Post by Admin on Dec 2, 2015 5:01:19 GMT
Colorado Springs shooting: What we know
www.9news.com/story/news/local/2015/11/27/colorado-springs-shooting/76454812/
Mallory E Davis and Raquel Villanueva, KUSA November 28, 2015
COLORADO SPRINGS – Two civilians and a University of Colorado-Colorado Springs police officer were killed when a gunman opened fire inside a Planned Parenthood clinic on Friday.
Colorado Springs police said nine others, including five officers and four civilians, were transported to area hospitals and are in good condition.
The suspect has been identified as Robert Lewis Dear, 57. He is currently being held without bond. Access to Dear's address in Hartsel, Colo. is closed, according to the Park County Sheriff's Office.
On Saturday morning, police were able to clear the scene and no additional people were found. The "items" Dear left at the scene were secured, processed and are no longer a threat.
Police said CC cameras in the Planned Parenthood played a role in the suspect's capture.
University of Colorado-Colorado Springs officer Garrett Swasey, 44, was killed while responding to the active shooter situation. Swasey was a six-year veteran of the UCCS Police Department.
24 other people were evacuated, unharmed from the Planned Parenthood building.
Police said there were 300 people sheltered in places between the King Soopers and surrounding businesses during the shooting situation.
Dear was taken into custody just before 5 p.m., after a nearly five-hour standoff involving multiple agencies.
If you are experiencing anxiety over the shooting, you can call the Colorado Mental Health Crisis Line.
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NEWS NOV 28 2015
Planned Parenthood Gunman Gives Up After Colorado Standoff That Left 3 Dead
by PETE WILLIAMS, ANDREW BLANKSTEIN, PHIL HELSEL, JILLIAN SEDERHOLM and MIGUEL ALMAGUER
www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/report-active-shooter-near-planned-parenthood-colorado-springs-n470431
A gunman armed with an AK-47-style weapon burst into a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs Friday, shooting at police from inside the building during the ensuing five-hour standoff.
Three people, including a police officer, died during the incident, Colorado Springs Police Department Lt. Catherine Buckley said. Nine others, including five officers, were wounded. All nine were in good condition, Buckley said.
Memorial Hospital in Colorado Springs said Saturday of the four patients it had received, two were discharged. There was no immediate word on the patients at other hospitals.
The slain officer was identified as Garrett Swasey, 44, of the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs police department. He was married and had a son and daughter, according to the website of his church, Hope Chapel in Colorado Springs.
The gunman, who police named as 57-year-old Robert Dear, walked out of the facility just before 5 p.m. local time and surrendered.
Gunshots were first reported near the facility on Centennial Boulevard in Colorado Springs at around 11:38 a.m. The shooter began firing in the parking lot and then entered the building, a law enforcement official told NBC News. The shooting unfolded during a regular working day, as patients waited for appointments and staff members attended to them.
"I heard everyone in the lobby screaming 'Get down! Get down!' and then I saw a gunman walking with a shotgun just shooting randomly outside of Planned Parenthood," Kentanya Craion said after getting out of the building.
The gunman "seemed calm, but crazy," she added, describing the man in a hunter's jacket and hat as "mumbling and ranting while he was shooting."
She said she ran into an open room with two others where they barricaded themselves inside for about five hours as they heard shots ring out.
Authorities soon tapped into the building's video surveillance system, and were able to monitor the gunman's movements, officials said.
Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers told NBC News that police watched for several hours on live video as the suspect hunkered down inside.
The officers watching passed along sketches of the building layout to teams inside, Suthers said. And as the gunman moved about the building, police rescued some of those trapped inside the other areas.
Other officials told NBC News that several people escaped during the ordeal thanks in part to police personnel who rammed the side of the building with a truck.
Police officers who responded were shot at with officers describing how they were "pinned down" by gunfire.
Police announced Saturday that they had cleared the building, which they had continued to inspect overnight to make sure several unidentified items the gunman brought with him were not dangerous.
Investigators were also trying to identify an item left in what is believed to be the suspect's car, a law enforcement source said. The device appeared to be a propane tank with wires sticking out, the source said.
