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Wednesday, April 2, 2014

Tragedy Hits Fort Hood Again. Isn't It Time To Re-examine The Policy Of Troops Being Unarmed On Base.

Shooter among 4 dead in Fort Hood spree, multiple people injured

Published time: April 02, 2014 22:13
Edited time: April 03, 2014 01:30
Reuters / III Corps Public Affairs/U.S. Army
Reuters / III Corps Public Affairs/U.S. Army
A shooting took place at the US military base at Fort Hood in Killeen, Texas on Wednesday afternoon. Four people were confirmed dead including the gunman of a self-inflicted wound.
Sources told CBS News that the shooter was a 34-year-old soldier named Ivan Lopez. While little is known about Spc. Lopez, sources told CBS the Wednesday shooting may have been motivated by a conflict with another soldier.
There had been multiple reports of a second shooter, though a US military official confirmed to KCEN-TV that Lopez had acted alone.
As many as fourteen people have reportedly been hospitalized. Three of the wounded have sufferedcritical injuries and were transported to Carl R. Darnall Medical Center and other area hospitals.

Witnesses speculated that 20 shots were fired from a .45 pistol.
One soldier told KENS-5 in Texas that the first gunshots rang out around 4:35 p.m. near the outdoor motor pool but the gunman then ran into the medical building. The witness said it seemed like some kind of standoff had taken place, and that some people tried to flee by jumping over a seven-foot-high barbed wire fence.

An estimated 90 police and military vehicles were at the scene two hours after the first shots, along with nearly two dozen ambulances and SWAT teams.
There were also reports of victims in the Battle Simulation Center on 65th and Warehouse.
The lockdown was lifted Wednesday night, allowing many families to reunite with loved ones who were either stuck in traffic on the way to the base or were waiting for loved ones to arrive there. The American Red Cross previously announced that it had opened a shelter with a capacity of 150 for families who may have had trouble returning to Fort Hood amid the confusion.
The parking lot outside the base, where thousands of people come and go on a daily basis, quickly filled with family members of military personnel anxious for news on the situation. Local media reported that, along with fear and concern, a number of people were voicing frustration that another shooting appears to have taken place after Nidal Hasan, a US Army major and psychiatrist, fatally shot 13 people and injured more than 30 others on the base in 2009.
Hospital officials said Wednesday night that the victims had been shot in the head, chest, neck, abdomen, and extremities. They added that, in the wake of the 2009 shooting, hospital staff carried out drills to prepare for a mass shooting incident.
“Their conditions range from stable to quite critical,” one doctor said in an evening press conference.“There’s a lot of unknowns early on and it creates some logistical problems...I’m pleased to report we were well prepared but it always takes a little while to figure out how many patients are going to come.”
Officials have not confirmed whether Lopez was in uniform at the time of the shooting, which was reportedly motivated by an argument at the Army base's motor pool. It is known that he was living in the Killeen area. Terrorism is not suspected as a motivating factor.
Speaking to a press pool in Chicago on Wednesday afternoon, US President Obama said he is“heartbroken” about the events at Fort Hood and promised “we will get to the bottom of what happened.”
"It's a terrible tragedy. We know that. We know there are casualties, both people killed and injured,"Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel told reporters during a news conference in Honolulu.
"We don't have all the facts yet. We will get those. It's still under investigation," he added.
US President Barack Obama departs after making a statement to the press on April 2, 2014 in Chicago, Illinois, on the shooting at the Fort Hood military base in Texas. (AFP Photo / Jewel Samad)
US President Barack Obama departs after making a statement to the press on April 2, 2014 in Chicago, Illinois, on the shooting at the Fort Hood military base in Texas. (AFP Photo / Jewel Samad)

The FBI had launched a manhunt for a former military recruit who told friends he was planning a “jihad” attack on Fort Hood, according to a Fox News report published Tuesday night. The FBI confirmed the report, although officials said the suspect had been interviewed and that he was not considered a threat.

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