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Gunman blocks NY center's door, kills 13, self
#1
By WILLIAM KATES, Associated Press Writer

BINGHAMTON, N.Y. – A gunman barricaded the back door of a community center with his car and then opened fire on a room full of immigrants taking a citizenship class Friday, killing 13 people before apparently committing suicide, officials said.

Investigators said they had yet to establish a motive for the massacre, which was at least the fifth deadly mass shooting in the U.S. in the past month alone.

The attack came just after 10 a.m. at the American Civic Association, an organization that helps immigrants settle in this country. Police Chief Joseph Zikuski said the gunman parked his car against the back door, "making sure nobody could escape," then stormed through the front, shooting two receptionists, apparently without a word.

The killer, believed to be a Vietnamese immigrant, then entered a room just off the reception area and fired on a citizenship class.

"The people were trying to better themselves, trying to become citizens," the police chief said.

One receptionist was killed, while the other, shot in the abdomen, pretended to be dead and then crawled under a desk and called 911, he said.

Police said they arrived within two minutes.

The rest of those killed were shot in the classroom. Four people were critically wounded.

The man believed to have carried out the attack was found dead with a self-inflicted gunshot wound in an office, a satchel containing ammunition slung around his neck, authorities said. Police found two handguns — a 9 mm and a .45-caliber — and a hunting knife.

Thirty-seven people in all made it out of the building, including 26 who hid in the boiler room in the basement, cowering there for three hours while police methodically searched the building and tried to determine whether the gunman was still alive and whether he was holding any hostages, Zikuski said.

Those in the basement stayed in contact with police by cell phone, switching from one phone to another when their batteries ran out, Zikuski said. Others hid in closets and under desks.

Police heard no gunfire after they arrived but waited for about an hour before entering the building to make sure it was safe for officers. They then spent two hours searching the building.

They led a number of men out of the building in plastic handcuffs while they tried to sort out the victims from the killer or killers.

Most of the people brought out couldn't speak English, the chief said.

Alex Galkin, an immigrant from Uzbekistan, said he was taking English classes when he heard a shot and quickly went to the basement with about 20 other people.

"It was just panic," Galkin said.

Zhanar Tokhtabayeva, a 30-year-old from Kazakhstan, said she was in an English class when she heard a shot and her teacher screamed for everyone to go to the storage room.

"I heard the shots, every shot. I heard no screams, just silence, shooting," she said. "I heard shooting, very long time, and I was thinking, when will this stop? I was thinking that my life was finished."

Dr. Jeffrey King, speaking at a Catholic Charities office where counseling was being offered Friday night, said he was certain his mother, 72-year-old Roberta King, who taught English at the community center, was among the dead.

Authorities read a list of survivors and his mother's name wasn't on it, he said.

King, one of 10 children, described his mother as a woman brimming with interests ranging from the opera to the preservation society to collecting thousands of dolls. He recollected a recent conversation in which he told her to enjoy her retirement.

"I said, 'Mom you're in your 70s,'" King said. "She said, 'What? You don't think I enjoy working?'"

President Barack Obama, who was traveling in Europe, said he was shocked and saddened by the shooting, which he called an "act of senseless violence." He said he and his wife, Michelle Obama, were praying for the victims, their families and the people of Binghamton, about 140 miles northwest of New York City.

Gov. David Paterson said the massacre was probably "the worst tragedy and senseless crime in the history of this city." Noting mass killings in Alabama and Oakland, Calif., last month, he said: "When are we going to be able to curb the kind of violence that is so fraught and so rapid that we can't even keep track of the incidents?"

The community center was holding class "for those who want to become citizens of the United States of America, who wanted to be part of the American Dream, and so tragically may have had that hope thwarted today," the governor said. "But there still is an American dream, and all of us who are Americans will try to heal this very, very deep wound in the city of Binghamton."

The suspected gunman carried ID with the name of 42-year-old Jiverly Voong, of nearby Johnson City, N.Y., but that was believed to be an alias, said a law enforcement official, speaking on condition of anonymity.

