Thursday, December 3, 2015 NATION/WORLD East Oregonian Page 7A SHOOTING: 10 of the wounded were hospitalized in critical condition Continued from 1A his brother-in-law about a week ago. He said he was in shock and had “absolutely no idea why he would do this.” The attackers invaded the Inland Regional Center about 60 miles east of Los Angeles and began shooting around 11 a.m. Wednesday. They RSHQHG ¿UH LQ D FRQIHUHQFH DUHD that the San Bernardino County Department of Public Health had rented out for an employee banquet, said Marybeth Feild, president and &(2RIWKHQRQSUR¿WFHQWHU Police spokeswoman Sgt. Vicki Cervantes said witnesses reported seeing one to three gunmen. “They came prepared to do what they did, as if they were on a mission,” Burguan, the police chief, said. Burguan said that someone had left the morning event after “there was some type of dispute,” but investigators were not sure whether that had anything to do with the subsequent massacre in the Southern &DOLIRUQLDFLW\RISHRSOH $V JXQ¿UH HFKRHG WKURXJK the large three-building complex, several people locked themselves in WKHLURI¿FHVGHVSHUDWHO\ZDLWLQJWR be rescued by police. Some texted or telephoned their loved ones and whispered to them what was going on. ³3HRSOH VKRW ,Q WKH RI¿FH waiting for cops. Pray for us. I am ORFNHG LQ DQ RI¿FH´ 7HUU\ 3HWLW¶V daughter texted him. Petit, choking back tears as he read the text for reporters at the scene, said his daughter works at the FHQWHU ZKHUH VRFLDO ZRUNHUV ¿QG jobs, housing and transportation and provide other services to people with disabilities such as autism, cerebral palsy and epilepsy. According to its web page, the center has a client base of more than 30,000 people with developmental disabilities and their families. It is a SULYDWHO\UXQQRQSUR¿WWKHODUJHVWRI its kind in California with about 670 employees. Ten of the wounded were hospi- talized in critical condition, and three were in serious condition, Fire Chief Tom Hannemann said. That the violence happened at a place dedicated to helping people with developmental disabilities — even if they were not targeted of Redlands saw a vehicle matching that description. Public records show the home is a possible residence of a family member of Farook. $XWKRULWLHVSXUVXHGWKH689DQG a gunbattle broke out around 3 p.m., DXWKRULWLHVVDLG2QHRI¿FHUVXIIHUHG a minor injury. The aftermath of the shootout was captured live by television news helicopters. (DFKRIWKHGHDGKDGDULÀHDQG handgun and was wearing tactical clothing, including vests stuffed with ammunition magazines, said Agent Meredith Davis of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. An explosive device was found at the social service center, and during the car chase, the couple hurled a fake bomb — a metal pipe stuffed with cloth — out RIWKH689VKHVDLG President Barack Obama was briefed on the attack by his homeland security adviser. He said it was too early to know the shooters’ motives but urged the country to take steps to reduce mass shootings, including AP Photo/Jae C. Hong stricter gun laws and stronger back- People who were near a shooting rampage at a social services center that killed multiple people and ground checks. wounded others arrive at a community center to reunite with their family members in San Bernardi- “The one thing we do know is no, Calif., Wednesday. that we have a pattern now of mass shootings in this country that has no “The one thing we do parallel anywhere else in the world, there’s some steps we could know is that we have and take, not to eliminate every one of a pattern now of mass these mass shootings, but to improve odds that they don’t happen as shootings in this coun- the frequently,” Obama told CBS. The shooting sounded like “an try that has no paral- organized plot,” and preliminary lel anywhere else in information seems to indicate that “this is personal, and there seems the world.” to suggest some element of revenge — President Barack Obama and retaliation,” said Erroll G. Southers, director of Homegrown with their hands up so that police Violent Extremism Studies at the could search them and make sure 8QLYHUVLW\ RI 6RXWKHUQ &DOLIRUQLD the attackers weren’t trying to slip and a former FBI agent. out. “What it says to me, it’s someone They had indeed escaped. One who’s familiar with the facility, it’s AP Photo/Chris Carlson witness, Glenn Willwerth, who runs someone who knew exactly what Law enforcement search for a suspect in a mass shooting at a a business across the street, said he room they were going to go to. Southern California social services center on Wednesday in San heard 10 to 15 shots and then saw an They knew exactly which way they Bernardino, Calif. 