University Chancellor Pam Shockley Zalabak said Swasey, the slain officer, was responding in support of city police to the active shooter situation when he was killed.
"We mourn the loss of a very brave police officer," Mayor Suthers said.
"While this was a terrible, terrible tragedy, it could have been much worse but for the actions of the first responders, particularly the police officers involved," Suthers told reporters.
"They were able to get people out of the building safely, and they were able to make sure that the perpetrator was isolated in a place where there could be communication back and forth about where he was," Suthers said.
Joan Motolinia said his sister was in the clinic when gunshots were heard. "She called me and she was telling me that there was a shooting — I heard the shooting," he said. "She couldn't say too much because she was afraid."
"She was telling me she was hiding under a table," Motolinia said. He said he heard more shots over the phone, and his sister hung up.
Caren Kesterson was working at a nearby Supercuts hair salon when two police cars sped past.
"We got up and we looked outside, and it was like almost immediately we heard gunshots — easily over 20," Kesterson told MSNBC by telephone.
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper issued a statement to victims families shortly after the fatalities were announced: "Our deepest condolences go out to the families and loved ones of those who were killed, including UCCS Officer Garrett Swasey, and those who were injured," he said.
"Our thoughts continue to be with law enforcement, the Colorado Springs community, and the staff and patients at Planned Parenthood."
A White House official said President Barack Obama had been notified about the situation, and he released a statement on Saturday calling for tighter gun control laws.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said in a tweet that "Today and every day, we hashtagStandWithPP," referring to Planned Parenthood.
Vicki Cowart, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Rocky Mountains, said Friday that "we don't yet know if Planned Parenthood was in fact the target of this attack."
But she vowed in a statement: "We will never back away from providing care in a safe, supportive environment that millions of people rely on and trust."
Cecile Richards, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, thanked law enforcement in a statement released Friday.
"Our hearts go out to the families and loved ones of the brave law enforcement officers who put themselves in harm's way in Colorado Springs," she said. "We are profoundly grateful for their heroism in helping to protect all women, men and young people as they access basic health care in this country."
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Colorado Springs, Colorado (CNN)Robert Lewis Dear, the suspect in Friday's shootings at the Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs, mentioned "baby parts" to investigators and in later interviews expressed anti-abortion and anti-government views, a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation told CNN.
Law enforcement officials caution it's too early to determine a motive in the case until all evidence is gathered and examined. That process is still going on. Though the state is taking the lead, the FBI is conducting its own investigation to determine whether federal charges will be filed.
Huckabee: Planned Parenthood shooting is 'domestic terrorism'
The official told CNN that propane tanks were found in the area of Dear's car in the parking lot, and that authorities believe he was trying to shoot them to cause an explosion.
The siege ended Friday when the suspect dropped his gun and surrendered in a hallway once the SWAT team brought in a BearCat armored vehicle and Dear was cornered.
'Crime against women'
Attorney General Loretta Lynch has called the shooting, which killed three people and wounded nine more, a "crime against women"; Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper has said it's "a tragedy that is beyond speech."
Among the victims was Garrett Swasey, a University of Colorado-Colorado Springs police officer who rushed to the clinic to offer his assistance. "There was no way any of us could have kept him here," UCCS Police Chief Brian McPike said of Swasey during a Saturday evening vigil. "He was always willing to go. ... He had an enthusiasm that was hard to quell."
Colorado Springs Police Chief Peter Carey said that the identities of the other two victims likely will not be released until Monday, after autopsies have been performed.
In addition to the three killed, five officers and four civilians were hospitalized for wounds sustained in the shooting. Lt. Catherine Buckley said Friday night all were in good condition. By late Saturday afternoon, officials said five patients remained in two hospitals.
Opposition to abortion eyed as motive
"I'm not going to say the perpetrator's name," a somber Hickenlooper said Saturday, referring to Dear, the man authorities suspect was the shooter.
Dear, 57, is being held without bail in a Colorado Springs jail, according to the El Paso County Sheriff's Office.
