Here we go again. Active shooter opens fire in Duncanville outside Dallas in children's summer camp

dseag2

Dallas, TX
Location
Dallas, TX
At least the police responded within 2 minutes, shot him dead and there were no victims. Good riddance.

June 13, 2022, 11:20 AM CDT / Updated June 13, 2022, 6:51 PM CDT
By David K. Li and Juliette Arcodia
Police quickly ended a potential siege at a children's sports camp in the Dallas area Monday when they fatally shot a gunman who had opened fire inside the complex, but did not injure anyone.
The unidentified man appeared to have fired twice in Duncanville Fieldhouse, a youth sports and training venue in the city of the same name about 13 miles south of Dallas, police said.

The armed suspect entered through the complex's main lobby doors and was confronted by a staff member who exchanged gunfire with him, Duncanville Police Department Assistant Chief Matt Stogner said at an afternoon news conference.

The alleged gunman then went to what was described as a classroom filled with children and opened fire from outside after he was unable to get in, the assistant chief said.
"Fortunately, no one was injured," he said.
Beginning with the first sounds of gunfire, children at the complex were moved into a "safe area" that was then locked, steps staffers were trained to execute in active shooter situations, Stogner said.
The suspect moved to the main gym, he said, where there were still children present, but no shots were fired, at least until officers arrived and engaged in the firefight that killed him.
The man was given first aid by officers at the scene and taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead, the assistant chief said.
It appeared no one but the suspect was struck or injured, Stogner said. The man was unknown to Duncanville police, he said.
Children attending camps at the complex range in age from 4 to 14, officials said.
Camp counselor Naomi Rodgers told NBC affiliate KXAS of Dallas-Fort Worth she was in the classroom, filled with children ages 4 to 6, when it became a focus of the suspect.

"The shooter actually came to our door," she said, "and he said if we didn’t let him see who he wanted to see he was going to shoot the place up."
The suspect shot the classroom door, which is glass, she said.
“I just started to pray then because that’s all I could do,” said the counselor, who’s 18.

Stogner credited a rapid response by officers for shutting down what could have been another shooting tragedy involving defenseless children.
Dispatchers began receiving 911 calls at 8:43 a.m. about a person with a gun at the Duncanville complex, where an estimated 250 children were attending camps, authorities said.
Officers arrived in two minutes, entered the building and looked for the armed individual, Duncanville police spokeswoman Michelle Arias told reporters.
Children were cleared from the building reunited with parents at the nearby Duncanville Recreation Center, authorities said.
Monday's incident unfolded nearly three weeks after a gunman broke into Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, about 350 miles southwest of Duncanvile, and killed 19 children and two teachers.
Stogner was asked about what went right with his officers' response at a time when the law enforcement strategy in Uvalde was being probed by state and federal investigators.
"We obviously understand what took place south of us," he said. "We certainly take our security very seriously."
Nonetheless, officials will review the safety protocols followed at the venue Monday to see if mistakes were made or if improvements can be instituted, Duncanville City Manager Aretha R. Ferrell-Benavides said at the afternoon news conference.
Police in Uvalde are under intense scrutiny. The killer there remained in a locked classroom with victims for more than an hour before a tactical unit from federal law enforcement entered and fatally shot the gunman.
And nearly one month ago, a white gunman motivated by hate and dressed in tactical gear killed 10 people at a supermarket in a predominantly Black neighborhood in western New York, officials said.
Before suspect Payton Gendron, 18, opened fire at Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo, he is alleged to have posted a 180-page document revealing plans to attack Black people while citing the racist “great replacement theory” — which falsely says white Americans are being supplanted by nonwhite people through immigration, interracial marriage and, eventually, violence.
:(
 

Uh, well.......what's the take-home lesson?
After Sandy Hook, someone said, "The only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun."

And, the good guys with guns (police & an armed staff member) didn't wait outside for hours...........

Sure beats 21 funerals.
 
At least the police responded within 2 minutes, shot him dead and there were no victims. Good riddance.

June 13, 2022, 11:20 AM CDT / Updated June 13, 2022, 6:51 PM CDT
By David K. Li and Juliette Arcodia
Police quickly ended a potential siege at a children's sports camp in the Dallas area Monday when they fatally shot a gunman who had opened fire inside the complex, but did not injure anyone.
The unidentified man appeared to have fired twice in Duncanville Fieldhouse, a youth sports and training venue in the city of the same name about 13 miles south of Dallas, police said.

The armed suspect entered through the complex's main lobby doors and was confronted by a staff member who exchanged gunfire with him, Duncanville Police Department Assistant Chief Matt Stogner said at an afternoon news conference.

The alleged gunman then went to what was described as a classroom filled with children and opened fire from outside after he was unable to get in, the assistant chief said.
"Fortunately, no one was injured," he said.
Beginning with the first sounds of gunfire, children at the complex were moved into a "safe area" that was then locked, steps staffers were trained to execute in active shooter situations, Stogner said.
The suspect moved to the main gym, he said, where there were still children present, but no shots were fired, at least until officers arrived and engaged in the firefight that killed him.
The man was given first aid by officers at the scene and taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead, the assistant chief said.
It appeared no one but the suspect was struck or injured, Stogner said. The man was unknown to Duncanville police, he said.
Children attending camps at the complex range in age from 4 to 14, officials said.
Camp counselor Naomi Rodgers told NBC affiliate KXAS of Dallas-Fort Worth she was in the classroom, filled with children ages 4 to 6, when it became a focus of the suspect.

