A grieving community will hold a memorial service Tuesday night for seven people who were killed at a small religious college in Oakland, California, when a former student went on a shooting spree.
Police took into custody
the suspect, 43-year-old One Goh, an hour after the Monday morning
shooting at the Oikos University in east Oakland, but had not filed
charges by early Tuesday.
Authorities also did not
know what prompted the shooter to open fire. In addition to the seven
dead, three others were wounded in the attack.
"With a case of this
magnitude, with all the victims and witnesses and all the chaos, it's
going to take a few days to put the pieces together," Oakland Police
Chief Howard Jordan said Monday night.
The college, which caters
to the Korean American Christian community, offers degrees in theology,
music, nursing and Asian medicine, according to its website.
Oakland Mayor Jean Quan
said most of the victims appeared to be from the city's Korean-American
community, and the city was working to find multilingual counselors to
help survivors.
"No American mayor wants
to have this situation," she said. "It seems over the last decade, we've
gotten used to seeing senseless mass killings like this, and we'll have
to question the availability of guns and the need for other services in
our community."
Gunfire erupted inside the single-story building that houses the private Christian college about 10:30 a.m. (1:30 p.m. ET).
A witness, Brian Snow, said he was at a nearby credit union when shots rang out, "and it started getting chaotic."
"In Oakland, sometimes
things like that happen, but it dies over," he said. But this time, he
said, "I went outside and the cops were coming and like 'Don't move,
don't move,' and it started getting chaotic ... a pedestrian came out
with a bullet hole and I was like, 'Getting really crazy right now.' "
Lucas Garcia, who was
teaching an English class at the college when the rampage began, told
CNN affiliate KGO-TV that he counted about six gunshots from a nearby
nursing classroom.
Garcia said he heard someone yell, "He's got a gun," and he got his students out of the building while the gunfire continued.
Jordan said the
relationship between the suspect and any of those shot remained unknown
Monday night, as detectives combed over "a very bloody scene with lots
of evidence."
"Initially, we were told he was in a classroom when he stood up and began shooting at the victims," Jordan said.
Several of the survivors, including the wounded, hid behind locked doors or desks as the shooting went on.
Tashi Wangzon said that
when her wife, a student, heard the shots, she locked the door to her
classroom and turned off the light.
"The man with the gun
later came toward the room and, at the time, he fired several rounds at
the door," Wangzon told KGO. "Then he left (when he thought nobody was
there."
The suspect took one of
the victims' cars and drove off, but surrendered to police at a grocery
store in the Oakland suburb of Alameda a short time later, Jordan said.
California Gov. Jerry Brown, who served as Oakland's mayor from 1999 to 2007, called the killings "shocking and sad."
"Our thoughts and
prayers go out to the victims, their families and friends and the entire
community affected by this senseless act of violence," Brown said in a
statement issued by his office.
The memorial service
will take place Tuesday evening at the Korean Methodist Church.
Officials said they may have to change the location if the church isn't
large enough to hold all those who plan to attend.
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