689ZLWKEODFNHGRXWZLQGRZVSXOO needed to escape,” Southers said. — made it even harder for some to somebody would come in and start out “very calmly, very slowly” and “They’ve done their homework.” drive off. shooting.” comprehend. The social services center has two As the manhunt dragged on, large buildings that require a badge FBI agents and other law “These are all disabled kids, very disabled,” said Sherry Esquerra, enforcement authorities converged VWRUHV RI¿FH EXLOGLQJV DQG VFKRROV to get in, said Sheela Stark, a member who was searching for her daughter on the center and searched room to were locked down in the city, and of its board of trustees. However, the and son-in-law, both of whom room for the attackers. Triage units roads were blocked off. conference room where many public About four hours later, with police events take place — including the work at the center. “She gets all the were set up outside, and people were services she possibly could for these wheeled away on stretchers. Others ORRNLQJ IRU D GDUN 689 RI¿FHUV banquet Wednesday — is usually kids. So I just don’t understand why were marched from the building staking out a home in the nearby city left open when visitors are expected. Ex-wife says Colorado Planned Parenthood shooting suspect vandalized another clinic By BRUCE SMITH and SADIE GURMAN Associated Press CHARLESTON, S.C. — The man accused of killing three people at a Colorado Planned Parenthood clinic left a decades-long trail of broken marriages, scant social connections and a reputation for religious zealotry that didn’t match his yen for gambling and extramar- ital affairs. New court documents and interviews reveal Robert Lewis Dear as an occasionally violent, fundamentalist loner who was known to nurse a grudge. He had one for at least 20 years against abortion providers, going so far as to put glue in the locks of a clinic in Charleston years earlier, a common protest technique among activists trying to shut down abortion clinics. But still unknown is what caused Dear, 57, to escalate from petty vandalism to the fusillade he is accused of unleashing at the &RORUDGR 6SULQJV RI¿FH ZKHUH D ODZ HQIRUFHPHQW RI¿FLDO VDLG he rambled about “no more baby parts” after his arrest. Colorado Springs police have refused to disclose a motive for Dear’s violence, but there’s mounting evidence that Dear was deeply concerned about abortion. Dear’s ex-wife, Barbara Mescher Micheau, told The Asso- ciated Press on Wednesday that her former husband came home one day bragging about gluing the doors of a clinic. Micheau, who lives in Moncks Corner, South Carolina, said Dear never talked much about Planned Parenthood, although “obviously he was against abortion.” “He was always plotting revenge against people he felt did him wrong and you know it didn’t take much for him to feel like somebody did him wrong,” Micheau said. “So he would spend a lot of time trying to get back at SHRSOHWU\LQJWR¿JXUHRXWZD\VWR get back at people.” Micheau was Dear’s second of WKUHH ZLYHV DQG LQ WKH DI¿GDYLW VKH ¿OHG WR GLYRUFH KLP LQ she described him as angry and isolated. Micheau said Dear had no friends, according to the document. He would listen to music on headphones for hours, ignoring her. He’d vanish for gambling trips Daniel Owen/The Gazette via AP, Pool Colorado Springs shooting suspect, Robert Dear, right, appears via video before Judge Gilbert Martinez, with public defender Dan King, at the El Paso County Criminal Justice Center for this irst court appearance, where he was told he faces irst degree murder charges. to Las Vegas or Atlantic City and suddenly explode in anger at home, kicking her and pulling her hair. “Rob’s anger erupts into fury in a matter of seconds and is alarming,” she wrote. “You have to constantly monitor his emotional state.” She added that he appeared devoutly religious. “He claims to be a Christian and is extremely evangelistic, but he does not follow the Bible in his actions,” Micheau wrote. “He says as long as he believes he will be saved, he can do whatever he pleases. He is obsessed with the world coming to an end.” Dear’s problems were evident even before their marriage ended. He jumped between jobs in fast-food management before joining the South Carolina electric company Santee Cooper. There “he got in trouble a lot and played hooky a lot” before he eventually quit and became an artist’s repre- sentative, selling prints wholesale to art galleries, Micheau said. “He liked the freedom of being his own boss and not having anyone to answer to,” she wrote in the divorce complaint. Money was tight and she said her former husband used his money for “personal plea- sures,” such as a motorcycle and an expensive gun, rather than their bills that piled up. ,QDIWHU'HDUDQG0LFKHDX were separated, he was arrested in North Charleston, South Carolina, on a charge of criminal sexual conduct after a woman said he put a knife to her neck, forced