Robert Dear is suspected in the Planned Parenthood shooting.
While authorities said that a motive had not yet been established, Mayor John Suthers said "inferences (could be made) from where it took place," the Denver Post reported.
Vicki Cowart, president of Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains, went beyond an inference, saying the shooter "was motivated by opposition to safe and legal abortion." Lynch, who called the "unconscionable attack" a "crime against women receiving health care services," pledged the full resources of her office for the investigation.
Planned Parenthood, which delivers reproductive health care and sex education to women and men across the United States, has come under attack before.
At least three Planned Parenthood buildings have been vandalized since September, when the organization was criticized in Washington and by some Republican presidential candidates after an anti-abortion group released videos alleging that it sold fetal organs and parts for profit. Planned Parenthood has disputed the veracity of the videos, contending that they are heavily edited and provide a distorted account.
Who is Robert Lewis Dear?
Based on a public records search, Dear appears to have lived in Colorado for only about a year. In October 2014, Dear purchased property in Hartsel, a rural community about 65 miles west of the clinic, for $6,000. Zigmond Post, a neighbor, said one of the few interactions he had was when Dear brought him some anti-Obama pamphlets. "That's about all I've run into him," he said.
Prior to Hartsel, Dear appears to have spent much of his life in the Carolinas.
WLOS, a CNN affiliate in Asheville, North Carolina, photographed a dilapidated-looking mountain cabin that Dear reportedly called home in rural Buncombe County. The sheriff's office there said it only had one recorded contact with Dear, a civil citation issued in 2014 for allowing his dogs to run wild.
A decade before that, Dear was arrested and charged with two counts of animal cruelty while living in South Carolina, but he was found not guilty in a 2003 bench trial. In 2002, Dear was charged with being a peeping Tom; those counts were dismissed in South Carolina. In 1997, Dear's wife accused him of domestic assault, although no charges were pressed, according to records provided by the Colleton County, South Carolina, sheriff's office.
Dear is scheduled to appear at 1:30 p.m. Monday before Chief Judge Gilbert Martinez, El Paso County court spokesman Rob McCallum said.
Scanners capture police plans
Conversations captured over the police scanner gave glimpses into Friday's drama as well as the strategic debate about what to do.
Despite initial fears that the gunman might be running around outside, authorities later determined that he was inside the Planned Parenthood building -- once he got through the front door -- throughout the siege, Buckley said.
Joan Motolinia's sister was among those inside. She called her brother Friday afternoon, and "I heard the shooting," a tearful Motolinia said.
"She couldn't say much because she was afraid," he said.
Fear, horror, disbelief among witnesses
Kentanya Craion, who had visited the clinic for an ultrasound, said she saw the gunman shooting as she left outside in the parking lot, so she turned around and ran back inside. "He had no remorse," Craion said. "This was just a game to him."
Obama: 'Enough is enough'
In a statement Saturday, President Barack Obama didn't mention the controversies surrounding Planned Parenthood, but he did offer praise for Swasey, condolences to the families of the victims and condemnation of the attack as another example of gun violence.
"The last thing Americans should have to do, over the holidays or any day, is comfort the families of people killed by gun violence -- people who woke up in the morning and bid their loved ones goodbye with no idea it would for the last time," Obama said. "And yet, two days after Thanksgiving, that's what we are forced to do again."
As he has time and again after mass shootings, the President called on policymakers to do something to prevent them.
"This is not normal. We can't let it become normal," he said. "If we truly care about this -- if we're going to offer up our thoughts and prayers again, for God knows how many times, with a truly clean conscience -- then we have to do something about the easy accessibility of weapons of war on our streets to people who have no business yielding them.
"Period. Enough is enough."
CNN's Dan Simon, Catherine E. Shoichet, Amanda Watts, Carma Hassan, Amanda Watts, Faith Karimi, Dani Stewart, Joe Sutton, Jason Hanna, Josh Berlinger, Kim Hutcherson, Michael Martinez and Nelson Quiñones contributed to this report.