A second law enforcement official, also speaking on condition of anonymity, said the two handguns were registered to Jiverly Wong, another name the man used. Both officials were not authorized to speak publicly.

Initial reports suggested Voong had recently been let go from IBM. But a person at IBM said there was no record of a Jiverly Voong ever working there.

The police chief would not confirm the name of the dead man with the ammunition satchel, saying authorities were still trying to establish with certainty that he was the gunman.

"We have no idea what the motive is," Zikuski said.

He said the suspected gunman "was no stranger" to the community center and may have gone there to take a class.

A woman who answered the phone at a listing for Henry D. Voong said she was Jiverly Voong's sister but would not give her name. She said her brother had been in the country for 28 years and had citizenship.

"I think there's a misunderstanding over here because I want to know, too," she said.

Friday evening, police searched Voong's house and carried out three computer hard drives, a brown canvas rifle case, a briefcase, a small suitcase and several paper bags.

Police left the Voong home shortly before 8 p.m., soon after four people arrived by car and went into the house. It wasn't clear who they were, but they promptly turned out the lights.

Crime scene tape was stretched across the street about 20 yards from the house, and a steady rain fell as two state troopers stood guard to keep anyone but neighborhood residents from entering the dead-end street.

Waiting outside a Catholic Charities office where counselors were tending to relatives of victims, Omri Yigal said his wife, Delores, was taking English lessons when the gunman attacked. He had no word on what happened to her.

He finally left the center feeling sullen shortly before 8 p.m.

"They told me they don't have much hope for me," the Filipino immigrant said before going home to wait for a telephone call.

The American Civic Association helps immigrants in the Binghamton area with citizenship, resettlement and family reunification. The shootings took place in a neighborhood of homes and small businesses in downtown Binghamton, a city of about 47,000 residents.

The Binghamton area was the home to Endicott-Johnson shoe company and the birthplace of IBM, which between them employed tens of thousands of workers before the shoe company closed a decade ago and IBM downsized in recent years.

A string of attacks in the U.S. in the last month left 44 people dead in all.

A gunman killed 10 people and himself in Samson, Ala.; shootings that began with a traffic stop in Oakland, Calif., left four police officers and the gunman dead; an apparent murder-suicide in Santa Clara, Calif., left six dead; and a gunman went on a rampage at a nursing home Sunday, killing seven elderly residents and a nurse who cared for them.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/hostage_shooting
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#2
BBC News

Gunman kills 13 in New York siege


A gunman has killed 13 people after taking dozens hostage in the US state of New York.

The suspected gunman was later found dead inside the immigration centre in Binghamton, police officials said.

Nearly 40 people escaped from the building but four were critically injured in the shooting, north-west of New York City, police said.

Pakistani Taleban leader Baitullah Mehsud called the BBC in Islamabad to claim responsibility for the attack.

He gave no evidence to corroborate the claim.

President Barack Obama, in Europe for a Nato summit, said he was "shocked and saddened" by the attack's "senseless violence".

Mr Obama said his administration was "actively monitoring the situation" and that Vice-President Joe Biden was in touch with officials in Binghamton.
“ About 15 or so employees came out crying with their hands behind their heads ”
Eyewitness

The town's police chief, Joseph Zikuski, told a news conference that 14 people had been found dead in the American Civic Association (ACA) buildings.

The man believed to have carried out the attack was found dead with an apparently self-inflicted gunshot wound, he said. Ammunition, two more hand guns and a hunting knife were recovered from the scene.

Democratic Congressman Maurice Hinchey told AP the gunman had entered a room where people were sitting exams for US citizenship.

"It was in the middle of a test. He just went in and opened fire," said Mr Hinchey, whose congressional district includes Binghamton.

The BBC's Matthew Price in Binghamton says people in the town are struggling to deal with the horror of what some have described as an "unbelievable" attack.

Wounded

Witnesses reported seeing a man entering the ACA building during the morning. He was described as being of Asian appearance, in his 20s, and wearing a bright green nylon jacket and dark-rimmed glasses.

