Wednesday, October 30, 2013

EX-CON KILLS MOM, AUNT, 3 OTHERS IN TERRELL, TEXAS SHOOTING SPREE

Police chief says the shooting spree has left his small rural town in a state of shock

The killer has a criminal history going back to 1995, including convictions for assaulting a family member, drug possession and weapons charges. His brother said he had been living with their mother and struggled with drug addiction.

SHOOTING SPREE LEAVES FIVE DEAD IN SMALL TEXAS TOWN

AFP
October 29, 2013

A shooting spree at four homes and a gas station left five people dead and a suspect in custody, local media reported Tuesday.

A woman who answered the phone at the police station in Terrell, Texas was unable to provide information on the shooting, telling AFP only that "the subject is in custody."

He was identified in local media reports as Charles Brownlow, a man with a lengthy criminal history.

NBC news reported that neighbors identified the first woman shot as Brownlow's aunt, whose body was discovered in her home at about 5 pm Monday.

Half an hour later a firefighter noticed smoke coming from the home of Brownlow's mother. Her body was discovered inside the charred house.

Things were quiet for a little while, but at 10 pm shots were fired at the home of Brownlow's girlfriend, NBC news reported. Nobody was hurt there.

The bodies of a woman and a man were found dead in another home at 10:27 pm. A three-year-old child discovered in the home was unhurt.

Ten minutes later, a convenience store clerk was shot dead at Ali's Market. Brownlow tried to flee police in a car stolen from his mother's house, but he crashed into a fence and then ran off into the woods. He was captured with the help of infrared cameras and helicopters at 1:30 am Tuesday.

"We're all in a state of shock, you have a tendency to think, 'How can that happen here?'" Terrell Police Chief Jody Lay told reporters at an early morning press conference.

"This is a country community, a rural community, people are real close and this is going to have a really big impact on us."

1 comment:

bob walsh said...

Its a good thing drugs are nonviolent or somebody might have gotten hurt.