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www.9news.com/media/cinematic/video/76510590/
www.9news.com/story/news/local/2015/11/27/colorado-springs-shooting/76454812/
Mallory E Davis and Raquel Villanueva, KUSA November 28, 2015
COLORADO SPRINGS – Two civilians and a University of Colorado-Colorado Springs police officer were killed when a gunman opened fire inside a Planned Parenthood clinic on Friday.
Colorado Springs police said nine others, including five officers and four civilians, were transported to area hospitals and are in good condition.
The suspect has been identified as Robert Lewis Dear, 57. He is currently being held without bond. Access to Dear's address in Hartsel, Colo. is closed, according to the Park County Sheriff's Office.
On Saturday morning, police were able to clear the scene and no additional people were found. The "items" Dear left at the scene were secured, processed and are no longer a threat.
Police said CC cameras in the Planned Parenthood played a role in the suspect's capture.
University of Colorado-Colorado Springs officer Garrett Swasey, 44, was killed while responding to the active shooter situation. Swasey was a six-year veteran of the UCCS Police Department.
24 other people were evacuated, unharmed from the Planned Parenthood building.
Police said there were 300 people sheltered in places between the King Soopers and surrounding businesses during the shooting situation.
Dear was taken into custody just before 5 p.m., after a nearly five-hour standoff involving multiple agencies.
If you are experiencing anxiety over the shooting, you can call the Colorado Mental Health Crisis Line.
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NEWS NOV 28 2015
Planned Parenthood Gunman Gives Up After Colorado Standoff That Left 3 Dead
by PETE WILLIAMS, ANDREW BLANKSTEIN, PHIL HELSEL, JILLIAN SEDERHOLM and MIGUEL ALMAGUER
www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/report-active-shooter-near-planned-parenthood-colorado-springs-n470431
A gunman armed with an AK-47-style weapon burst into a Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs Friday, shooting at police from inside the building during the ensuing five-hour standoff.
Three people, including a police officer, died during the incident, Colorado Springs Police Department Lt. Catherine Buckley said. Nine others, including five officers, were wounded. All nine were in good condition, Buckley said.
Memorial Hospital in Colorado Springs said Saturday of the four patients it had received, two were discharged. There was no immediate word on the patients at other hospitals.
The slain officer was identified as Garrett Swasey, 44, of the University of Colorado-Colorado Springs police department. He was married and had a son and daughter, according to the website of his church, Hope Chapel in Colorado Springs.
The gunman, who police named as 57-year-old Robert Dear, walked out of the facility just before 5 p.m. local time and surrendered.
Gunshots were first reported near the facility on Centennial Boulevard in Colorado Springs at around 11:38 a.m. The shooter began firing in the parking lot and then entered the building, a law enforcement official told NBC News. The shooting unfolded during a regular working day, as patients waited for appointments and staff members attended to them.
"I heard everyone in the lobby screaming 'Get down! Get down!' and then I saw a gunman walking with a shotgun just shooting randomly outside of Planned Parenthood," Kentanya Craion said after getting out of the building.
The gunman "seemed calm, but crazy," she added, describing the man in a hunter's jacket and hat as "mumbling and ranting while he was shooting."
She said she ran into an open room with two others where they barricaded themselves inside for about five hours as they heard shots ring out.
Authorities soon tapped into the building's video surveillance system, and were able to monitor the gunman's movements, officials said.
Colorado Springs Mayor John Suthers told NBC News that police watched for several hours on live video as the suspect hunkered down inside.
The officers watching passed along sketches of the building layout to teams inside, Suthers said. And as the gunman moved about the building, police rescued some of those trapped inside the other areas.
Other officials told NBC News that several people escaped during the ordeal thanks in part to police personnel who rammed the side of the building with a truck.
Police officers who responded were shot at with officers describing how they were "pinned down" by gunfire.
Police announced Saturday that they had cleared the building, which they had continued to inspect overnight to make sure several unidentified items the gunman brought with him were not dangerous.
Investigators were also trying to identify an item left in what is believed to be the suspect's car, a law enforcement source said. The device appeared to be a propane tank with wires sticking out, the source said.
