CHATTANOOGA,
Tenn. (AP)
A gunman unleashed a barrage of fire at a recruiting center and another U.S. military site a few miles apart in Chattanooga on Thursday, killing at least four Marines and sending service members scrambling for cover as bullets smashed through the windows. The attacker was also killed.
A gunman unleashed a barrage of fire at a recruiting center and another U.S. military site a few miles apart in Chattanooga on Thursday, killing at least four Marines and sending service members scrambling for cover as bullets smashed through the windows. The attacker was also killed.
Federal authorities
said they were investigating the possibility it was an act of terrorism,
and the FBI took charge of the case.
Authorities
identified the gunman as Kuwait-born Muhammad Youssef Abdulazeez, 24,
of Hixson, Tennessee, though the spelling of his first name was in
dispute, with federal officials and records giving at least four
variations.
A U.S. official said there was no
indication Abdulazeez was on the radar of federal law enforcement before
the shootings. The official was not authorized to discuss the case and
spoke on condition of anonymity.
The shootings
took place minutes apart, with the gunman stopping his car and spraying
dozens of bullets first at a recruiting center for all branches of the
military, then apparently driving to a Navy-Marine training center 7
miles away, authorities and witnesses said. The attacks were over within
a half-hour.
In addition to the Marines killed, three people were reported wounded, including a sailor who was seriously hurt.
"Lives
have been lost from some faithful people who have been serving our
country, and I think I join all Tennesseans in being both sickened and
saddened by this," Gov. Bill Haslam said.
Authorities
would not say how the gunman died. FBI agent Ed Reinhold said
Abdulazeez had "numerous weapons" but would not give details.
"We
are looking at every possible avenue, whether it was terrorism, whether
it's domestic, international, or whether it was a simple criminal act,"
Reinhold said.
Within hours of the bloodshed,
law officers with guns drawn swarmed what was believed to be
Abdulazeez's house, and two females were led away in handcuffs.
A
dozen law enforcement vehicles, including a bomb-squad truck and an
open-sided Army green truck carrying armed men, rolled into the Hixson
neighborhood, and police closed off streets and turned away people
trying to reach their homes.
Abdulazeez
graduated from the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga in 2012 with a
bachelor's in electrical engineering and was a student intern a few
years ago at the Tennessee Valley Authority, the federally owned utility
that operates power plants and dams across the South.
The
U.S. National Counterterrorism Center said it has seen nothing so far
to connect Abdulazeez any terrorist organization. But it noted that the
Islamic State group has been encouraging extremists to carry out attacks
in the U.S., and several such homegrown acts or plots have unfolded in
recent months.
The names of the dead were not
immediately released. In addition to the wounded sailor, a Marine was
hit in the leg but not seriously hurt, and a police officer was shot in
the ankle, authorities said.
In Washington,
President Barack Obama pledged a prompt and thorough investigation and
said the White House had been in touch with the Pentagon to make sure
military installations are being vigilant.
"It
is a heartbreaking circumstance for these individuals who served our
country with great valor to be killed in this fashion," he said.
Vice President Joe Biden likewise said: "Their families have already given a lot to the country, and now this."
The
shootings began at the recruiting center on Old Lee Highway, where a
shot rang out around 10:30 or 10:45 a.m., followed a few seconds later
by more fire, said Sgt. 1st Class Robert Dodge, leader of Army
recruiting at the center.
He and his comrades
dropped to the ground and barricaded themselves in a safe place. Dodge
estimated there were 30 to 50 shots fired. Doors and glass were damaged
at the neighboring Air Force, Navy and Marine offices, he said.
Law
enforcement officials told recruiters that the gunman stopped his car
in front of the recruiting station, shot at the building and drove off,
said Brian Lepley, a spokesman with the U.S. Army Recruiting Command in
Fort Knox, Kentucky.
The recruiting center
sits in a short strip mall, between a cellphone business and an Italian
restaurant, with no apparent special security.
The
gunman opened fire next at the Navy Operational Support Center and
Marine Corps Reserve Center Chattanooga. All the dead were killed there.
The
Navy-Marine center, situated in an industrial area of the city, is a
fenced-off installation. Its two entrances have unmanned gates and
concrete barriers that require approaching cars to slow down to drive
around them.
Marilyn Hutcheson, who works at Binswanger Glass across the street, said she heard a barrage of gunfire around 11 a.m.
"I
couldn't even begin to tell you how many," she said. "It was
rapid-fire, like pow-pow-pow-pow-pow, so quickly. The next thing I knew,
there were police cars coming from every direction."
She
ran inside, and she and other employees and a customer waited it out
with the doors locked. The gunfire continued with occasional bursts for
what she estimated was 20 minutes. Bomb squads, SWAT teams and other
local, state and federal authorities rushed to the scene.
"If it was a grievance or terroristic related, we just don't know," she said.
---
Associated
Press writers Eric Tucker, Ted Bridis and Lolita C. Baldor in
Washington; Travis Loller and Kristin M. Hall in Nashville; and Rebecca
Reynolds Yonker and Claire Galofaro in Louisville, Kentucky, contributed
to this report.
---
This
story has been corrected to show that the gunman's hometown is Hixson,
not Hixton, and that the name of the school he attended is the
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, not the University of
Chattanooga.
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