The gunman, believed to have been a Vietnamese-American, used his car to barricade the building's back door before bursting in the front door, firing his weapon, said officials.
Jon Donnison, BBC News, Binghamton Binghamton is the latest American town trying to come to terms with a mass shooting. Last week it was Carthage, North Carolina. The week before Samson, Alabama.

With the red and blue lights of police cars flashing through the drizzle, smokers huddle in doorways on Main Street. There is only one topic of conversation. "It's a very good area, I would never think that it would happen here," said Martine Youmans.

The words and the scenes are increasingly familiar for Americans. On local talk radio stations the chatter has already turned to gun law, still as divisive an issue as ever. One caller's plea: "Don't let them take away our guns."

He shot two receptionists, one of whom managed to call the police, before walking down a corridor towards classrooms.

Police were on the scene in minutes - people in nearby apartments, a school and a care home were told to stay in their buildings and some streets were sealed off.

Mr Zikuski said 26 people took refuge in the building's basement after hearing gunshots.

Eyewitnesses described seeing some people fleeing the building.

"About 15 or so employees of the Civic Association came out crying with their hands behind their heads," one witness told Binghamton's WNBF Radio.

"They were escorted by the police and they took them to ambulances and took them away," he said.

Two other people were seen being led away by police in plastic handcuffs during the incident but officials later said they were not suspects.

Police later raided the home of the suspected gunman and removed items including computer hard drives and a rifle bag, reports said.

'Profound outrage'

Local hospitals have said about 30 people are being treated.

A spokeswoman for Our Lady of Lourdes hospital told the BBC several people had been admitted with serious injuries.

The governor of New York state, David Paterson, said it had been "a tragic day for New York".

"This is a horrible situation. There's actually no reason or excuse for this kind of shooting and brutal attack on innocent people right here in New York state," he said.

Mr Paterson told a news conference there was "a profound sense of outrage at this senseless act of violence in which many innocent people were killed, injured and probably traumatised for some time to come".

He said many of the victims were not from the US and police were in the process of contacting their families living abroad.

New York State would offer any assistance to the victims, who had "wanted to be part of the American dream and so tragically may have had that hope thwarted today", said Mr Paterson.

"There still is an American dream and all of us who are Americans will try to heal this very, very deep wound in the city of Binghamton."

Our correspondent said police were picking through evidence in the building trying to determine what had happened and why.

Bob Joseph of WNBF Radio told the BBC the town had never experienced an incident on such a scale before.

The ACA says on its website that it assists immigrants and refugees with personal and immigration counselling.

RECENT US SHOOTINGS

# March 2009: A gunman kills a total of 11 people in a series of shootings southern Alabama
# Dec 2008: A gunman dressed as Santa Claus kills nine people and himself on Christmas Eve in LA
# Sept 2008: Six people die in a series of shootings in the north-west of Washington state
# June 2008: A worker at a plastics plant in Kentucky kills five people before killing himself
# Apr 2007: 32 people and the gunman die at the Virginia Tech campus

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/am...982444.stm

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#3
Binghamton, NY: Hostages freed, gunman, 13 others dead

UPDATE: Obama 'shocked' at shootings which claimed 13 lives, plus gunman

"Michelle and I were shocked and deeply saddened to learn about the act of senseless violence in Binghamton, NY today," Obama said in a statement as the president visited France to attend NATO's 60th anniversary summit.

"Our thoughts and prayers go out to the victims, their families and the people of Binghamton," Obama said.

A gunman massacred 12 to 13 people Friday at an immigration center in Binghamton, New York, Governor David Paterson said. He took at least 20 hostages, then apparently turning the gun on himself, according to CNN.

"We don't yet know all the facts, but my administration is actively monitoring the situation and the Vice President (Joe Biden) is in touch with Governor Paterson and local officials to track developments," Obama said.

New York's two US senators, Charles Schumer and Kirsten Gillibrand, also reacted to the massacre.