University Chancellor Pam Shockley Zalabak said Swasey, the slain officer, was responding in support of city police to the active shooter situation when he was killed.
"We mourn the loss of a very brave police officer," Mayor Suthers said.
"While this was a terrible, terrible tragedy, it could have been much worse but for the actions of the first responders, particularly the police officers involved," Suthers told reporters.
"They were able to get people out of the building safely, and they were able to make sure that the perpetrator was isolated in a place where there could be communication back and forth about where he was," Suthers said.
Joan Motolinia said his sister was in the clinic when gunshots were heard. "She called me and she was telling me that there was a shooting — I heard the shooting," he said. "She couldn't say too much because she was afraid."
"She was telling me she was hiding under a table," Motolinia said. He said he heard more shots over the phone, and his sister hung up.
Caren Kesterson was working at a nearby Supercuts hair salon when two police cars sped past.
"We got up and we looked outside, and it was like almost immediately we heard gunshots — easily over 20," Kesterson told MSNBC by telephone.
Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper issued a statement to victims families shortly after the fatalities were announced: "Our deepest condolences go out to the families and loved ones of those who were killed, including UCCS Officer Garrett Swasey, and those who were injured," he said.
"Our thoughts continue to be with law enforcement, the Colorado Springs community, and the staff and patients at Planned Parenthood."
A White House official said President Barack Obama had been notified about the situation, and he released a statement on Saturday calling for tighter gun control laws.
Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton said in a tweet that "Today and every day, we hashtagStandWithPP," referring to Planned Parenthood.
Vicki Cowart, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Rocky Mountains, said Friday that "we don't yet know if Planned Parenthood was in fact the target of this attack."
But she vowed in a statement: "We will never back away from providing care in a safe, supportive environment that millions of people rely on and trust."
Cecile Richards, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Federation of America, thanked law enforcement in a statement released Friday.
"Our hearts go out to the families and loved ones of the brave law enforcement officers who put themselves in harm's way in Colorado Springs," she said. "We are profoundly grateful for their heroism in helping to protect all women, men and young people as they access basic health care in this country."
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Colorado Springs, Colorado (CNN)Robert Lewis Dear, the suspect in Friday's shootings at the Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs, mentioned "baby parts" to investigators and in later interviews expressed anti-abortion and anti-government views, a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation told CNN.
Law enforcement officials caution it's too early to determine a motive in the case until all evidence is gathered and examined. That process is still going on. Though the state is taking the lead, the FBI is conducting its own investigation to determine whether federal charges will be filed.
Huckabee: Planned Parenthood shooting is 'domestic terrorism'
The official told CNN that propane tanks were found in the area of Dear's car in the parking lot, and that authorities believe he was trying to shoot them to cause an explosion.
The siege ended Friday when the suspect dropped his gun and surrendered in a hallway once the SWAT team brought in a BearCat armored vehicle and Dear was cornered.
'Crime against women'
Attorney General Loretta Lynch has called the shooting, which killed three people and wounded nine more, a "crime against women"; Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper has said it's "a tragedy that is beyond speech."
Among the victims was Garrett Swasey, a University of Colorado-Colorado Springs police officer who rushed to the clinic to offer his assistance. "There was no way any of us could have kept him here," UCCS Police Chief Brian McPike said of Swasey during a Saturday evening vigil. "He was always willing to go. ... He had an enthusiasm that was hard to quell."
Colorado Springs Police Chief Peter Carey said that the identities of the other two victims likely will not be released until Monday, after autopsies have been performed.
In addition to the three killed, five officers and four civilians were hospitalized for wounds sustained in the shooting. Lt. Catherine Buckley said Friday night all were in good condition. By late Saturday afternoon, officials said five patients remained in two hospitals.
Opposition to abortion eyed as motive
"I'm not going to say the perpetrator's name," a somber Hickenlooper said Saturday, referring to Dear, the man authorities suspect was the shooter.
Dear, 57, is being held without bail in a Colorado Springs jail, according to the El Paso County Sheriff's Office.
