The Independent - 05.09.2019

(Tuis.) #1

he had spent the weekend playing golf and tweeting his condolences following the carnage in El Paso,
Texas, and Dayton, Ohio. “We have to get it stopped. It’s been going on for years. Years and years, and we
have to get it stopped.”


He said he believed both shooters were “really very seriously mentally ill” and added: “I’ll be making a
statement tomorrow, sometime. Hate has no place in our country, and we’re going to take care of it.”


As Mr Trump was speaking, authorities in the two cities were scrambling to deal with multiple challenges.
In Ohio, officials said they were still trying to assess what led 24-year-old Connor Betts to open fire outside
the Ned Peppers bar in the Oregon neighbourhood, killing nine people and injuring more than 20 before he
was shot dead by nearby police officers, who responded within 30 seconds.


Police chief Richard Biehl said yesterday afternoon that there was far too much information to review before
a motive could be determined, although he said officers had found writings in which Betts had expressed an
interest in killing people. He said the man had used a .223 calibre high-capacity gun and had additional
magazines, similar to many of the weapons used in other mass shootings.


Meanwhile in El Paso, a city on the border with Mexico, police said they increasingly believed a racist
manifesto posted online that talked about responding to the “Hispanic invasion of Texas” and praising the
person who carried out shooting rampages at two mosques in New Zealand earlier this year, was the work
of shooting suspect Patrick Crusius.


It was posted on the 8chan message board just 20 minutes before a gunman armed with a semi-automatic
rifle walked into a Walmart store at a shopping mall and opened fire. The death toll currently stands at 20,
with six of those killed Mexican citizens. Another two dozen people were injured.


Authorities said they were treating the shooting as an act of domestic terrorism and would seek the death
penalty if the 21-year-old white man from the city of Alen, 650 miles to the east, was found guilty.


Yesterday afternoon, outside the Walmart store where the bodies of the dead had been left in place as the
authorities carried out their investigation, people walked to a road junction that overlooked the store. Some
left flowers or candles.


“This is a friendly city. It is a welcoming place,” said Cynthia Chavez, who had come with her daughter to
place two bouquets of roses, one red, the other pink. “It’s close knit.”


El Paso has a large migrant population, and the manifesto posted online suggested it had been intentionally
chosen for that reason. Many of those people paying their respects said they believed that Mr Trump’s
racist language – last month he was formally condemned by the House of Representatives after tweeting
that four Democratic congresswomen should go back to their countries of origin – was a factor to what had
happened.


Joseph de la Cruz, 36, said: “It has a lot to do with it. It has a lot to do with what our leader says.”


Larry Scott, 40, a member of the army, had been in the Walmart around 6.30am on Saturday morning,
about four hours before the incident. He said he was feeling shaken by what had happened.


Asked about the possible impact of the president’s language, he said it was hard to measure the extent it
impact people. Yet he said he believed that with the president “being so bold ... people feel this is allowed.
It kind of justifies it.”


A number of Democrats seeking to challenge the president in 2020 also said they believed his language
helped feed bigotry.


“You reap what you sow, and he is sowing seeds of hate in this country. This harvest of hate violence we’re
seeing right now lies at his feet,” senator Cory Booker of New Jersey told NBC. “He is responsible.”

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