. In one video, a ranger is seen firing toward Fussner from
inside a vehicle access door in the building.
In another video, a different ranger outside the building approaches the
wounded Fussner as he lay still on the ground, dressed in black and with
one hand raised upward at the elbow. Fussner remains motionless as the
ranger takes his semiautomatic rifle, unclipping it from a strap.
Fussner also was armed with a semiautomatic pistol, according to park
officials.
Body-camera footage shows a third ranger running to the scene from in
between nearby employee dormitories, yelling to unseen people: "Get back
in your dorms!” As the ranger runs, a dozen gunshots are heard.
“Stay down! Stay down!” the ranger shouts to two people crouching behind
the front wheel of an SUV. Authorities blurred out the faces of all
people in the videos, shielding their identities.
As the ranger approaches the corner of a building, two other rangers
stand with rifles pointed and somebody yells: “Suspect’s down, he’s not
moving!”
Inside the back entrance where the gunman attacked, photos showed at
least 18 bullet holes in the walls. There, the first ranger to trade
fire with Fussner was wounded in a “lower extremity,” according to park
officials.
Footage shows rangers approaching their wounded colleague sitting in a
concrete stairwell landing.
"You all right?" someone asks.
“Yeah, I'm good,” the ranger responds, flashing a thumbs-up.
Medical workers tried to help Fussner but a doctor pronounced him dead,
according to park officials.
Besides Fussner, the ranger was the only person physically hurt that day
in an area crowded with some 200 park concession workers and visitors.
The ranger was treated at a hospital and released within a few days,
according to park officials.
Park officials have not identified the rangers involved in the
confrontation, including the five at the shooting scene. Of the five,
four activated their body-worn video cameras during and soon after the
gunfire.
National Park Service policy requires rangers to activate their cameras
whenever they begin making contact with somebody “except when faced with
an emergency situation requiring immediate action to preserve life or
safety,” according to a National Park Service narrative accompanying
Thursday's edited sequence of body camera video, a recording of the
initial 911 call, photos and diagrams of the scene.
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This image made from a video taken from an unidentified Yellowstone
National Park ranger's body-worn camera and provided by the National
Park Service shows Samson Lucas Bariah Fussner shortly after he
opened fire at an entrance to a Yellowstone National Park employee
dining room and was killed when rangers shot back, July 4, 2024, in
Canyon Village, Wyo. (National Park Service via AP)
The shooting led authorities to close off Canyon Lodge, a complex of
hotel rooms, cabins and dining facilities, for several days. The
facilities are run by Yellowstone’s main tourism concessionaire,
Xanterra Parks and Resorts, where Fussner had been working for the
summer season.
Park rangers had been looking for Fussner for hours before the
shooting. Late on July 3, Fussner held another concessionaire worker
against her will with a gun and knife at her residence in Canyon
Village.
Early on July 4, the woman reported that Fussner threatened to kill
her and others, including carrying out a mass shooting at
Independence Day events outside the park, park officials said in a
statement five days after the shooting.
On Thursday, the text and voiceover narrative added that Fussner
told the woman he planned to carry out mass shootings at the
employee dining room as well as July 4 events outside the park.
Officials have not said whether Fussner had released the woman or
whether she had escaped.
Yellowstone officials didn't immediately respond to an email
Thursday asking why they didn't previously disclose that Fussner
told the woman he planned a mass shooting at the dining room.
The incident remains under investigation by the FBI and authorities
have not yet cleared rangers of wrongdoing in the confrontation. Not
all materials related to the confrontation have been released.
The FBI did not immediately respond Thursday if anyone besides park
rangers witnessed the shooting.
After receiving a 911 call just after midnight on July 4 that
Fussner had taken the woman hostage, rangers found Fussner’s vehicle
but not him. Inside, they found a handgun.
The subsequent overnight search for Fussner involved more than 20
law enforcement rangers, including a park special response team.
Around 8 a.m. the next morning, Fussner approached the dining
facility service entrance and opened fire.
Fussner’s Facebook page suggested he was proud about landing a
concession job in Yellowstone, a typically seasonal gig that often
involves cooking and serving food to the park’s 3 million summer
visitors. Such jobs usually go to somewhat younger people in their
early 20s; often they are college students visiting from other
countries.
Fussner posted a photo of his Xanterra Parks and Resorts badge and
photos of him in snowy Yellowstone scenes from mid-May. The posts
did not hint at anger or other motivation.
Yellowstone often draws headlines for sometimes deadly mishaps
involving wildlife and the park’s famous hot springs. But shootings
— despite the park’s millions of visitors and high rate of gun
ownership in the region — are rare.
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