"This is a terrible tragedy and our hearts and prayers go out to the victims and their families. We are monitoring the situation closely and will do everything we can to help," the two Democrats said.

From USA Today:

    Update at 5:17 p.m.: Four people are listed in critical condition. Police rescued 37 people; 26 hid in a basement boiler room.

    [Police Chief Joseph] Zikuski is taking questions from reporters. He won't identify the shooter until a positive identification has been made.

    Update at 5:21 p.m.: Besides the suspected gunman the dead include one receptionist and 12 people in a classroom. A second receptionist who was wounded placed the 911 call.

PREVIOUS UPDATES ...

From AFP:

    The gunman in Friday's massacre at a civic center in Binghamton, New York, is dead and surviving hostages have been freed, television reports said.

    The CNN network quoted several unnamed sources saying the gunman had been found dead inside the center.

    And local News 10 Now television said that the town police chief told them "the building is secure and everyone alive is out."

At 2:45 PM EST, CNN confirms reports that the gunman is dead. And early reports indicate that he acted alone, although authorities are still checking the building to make certan. Governor Paterson alluded to 12 or 13 killed moments before in a press conference.

On MSNBC, a WNBF reporter claimed that a top police source says the death toll could go as high as 15.

Conflicting media reports said either four, twelve or thirteen were killed after a gunman disrupted a citizenship class being held at an immigration services center in an upstate New York town.

"I speak for all of New York when I offer my prayers for the victims and families of this tragedy," Gov. David Paterson said.

Latest update from AFP: "A dozen or more may have died in the last two hours," Bob Joseph, news director of local WNBF Radio in the town of Binghamton, told CNN, quoting sources.

NBC News reports: "NBC's Pete Williams cited city and state officials as saying that as many [as] 13 people might have been killed. But Williams cautioned that the information was very preliminary and may change because police were still searching the building."

ABC News and Reuters are also reporting a dozen or thirteen dead.

"The suspect was described as an Asian male in his 20s, between 5-feet 8-inches and 6 feet tall, wearing a bright green nylon jacket and dark-rimmed glasses," a Binghamton newspaper reports. It also states, "Two people were taken from the American Civic Association with their hands cuffed behind their back."

A CNN reporter observed that no has any idea if the suspects seen handcuffed had anything to do with the shootings.

Latest AP update says that the suspect entered firing:

    A gunman blocked the back door of an immigration services center with his car Friday before walking through the front door firing, wounding at least six people and taking as many as 41 hostage, officials said.

    Two handguns were recovered at the scene, said a law enforcement official who was not authorized to speak about details of an ongoing hostage response and spoke to The Associated Press on condition of anonymity.

The Binghamton Press & Sun Bulletin reports:

    At least four people were shot and dozens of others are being held hostage by a gunman at the American Civic Center in Binghamton.

    Victims were being taken to Lourdes Hospital in Binghamton and Wilson Regional Medical Center in Johnson City, while sharp shooters from Binghamton SWAT team were poised outside the building at 131 Front Street.

    Binghamton High School, on Oak and Main streets, and a nearby nursing home remain under lockdown. Apartments were evacuated and roads were closed. The high school is a block and a half away.

    According to police reports, about 40 hostages were in the building -- 15 in a closet and 26 in the boiler room.

The Associated Press reports:

    A spokeswoman at Our Lady of Lourdes Hospital in Binghamton confirmed that a student from Binghamton University was being treated at the emergency room. Spokeswoman Linda Miller said she didn't know the nature of the injuries.

    "We're on full alert anticipating we're going to get additional casualties," Miller said.

    The American Civic Association describes itself as helping immigrants and refugees with counseling, resettlement, citizenship, family reunification and translators.

    It also intervenes with emergencies, including fighting, hunger and homelessness, according to information from the association's Web site.

