A man thrown out of the US Air Force for beating his wife and child shot and killed 26 people in a Texas church where his in-laws had sometimes worshipped before shooting himself, officials said yesterday, in the latest in a string of US mass shootings.
The gunman, Devin Patrick Kelley, 26, walked into the white-steepled First Baptist Church in rural Sutherland Springs carrying an assault rifle and wearing black tactical gear, then opened fire during a Sunday prayer service. He wounded at least 20 others, officials said.
After he left the church, two local residents, one of whom was armed, chased him in their vehicles and exchanged gunfire, and Kelley crashed his car and shot himself, dying of his wounds, Wilson County Sheriff Joe Tackitt told CBS News in an interview yesterday morning.
“At this time we believe that he had a self-inflicted gunshot wound,” Tackitt said.
Tackitt said Kelley’s in-laws sometimes attended services at First Baptist, which was cordoned off by yellow crime-scene tape yesterday morning.
“I heard that they attended church from time to time,” Tackitt told Reuters. “Not on a regular basis.”
The attack came a little more than a month after a gunman killed 58 people in Las Vegas in the deadliest shooting by a sole gunman in US history.
The initial death toll matched the fatalities at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, where a man shot and killed 26 children and educators and his mother before taking his own life in December 2012. Those attacks now stand as the fourth deadliest by a single gunman in the United States.
Republican Texas Governor Greg Abbott told CBS there was evidence that Kelley had mental health problems and that he had been denied a Texas gun permit.
“It’s clear this is a person who had violent tendencies, who had some challenges, and someone who was a powder keg, seeming waiting to go off,” Abbott said.
Abbott and other Republican leaders were quick to say that the attack did not influence their support of gun ownership by US citizens — the right to bear arms protected under the Second Amendment of the US Constitution.
“This isn’t a guns situation. I mean we could go into it but it’s a little bit soon to go into it,” US President Donald Trump told reporters while on trip to Asia. “But fortunately somebody else had a gun that was shooting in the opposite direction, otherwise...it would have been much worse. But this is a mental health problem at the highest level.”
Democrats renewed their call to restrict gun ownership following the attack.
“How many more people must die at churches or concerts or schools before we stop letting the @NRA control this country’s gun policies,” Democratic US Senator Elizabeth Warren said on Twitter.
The victims in Sutherland Springs, a community of fewer than 400 people, located about 65km east of San Antonio, included the 14-year-old daughter of church pastor Frank Pomeroy, the family told several television stations.
One couple, Joe and Claryce Holcombe, told the Washington Post they lost eight extended family members, including a pregnant granddaughter-in-law and three of her children.
In rural areas like Sutherland Springs, gun ownership is a part of life and the state’s Republican leaders for years have balked at gun control, arguing that more firearms among responsible owners make the state safer.
John Stiles, a 76-year-old retired US Navy veteran, said he heard the shots from his home about 150 yards  from the church.
“The wind was blowing and there was a bang, bang, bang. It was the gunshots,” Stiles said. “My wife and I were looking for a peaceful and quiet place when we moved here but now that hasn’t worked out.”
Kelley served in its Logistics Readiness unit at Holloman Air Force Base in New Mexico from 2010 until his discharge in 2014, according to the US Air Force.
Kelley was court-martialed in 2012 on charges of assaulting his wife and child, and given a bad-conduct discharge, confinement for 12 months and a reduction in rank, Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek said.
Kelley’s Facebook page has been deleted, but cached photos show a profile picture where he appeared with two small children.
He also posted a photo of what appeared to be an assault rifle, writing a post that read: “She’s a bad ***.”
US President Donald Trump yesterday said the mass shooting in a Texas church that left at least 26 people dead was due to a “mental health problem” and wasn’t “a guns situation”.
Asked what policies he might support in response to the shooting at a press conference in Tokyo, Trump said that based on preliminary reports, the gunman was “a very deranged individual, a lot of problems”.
“We have a lot of mental health problems in our country, as do other countries.
But this isn’t a guns situation,” he said. “Fortunately somebody else had a gun that was shooting in the opposite direction.
“This is a mental health problem at the highest level,” he said. “It’s a very, very sad event.”