Man With Rifle Kills Eight in Omaha Mall, Shoots Self
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OMAHA, Neb. — A man opened fire with a rifle at a busy department store yesterday, killing eight people before taking his own life in an attack that made holiday shoppers run screaming through a mall and barricade themselves in dressing rooms. Five more people were wounded, two critically. The gunman left a suicide note that was found at his home by his mother, a law enforcement official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak. TV station KETV reported that the note said he wanted to “go out in style.”
The official identified the gunman as Robert Hawkins, 20.
Witnesses said the gunman fired down on shoppers from a third-floor balcony of the Von Maur store. One witness told a TV station that he shot up a teddy bear as he sprayed fire on shoppers.
He was found dead on the third floor with a self-inflicted gunshot wound, and his victims were discovered on the second and third floors, police said.
“My knees rocked. I didn’t know what to do, so I just ran with everybody else,” Kevin Kleine, 29, said. Ms. Kleine was shopping with her 4-year-old daughter at the Westroads Mall, in a prosperous neighborhood on the city’s west side.
She said she hid in a dressing room with four other shoppers and an employee.
Sergeant Teresa Negron said the gunman killed eight people, then apparently killed himself. Authorities gave no motive for the attack and said they did not know whether he said anything during the rampage.
Police received a 911 call from someone inside the mall, and shots could be heard in the background, Sergeant Negron said. By the time officers arrived six minutes later, the shooting was over, she said.
The Omaha World-Herald reported that the gunman had a military-style haircut and a black backpack, and wore a camouflage vest.
“Everybody was scared, and we didn’t know what was going on,” Belene Esaw-Kagbara, 31, a Von Maur employee, said. “We didn’t know what to do. I was praying that God protect us.”
Mickey Vickory, who worked at Von Maur’s third-floor service department, said she heard shots at about 1:50 p.m. She and her co-workers and customers went into a back closet behind the wrapping room to hide, then emerged about a half-hour later when police shouted to come out with their hands up. As police took them to another part of the mall for safety, they saw the victims.
“We saw the bodies and we saw the blood,” she said.