WBNG TV reported earlier:

    Scanner reports say a man went into the building and started shooting.
    When the shooting started, people inside escaped to the basement in search of safety. More than a dozen people are hiding in a closet, for more than an hour now. Emergency dispatchers are in contact with some people inside by phone. Police have sent some people to Wilson and Lourdes Hospital, and have requested ambulances to the scene.

    Police have shut down Court Street heading west at Water Street. They have also closed Main Street at Murray Street. Binghamton High School has locked down the school, and will not allow students out for lunch.

AFP reports on other recent shootings:

    Friday's carnage in New York state is the latest to rock small-town America, which has often borne the brunt of violent gun-related outbursts but where many inhabitants fiercely advocate the right to own and carry firearms.

    Earlier this month, a 28-year-old unemployed man killed 10 people, including his mother and a toddler, in a shooting rampage through two counties in Alabama, the worst in the southern state's history.

    In December, a man dressed as Santa Claus opened fire at a Christmas party being given by his ex-wife in Covina, California, killing nine people before shooting himself.

    In October, an ex-convict opened fire with an assault rifle at a man and two children who had come to trick-or-treat at his home in Sumter, South Carolina on Halloween. A 12-year-old boy died of his wounds in that incident.

    And in September, a mentally ill man shot eight people, killing six, in Alger, Washington a month after being released from prison.

    The spate of high-profile mass killings in the United States in the past six months has shown the impact that the economic meltdown is having on rising violence, experts have said.

    Criminologist Jack Levin says there is a clear link between the economy and rising body counts.

    "A mass killer is someone who has almost always suffered a catastrophic loss -- that's the link between a recession and mass killings," he told AFP, citing the loss of a job, the loss of a lot of money or the loss of a relationship.

http://rawstory.com/blog/2009/04/reports...hamton-ny/
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#4
I see an even clearer link between mass killings and times of Satanic rituals, and mass global meetings. Like say the G-20 summits and so forth. It's an emerging pattern I've noticed. I Pittsburgh, a guy in a domestic dispute killed 3 officers who came to apprehend him and take his firearms. He was clearly a danger, but what made him snap around the same time of the Nato summit is,well oddly coincidental at best. These incidents of killings,to me, not only satisfy their need for a blood sacrifice. But as well to bolster the call for disarmament. All the while leaving out the facts that most of these people appear to have been triggered. It plays on public emotions etc,to help TPTB reach their intended ends. It confirms that they have no regard for human life,and will use people as pawns to reach their goals.

It also confirms, to me, the reality, and existence of what is called "The Black awakening." Which is more of less, those who've been "programed" to carry out acts of violence etc, when they are triggered.

Just my .02 cents, as this is getting beyond the nutty norm.
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#5
I think the killer was programmed too. Not only did he kill 13 people but the building address was 131. That’s 13 forward and backward.
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#6
Another interesting thing is Pakistani Taleban leader Baitullah Mehsud called the BBC in Islamabad to claim responsibility for the attack. On March 31st the top Taliban commander in Pakistan promised an assault on Washington "soon" - one he says will "amaze" the world. He said this 3 days before the killings. http://www.hyperspacecafe.com/forum13/6762.html

However the FBI ruled it out.

FBI rules out Taliban claim on New York killings


Sat Apr 4, 2009 7:37pm IST

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The FBI on Saturday ruled out Pakistani Taliban militant leader Baituallah Mehsud's claim that he was responsible for an attack on a U.S. immigration assistance center in New York state in which 14 people were killed.

"Based on the evidence, we can firmly discount that claim," FBI spokesman Richard Kolko said.

A man armed with two handguns killed 13 people at an immigrant services center on Friday before apparently turning the gun on himself, authorities in Binghamton, New York, said.

Representative Maurice Hinchey, whose district includes Binghamton, told the New York Times that indications were the gunman was an immigrant from Vietnam.

Mehsud told Reuters in Pakistan earlier Saturday that his group was responsible. "I accept responsibility. They were my men. I gave them orders in reaction to U.S. drone attacks," Mehsud said by telephone from an undisclosed location.

http://in.reuters.com/article/topNews/id...3420090404

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