"The shooter actually came to our door," she said, "and he said if we didn’t let him see who he wanted to see he was going to shoot the place up."
The suspect shot the classroom door, which is glass, she said.
“I just started to pray then because that’s all I could do,” said the counselor, who’s 18.

Stogner credited a rapid response by officers for shutting down what could have been another shooting tragedy involving defenseless children.
Dispatchers began receiving 911 calls at 8:43 a.m. about a person with a gun at the Duncanville complex, where an estimated 250 children were attending camps, authorities said.
Officers arrived in two minutes, entered the building and looked for the armed individual, Duncanville police spokeswoman Michelle Arias told reporters.
Children were cleared from the building reunited with parents at the nearby Duncanville Recreation Center, authorities said.
Monday's incident unfolded nearly three weeks after a gunman broke into Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, about 350 miles southwest of Duncanvile, and killed 19 children and two teachers.
Stogner was asked about what went right with his officers' response at a time when the law enforcement strategy in Uvalde was being probed by state and federal investigators.
"We obviously understand what took place south of us," he said. "We certainly take our security very seriously."
Nonetheless, officials will review the safety protocols followed at the venue Monday to see if mistakes were made or if improvements can be instituted, Duncanville City Manager Aretha R. Ferrell-Benavides said at the afternoon news conference.
Police in Uvalde are under intense scrutiny. The killer there remained in a locked classroom with victims for more than an hour before a tactical unit from federal law enforcement entered and fatally shot the gunman.
And nearly one month ago, a white gunman motivated by hate and dressed in tactical gear killed 10 people at a supermarket in a predominantly Black neighborhood in western New York, officials said.
Before suspect Payton Gendron, 18, opened fire at Tops Friendly Market in Buffalo, he is alleged to have posted a 180-page document revealing plans to attack Black people while citing the racist “great replacement theory” — which falsely says white Americans are being supplanted by nonwhite people through immigration, interracial marriage and, eventually, violence.
:(
My primary goal with my children was to keep them alive. Beyond that, I wanted to keep them free from feelings of terror. Now that I have twin baby great-grandsons, I live in fear for their lives. My family is mixed-race. The spread of hate and the resorting to violence just ties me in knots.
 
"The shooter actually came to our door," she said, "and he said if we didn’t let him see who he wanted to see he was going to shoot the place up."



:(
Sounds like the locked classroom door was the main reason no children were killed. Even if it only took police ten seconds to get there, that first spray of bullets would have killed lots of children if it had been inside the room.

It also sounds like the shooter might have been involved in a custody battle.

Once again the shooter was, "not known to police." So far there's no evidence of a felony record or a history of mental illness. Background checks would not have stopped this anymore than hate crime laws stopped what happened in Buffalo.

When will we learn? We can't make laws against emotions, people will always hate. All hate laws have done is assured that a killer will do less time for shooting children than for shooting certain adults. Is that what we wanted?

There is no way to predict who will snap or who has the most hate in his heart. What we can do is make sure they don't have easy access to guns before they have time to calm down.
 
Uh, well.......what's the take-home lesson?
After Sandy Hook, someone said, "The only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun."

And, the good guys with guns (police & an armed staff member) didn't wait outside for hours...........

Sure beats 21 funerals.
But it was the 'good guys' who's job it is to do so--not some random civilian who stopped him.
 
i've searched for the story, reading a couple of accounts--tho my computer is being slow loading or i would have read more. None of reports i've seen so far have mentioned what type of gun the shooter had. That's puzzling cause it's usually an leading detail.
 
Yes, I saw recently that many of these shooters actually want to commit suicide by cops, so they really don't care if they are killed after they have taken the lives of many others. Scary.
 
So, this country boy just has to ask this question? What is making more and more people more and more violent? Is it the violence in American films? Is it the Internet that allows the crazies to get crazy ideas? Is it the stress in our society following the "American Dream?" Perhaps it is the lifestyle of everyone running around, shopping and consuming, where folks don't have time to talk to anyone because "we are so busy?" We live in a society of stress and speed where happiness is an ever shrinking dream.
 
i've searched for the story, reading a couple of accounts--tho my computer is being slow loading or i would have read more. None of reports i've seen so far have mentioned what type of gun the shooter had. That's puzzling cause it's usually an leading detail.
I read one that mentioned a handgun.
 
Uh, well.......what's the take-home lesson?
After Sandy Hook, someone said, "The only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy with a gun."

And, the good guys with guns (police & an armed staff member) didn't wait outside for hours...........

Sure beats 21 funerals.
This happened two days ago.

What about when the bad guy has a knife and the good guy has a gun? I'm guessing in this domestic situation, the estranged husband got the drop on her so she was unable to grab her revolver.

https://nypost.com/2022/06/13/nypd-cop-fatally-stabbed-by-husband-in-bronx-cops/

https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/loc...usband-who-turned-himself-in-sources/3731471/

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...D-cop-31-stabbed-death-inside-Bronx-home.html
 


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