NASHVILLE, Tenn. --
(SOURCE: CBS NEWS, CNN) Church members praised an usher who confronted the gunman in a deadly
shooting at a Tennessee church.
The suspect is 25-year-old Emanuel Kidega Samson. He was in police
custody after shooting himself Sunday by accident. Nashville police said
Samson killed one woman in a parking lot and wounded seven other people.
He is a legal U.S. resident who came from Sudan in 1996.
Authorities said the ordeal began just before 11:15 Sunday morning as
services at Burnette Chapel Church of Christ were being let out, CBS
News correspondent Errol Barnett reports.
Police said Samson drove a blue SUV up to the church, left the engine
running and got out with two pistols, his face partially covered with a
mask. Police said he then shot and killed Melanie Smith, a 39-year-old
mother of two. She was a caring woman who loved God, according to her
daughter Breanna.
"Everybody's looking for why, why, why," Breanna Smith said. "There's no
understanding evil. There's no understanding hate.
Samson allegedly then
entered the church and walked down the aisle of the main sanctuary,
shooting as he moved. He hit and wounded six people, including the
church pastor, before he was confronted by 22-year-old usher Robert
Caleb Engle. Police say Samson pistol-whipped Engle, but then
accidentally shot himself during the scuffle and fell to the ground.
"This guy came and fighting with him and tackle him down," Minerva Rosa
said.
Rosa, who later tended to her pastor's wounds, said Engle jumped in as
Samson continued to fire his weapon.
"He was shooting, and then he's standing in the pulpit and he start
shooting more," Rosa said.
Injured from his struggle with Samson, authorities said Engle went
outside to his car to get his own registered gun, then went back into
the church to stand guard over the wounded shooter until police arrived.
"Mr. Engle saved countless lives here today," said Don Aaron, a
spokesman for the Metro Nashville Police Department. "He is, at the end
of the day, the hero in this because we think this could've been much
worse in terms of death."
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(CNN) - Local police and
federal authorities worked Monday to determine why a man went on a
deadly shooting spree at a Nashville-area church, while a shocked
community prepared for prayer vigils for the victims and their families
in the shooting's aftermath.
One person was killed and seven others injured Sunday as services were
wrapping up at the Burnette Chapel Church of Christ in Antioch, near
Nashville.
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Emanuel Kidega Samson, 25, of La Vergne, Tennessee, was charged with
felony homicide and was being held without bond. Other charges are
coming later, police said. His next court appearance is Wednesday.
The Justice Department and FBI have opened a federal civil rights
investigation into the shooting, and police said they were still trying
to establish the suspect's motive.
Local police also requested the assistance of the Bureau of Alcohol,
Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives to run an "urgent trace" on a firearm,
an ATF representative told CNN.
The trace would give authorities an indication of where the gun was
purchased, who purchased it and whether it was purchased legally, the
ATF representative said.
Church members told police that Samson attended the church one to two
years ago, Metropolitan Nashville police spokesman Don Aaron. But they
had not seen him in a while and did not immediately recognize him
because the gunman was masked.
Police initially said the suspect was African-American but later
identified him as Sudanese with legal US residency.
From church parking lot to sanctuary
Samson "pulled into the church parking lot in a blue SUV. He is believed
to have been there for at least several minutes before church let out,"
the police said in a statement.
Samson shot and killed Melanie Crow Smith, 39, of Smyrna, Tennessee, as
she was walking to her car in the parking lot, police said. She died at
the scene.
The shooter then entered the church through the sanctuary's main door
with two pistols and "began indiscriminately shooting," said Aaron, the
police spokesman.
Minerva Rosa, who was inside the church when the shooting started, told
reporters Sunday the gunman was silent when he opened fire.
About 50 people were still inside the sanctuary during the shooting.
Six people, ranging in age from 64 to 84, were wounded by gunfire, Aaron
said.
One patient at Vanderbilt University Medical Center is in critical
condition, the hospital said. It would not release the name.
Usher called 'a hero'
Church usher Robert Caleb Engle, 22, saw the shooting and confronted the
gunman, Aaron said. During a struggle, Engle was pistol-whipped and the
gunman mistakenly shot himself.
"The wound sent Samson to the floor. Engle, despite his head injuries,
ran out to his car in the parking lot and retrieved a pistol. He held
Samson at gunpoint until police arrived," a police statement said.
Police recovered four firearms believed to be Samson's -- two pistols in
the church and a pistol and rifle from his SUV.
Without Engle, "I think it could be worse," Rosa said. "He was a hero
today."
Nashville Police Chief Steve Anderson said Engle "stopped this madness,
so we're very, very, very grateful to him."
"He's the hero," Anderson said.
Engle released a statement through the hospital where he was treated,
saying he did not want to be labeled a hero.
"I've been going to this church my whole life, since I was a small
child," he said. "I would have never, ever thought something like this
would have happened."
He asked for prayers for the victims and their families, adding, "Please
pray for the shooter, the shooter's family and friends. They are hurting
as well."
He said, "The real heroes are the police, first responders and medical
staff and doctors who have helped me and everyone affected."
Community prayers
Prayer vigils will be held Monday to show support for the victims and
their families.
One is set for 3 p.m. local (4 p.m. ET) at Woodmont Hills Church in
Nashville, an event led by area religious leaders
"Nashville area pastors, ministers and shepherds, please join us for a
time of prayer and unity," the church said on its Facebook page. "If you
are unable to attend, please join us in spirit."
Another will be outside Burnette Chapel Church of Christ at 7 p.m. local
time.
"We are beyond grateful for the enormous outpouring of love and
compassion we have received from so many after the tragic event that
took place yesterday," the church said on its Facebook page Monday.
"We ask for your continued prayers and support during the coming days
and months." |
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