her into her apartment and sexually assaulted her after hitting her in the mouth. No records show how the case was ultimately handled. Dear also married Pamela Ross, who told The New York Times that he didn’t seem overly zealous, standing against abortion but not dwelling on it. Court records show they divorced in 2001. Neighbors who lived beside Dear’s former Walterboro, South Carolina, home say he hid food in the woods as if he was a survivalist, warning neighbors about government spying. One neighbor put up a wooden fence separating their land because Dear liked to skinny dip. Dear also lived part of the time in a cabin with no electricity or running water in Black Mountain, North Carolina. About a year later he moved again, having convinced another woman he met in South Carolina to live with him in his white trailer marked with a cross on a desolate stretch of land in Hartsel, Colo- rado, ringed by Rocky Mountains. Living more than 60 miles west of the clinic in Colorado Springs, Dear rarely waved to neighbors, who saw him heading into the mountains on an ATV to gather ¿UHZRRGRUVWRSSLQJWRJHWKLVPDLO DWWKHSRVWRI¿FH Relatives of Dear’s girlfriend, Stephanie Bragg, said they hadn’t heard from her much since they moved. BRIEFLY Budget talks hit snag over environment, refugees WASHINGTON (AP) — Talks on a massive, government-wide spending bill hit a snag Wednesday as Republicans pressed demands to EORFNQHZSRZHUSODQWUXOHVZHDNHQ¿QDQFLDOVHUYLFHVUHJXODWLRQVDQG PDNHLWPRUHGLI¿FXOWIRU6\ULDQDQG,UDTLUHIXJHHVWRHQWHUWKH86 Democrats, whose votes will be needed to carry the $1.1 trillion PHDVXUHWKURXJKWKH+RXVHÀDWO\ rejected the initial offer from top Republicans. With little more than a week to pass a measure to avert a government shutdown, it’s likely that a short-term funding bill will be needed to keep the government open past the Dec. 11 deadline. Republican aides characterized Tuesday night’s offer from House Speaker Paul Ryan and top Senate Republican Mitch McConnell as an opening move, but the White House weighed in sharply, saying it threatened a government shutdown. Many lower-tier items in the massive measure have been worked out, leaving numerous policy provisions, known as “riders” as the main unresolved items. “The effort they’re engaged in now is to lard the bill up with ideological riders,” White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest told reporters. House scales back ‘No Child Left Behind’ WASHINGTON (AP) — After years of failed efforts, the House voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to sharply scale back the federal role in American education. But the bill would retain the testing requirement in the 2002 No Child Left Behind law that many parents, teachers and school districts abhor. 7KHOHJLVODWLRQDSSURYHGZRXOGUHWXUQWRWKHVWDWHVWKH decision-making power over how to use students’ test performance in assessing teachers and schools. The measure also would end federal efforts to encourage academic standards such as Common Core. The 1,000-plus page measure was a compromise reached by House and Senate negotiators. The Senate is to vote on it early next week and President Barack Obama is expected to sign it. Rep. John Kline, R-Minn., who led the House-Senate conference committee on the legislation, said Washington has been micromanaging the nation’s classrooms for too long. “Today, we turn the page on the failed status quo and turn over to our nation’s parents and our state and local leaders the authority, ÀH[LELOLW\DQGFHUWDLQW\WKH\QHHGWRGHOLYHUFKLOGUHQDQH[FHOOHQW education,” he said. Lack of sound in Chicago police videos raises more questions CHICAGO (AP) — A police dash-cam video that captures a ZKLWH&KLFDJRRI¿FHUIDWDOO\VKRRWLQJDEODFNWHHQDJHUWLPHVKDV no sound, nor do videos from four other squad cars at the scene. But department protocol indicates all the cruisers should have been recording audio that night. 7KHVLOHQFHLVDOPRVWVXUHWR¿JXUHLQWRWKHRQJRLQJIHGHUDO LQYHVWLJDWLRQRIWKHFDVHDQGLWUDLVHVTXHVWLRQVDERXWZKHWKHURI¿FHUV were careless with the recording equipment or, worse, attempting a cover-up. “When you’ve got a standup cop with nothing to hide, the dash-cam is his friend,” said Gregg Stutchman, who has specialized in video forensics in California for 23 years. “But for cops who aren’t quite as standup, it would make sense that they wouldn’t want things recorded.” Several experts on the type of equipment commonly installed in police vehicles told The Associated Press that it’s plausible for a single squad car to have a glitch preventing sound recording. But they could QRWLPDJLQHKRZDQHQWLUHÀHHWRIFDUVZRXOGHYHUORVHDXGLRDWWKH same time and place by mere happenstance. ³,¶YHQHYHUKHDUGRILWEHIRUH´6WXWFKPDQVDLG³,WUDLVHVDUHGÀDJ´ The more likely explanation is that audio was intentionally switched off, he said.