10:05 24/07/2015
Louisiana - A lone gunman opened fire inside a crowded movie
theater in Lafayette, Louisiana, on Thursday evening, killing two people
and injuring seven others before taking his own life, police said.
The gunfire erupted during a 19:00 showing of the film Trainwreck and took place almost three years to the day after a massacre at a cinema in Aurora, Colorado, that killed 12 people.
Lafayette
Police Chief Jim Craft said two people died in the hail of bullets
before the 58-year-old suspect killed himself with a handgun as officers
rushed to the scene shortly after 19:30.
Seven people suffered injuries ranging from non life-threatening to critical, Craft said.
Authorities
said they knew the gunman's identity but were not releasing his name
during the early stage of the investigation. They offered no immediate
motive and did not disclose any clues they might have found.
"The
shooter is deceased. We may never know," Craft said, adding that the man
appeared to have a criminal history that he described as "pretty old."
Batman
Police
officials said that bomb-sniffing dogs had alerted on a backpack inside
the theater and that they had also signaled "suspicious" items inside
the suspect's car. A robot was being used to probe the vehicle further.
Investigators
also headed to the gunman's home. His body remained inside the theater
several hours later. None of the victims, who were described as ranging
in age from teens to early 60s, were immediately identified by
authorities.
Witnesses said the gunman abruptly stood up in the darkness of the theater about 20 minutes into the movie and began shooting.
"He
wasn't saying anything. I didn't hear anybody screaming either," Katie
Domingue, who was watching the film with her fiance, told the local
Advertiser newspaper.
Republican Louisiana Governor Bobby Jindal
traveled to Lafayette, a city of about 120 000 people roughly 90km
southwest of Baton Rouge.
"As governor, as a father and as a
husband, whenever we hear about these senseless acts of violence it
makes us both furious and sad at the same time," he said at a briefing.
Jindal
said that two of the wounded victims were teachers and that one of them
managed to pull a fire alarm in the theater after being shot.
The
shooting came three years after a gunman opened fire at a movie theater
in Aurora, Colorado, during a midnight screening of the Batman film, The Dark Knight Rises, killing 12 people and wounding 70 others.
James
Holmes, a former neuroscience graduate student at the University of
Colorado, was convicted last week on 165 counts of murder, attempted
murder and explosives in the July 20, 2012, rampage.
Jurors in
that case were trying to determine if Holmes should face the death
penalty or life in prison during a penalty phase of that case.
The United States has witnessed several mass shootings in the last two months.
A
gunman is accused of a racially motivated shooting at a black church in
South Carolina that killed nine church members in June. More recently, a
gunman attacked military offices in Tennessee last week, killing five
US servicemen.
Jindal, who last month announced his candidacy for
president, said he had ordered National Guard members at offices and
other facilities to be armed in the wake of the Tennessee attack.
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