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Police Chief Richard Biehl released a timeline of the early-morning shooting that left nine people dead, including the gunman’s sister.
Biehl said the shooter opened fire with a .223-caliber high-capacity rifle with 100-round drum magazines. Officers patrolling the Oregon District as the bars were closing shortly after 1 a.m. heard the gunfire and saw a large crowd running away, the police chief said.
“The officers immediately advanced toward the gunfire and within approximately 20 seconds, they engaged the suspect, who was actively firing and attempting to enter a crowded liquor establishment,” the police chief said.
“The threat was neutralized at approximately 30 seconds of the suspect firing his first shot,” Biehl said.
Biehl released a frantic 911 call from the shooting as well as surveillance footage and the names of the six officers who responded to the shooting.
Twenty-seven other people were injured when Connor Betts, 24, fired dozens of shots. The motive remained unclear.
Betts, his sister and a male companion had arrived in the same vehicle but they separated at some point in the evening, the police chief said. Police are trying to determine the shooter’s whereabouts after he and his sister separated.
No evidence so far of a bias crime, police say
Local and federal law enforcement sources served a search warrant on Betts’ family home in Bellbrook.
During the search, authorities found writings linked to the shooter that show he had an interest in killing people, two federal law enforcement sources told CNN. A preliminary assessment of the writings did not indicate any racial or political motive, the sources said.
“We do not have sufficient information to answer the question everyone wants to know: ‘Why?'” Biehl said.
He added: “We have no evidence [that] suggests that there is a bias motive in this crime at this time”
Matt Carper, assistant police chief, said speculating at this point would be premature.
“We’re always looking at what could have motivated such a horrific action as this, and like I said this morning, we’re interviewing dozens of people and going through a lot of different electronic evidence, other evidence to try to determine that. We don’t have that answer yet,” Carper said.
Assault-style rifle used in shooting was ordered online in Texas, police say
Betts began shooting as he made his way toward a bar called Ned Peppers, said Deb Decker, public information officer for Montgomery County.
Someone from Ned Peppers grabbed the barrel of the rifle, and the shooter “picked up a handgun and was willing to continue shooting,” Decker said, when police arrived and killed the shooter, who wore body armor.
Biehl said he did not have information to verify that account.
No officers were injured, Carper said.
Mayor Nan Whaley said: “I really want to — think about that minute. The shooter was able to kill nine people and injure 26 in less than a minute. And if we did not have police in the Oregon District and the thousands of people in the Oregon District enjoying their Saturday evening, what we could have had in this city,” she said.
“The question has to be raised, why does Dayton have to be the 250th mass shooting this year?”
Police recovered the rifle that was used in the shooting, Biehl said. It was ordered online from Texas but transferred to the suspect at a local firearms dealer, the police chief said. Authorities also found a shotgun in the shooter’s 2007 Toyota Corolla, which was parked nearby. That weapon was acquired from a separate local firearms dealer, Biehl said.
“There’s nothing in this individual’s history or record that would have precluded him from purchasing that firearm,” Biehl said.
The gunman’s victims
The city identified the nine people killed in the shooting:
— Lois L. Oglesby, 27
— Megan K. Betts, 22, the shooter’s sister
— Saeed Saleh, 38
— Derrick R. Fudge, 57
— Logan M. Turner, 30
— Nicholas P. Cumer, 25
— Thomas J. McNichols, 25
— Beatrice N. Warren-Curtis, 36
— Monica E. Brickhouse, 39
Police did not provide information about the Betts siblings’ relationship.
Biehl said the shooter killed his sister and wounded his male companion. Authorities do not believe the male companion, who had driven to the scene with the shooter and his sister, had advance knowledge of the attack, two law enforcement sources tell CNN.
Bellbrook Police Chief Doug Doherty said he has been in touch with Betts’ parents, who are not ready to talk about the deaths of their two children.
“They are victims, and we’re treating that as such — them as victims,” he said, according to CNN affiliate WLWT.
A total of 31 people were transported to hospitals, officials said. Nine remained hospitalized Sunday evening.
‘Bodies all over the place’
Graham Hunter, 24, of Dayton, said he and four friends arrived just as the incident was over and immediately came upon the body of the shooter outside.
“Everyone was panicking and running around,” Hunter said. “After the shooter was dead, everyone was just crying and stuff,” and he saw “bodies all over the place.”
A police officer told him and his friends to go into Ned Peppers.
He said he and his friends consider the area a safe, fun place to hang out on weekends, where many people walk around outdoors and enjoy patios at restaurants and bars.
“It’s a nice spot,” he said. “It’s where everyone goes to hang out.”
The district was to open Sunday afternoon, the mayor said. A vigil is planned for 8 p.m. ET.
A deadly end to a deadly week in America
He has been identified by three sources as Patrick Crusius, a 21-year-old white man from Allen, Texas.
Shooter attended college in Dayton
The shooter had been enrolled at Sinclair Community College in Dayton but was not enrolled in the summer term, the school’s president said in a statement.
“Our hearts are broken for so many members of this wonderful community this weekend. A senseless tragedy occurred in our community and our thoughts are and will remain with the victims and their friends and families,” President Steve Johnson said.
Betts’ only contact with law enforcement was minor traffic violations, the police chief said.
A friend, Brad Howard, said Connor Betts was quiet and kept to himself.
“It’s a kick in the teeth” to the Bellbrook neighborhood, Howard said.
CNN’s Madeline Holcombe, Melissa Alonso, Diane Ruggiero, Amanda Watts, Artemis Moshtaghian, Scott Glover, Josh Campbell, Shimon Prokupecz, Phil Gast, Evan Perez, Chuck Johnston and Scottie Andrew contributed to this report.
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