Robert Dear is suspected in the Planned Parenthood shooting.
While authorities said that a motive had not yet been established, Mayor John Suthers said "inferences (could be made) from where it took place," the Denver Post reported.
Vicki Cowart, president of Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains, went beyond an inference, saying the shooter "was motivated by opposition to safe and legal abortion." Lynch, who called the "unconscionable attack" a "crime against women receiving health care services," pledged the full resources of her office for the investigation.
Planned Parenthood, which delivers reproductive health care and sex education to women and men across the United States, has come under attack before.
At least three Planned Parenthood buildings have been vandalized since September, when the organization was criticized in Washington and by some Republican presidential candidates after an anti-abortion group released videos alleging that it sold fetal organs and parts for profit. Planned Parenthood has disputed the veracity of the videos, contending that they are heavily edited and provide a distorted account.
Who is Robert Lewis Dear?
Based on a public records search, Dear appears to have lived in Colorado for only about a year. In October 2014, Dear purchased property in Hartsel, a rural community about 65 miles west of the clinic, for $6,000. Zigmond Post, a neighbor, said one of the few interactions he had was when Dear brought him some anti-Obama pamphlets. "That's about all I've run into him," he said.
Prior to Hartsel, Dear appears to have spent much of his life in the Carolinas.
WLOS, a CNN affiliate in Asheville, North Carolina, photographed a dilapidated-looking mountain cabin that Dear reportedly called home in rural Buncombe County. The sheriff's office there said it only had one recorded contact with Dear, a civil citation issued in 2014 for allowing his dogs to run wild.
A decade before that, Dear was arrested and charged with two counts of animal cruelty while living in South Carolina, but he was found not guilty in a 2003 bench trial. In 2002, Dear was charged with being a peeping Tom; those counts were dismissed in South Carolina. In 1997, Dear's wife accused him of domestic assault, although no charges were pressed, according to records provided by the Colleton County, South Carolina, sheriff's office.
Dear is scheduled to appear at 1:30 p.m. Monday before Chief Judge Gilbert Martinez, El Paso County court spokesman Rob McCallum said.
Scanners capture police plans
Conversations captured over the police scanner gave glimpses into Friday's drama as well as the strategic debate about what to do.
Despite initial fears that the gunman might be running around outside, authorities later determined that he was inside the Planned Parenthood building -- once he got through the front door -- throughout the siege, Buckley said.
Joan Motolinia's sister was among those inside. She called her brother Friday afternoon, and "I heard the shooting," a tearful Motolinia said.
"She couldn't say much because she was afraid," he said.
Fear, horror, disbelief among witnesses
Kentanya Craion, who had visited the clinic for an ultrasound, said she saw the gunman shooting as she left outside in the parking lot, so she turned around and ran back inside. "He had no remorse," Craion said. "This was just a game to him."
Obama: 'Enough is enough'
In a statement Saturday, President Barack Obama didn't mention the controversies surrounding Planned Parenthood, but he did offer praise for Swasey, condolences to the families of the victims and condemnation of the attack as another example of gun violence.
"The last thing Americans should have to do, over the holidays or any day, is comfort the families of people killed by gun violence -- people who woke up in the morning and bid their loved ones goodbye with no idea it would for the last time," Obama said. "And yet, two days after Thanksgiving, that's what we are forced to do again."
As he has time and again after mass shootings, the President called on policymakers to do something to prevent them.
"This is not normal. We can't let it become normal," he said. "If we truly care about this -- if we're going to offer up our thoughts and prayers again, for God knows how many times, with a truly clean conscience -- then we have to do something about the easy accessibility of weapons of war on our streets to people who have no business yielding them.
"Period. Enough is enough."
CNN's Dan Simon, Catherine E. Shoichet, Amanda Watts, Carma Hassan, Amanda Watts, Faith Karimi, Dani Stewart, Joe Sutton, Jason Hanna, Josh Berlinger, Kim Hutcherson, Michael Martinez and Nelson Quiñones contributed to this report.
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www.9news.com/media/cinematic/video/76510590/