Las Vegas federal building shootout leaves 2 dead

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  • jedi

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    LAS VEGAS – Nearly four months after a judge dismissed his lawsuit over Social Security benefits, 66-year-old Johnny Lee Wicks opened fire with a shotgun in a Las Vegas federal building, killing one security guard and wounding a U.S. marshal before being shot to death, authorities said.
    Preliminary evidence pointed to Wicks' anger over his benefits case as the motive for the shooting, law enforcement officials told The Associated Press Monday, though authorities are continuing to investigate. The two officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the case.
    FBI Special Agent Joseph Dickey said the gunman opened fire Monday morning in front of a set of security metal detectors just inside a two-story atrium rotunda. He said he didn't know if any words were spoken before the shooting began.
    "From what witness accounts have said, he walked in with a shotgun underneath his jacket and opened fire when he opened the doors," Dickey said. "Seven officers responded and returned fire."
    The gunfire erupted at about 8 a.m. and lasted several minutes as shots echoed around tall buildings in the area more than a mile north of the Las Vegas Strip.
    The U.S. Marshals Service said the victims of the shooting Monday include a 48-year-old deputy U.S. marshal who was hospitalized and Stanley Cooper, a 65-year-old contract court security officer.
    Cooper was a retired Las Vegas police officer employed by Akal Security, said Jeff Carter, spokesman for the Marshals Service in Washington. He was a police officer for 26 years and became a federal court security officer in Las Vegas in 1994, Carter said. Authorities didn't immediately release the name of the wounded marshal.
    Democratic Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, who was in Las Vegas but not at his local office in the building, said one of his aides bent down to pick up some newspapers in the atrium when the shooting began.
    "She believes her life was saved as a result of picking up those papers," Reid said. "She then crouched behind a pillar when this 'war,' as she said, took place."
    Authorities also were investigating a fire that damaged Wicks' one-bedroom apartment in a 90-unit seniors complex three miles northwest of the scene of the federal building, FBI Special Agent Dickey said as investigators pieced together a motive for the shooting and retraced Wicks' steps.
    A neighbor, Johnetta Watkins, said she didn't see Wicks after firefighters doused the fire.
    Watkins, 56, used to drive Wicks to the grocery store. She described him as a quiet man who walked with a limp, lived alone and sometimes complained that Las Vegas was a "prejudiced" place to live. He also complained about what he called an unfair cut in his Social Security benefits, she said.
    "He hated living in Las Vegas and he had spoken about moving back to California," Watkins said, recalling that Wicks moved in about mid-2007. "He said that he had had several strokes ... and that he was distraught because the government was taking most of his money. They had cut his funds and he was very upset about that."
    In a handwritten lawsuit filed in March 2008, Wicks complained that his Social Security benefits were cut following his move to Las Vegas, and he accused federal workers of discrimination because of his race.
    "Lots of state worker(s) and agencies have took part in this scam mainly for old blacks who are not well educated," Wicks wrote in the seven-page complaint.
    Wicks claimed the problem began in California, after he had a stroke and was unable to go to government offices to protest an earlier benefits reduction. He alleged Social Security staff called his new landlord in Las Vegas and told her not to help him.
    The case was dismissed Sept. 9 by U.S. District Court Judge Philip Pro in Las Vegas following a hearing before federal Magistrate Judge George Foley Jr. Both judges have courtrooms in the federal building.

    U.S. Sen. John Ensign, R-Nev., told reporters it appeared the gunman acted alone and the shooting was not a terrorist act. Ensign also has an office in the building but wasn't there at the time. The senator said the guard who died was shot in the chest.
    A video posted on YouTube recorded the sound of the running firefight as the man retreated across Las Vegas Boulevard toward another federal building and a historic school.
    "I could see guards and everything coming out, and then all of a sudden I just started hearing pop, pop, pop. I mean, just like 30 or 40 shots," said Troy Saccal, a tax services manager who was arriving for work at the time.
    Saccal said he thought he saw one guard slump to the ground and another move to help him.
    The gunman died moments later in the bushes outside the restored Fifth Street School, where his body remained for several hours.
    John Clark, director of the U.S. Marshals Service in Washington, called the security officers heroes.
    "The brave and immediate actions of these two individuals saved lives by stopping the threat of a reckless and callous gunman," Clark said in a statement.
    Bullet holes marked the entrance of the eight-story modern federal building, which was locked down after the shootout and closed for the day.
    A helicopter view showed heavily armed officers in flak jackets scouring the building's roof. Shortly afterward, armed officers escorted employees to the auditorium of a school three blocks away. Dickey called the evacuation "standard procedure." The Lloyd D. George U.S. Courthouse and Federal Building opened in 2002 and is named for a longtime senior federal judge who still hears cases. It was touted as the first federal building built to comply with blast resistance requirements following the 1995 bombing of the Alfred P. Murrah Federal Building in downtown Oklahoma City.

    FYI the shooter's benefits were reduced becuase he moved from one state (CA) to another (NV) which has a different set of benefit levels (each state has a different beneift level). The shooter was getting SSI payments not the regular retirement benefits (social security payments) that most people think SSA gives out.
     

    IndyGunworks

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    FYI the shooter's benefits were reduced becuase he moved from one state (CA) to another (NV) which has a different set of benefit levels (each state has a different beneift level). The shooter was getting SSI payments not the regular retirement benefits (social security payments) that most people think SSA gives out.

    makes me wonder if anyone ever explained that to him? or if he was too set on the fact he was being discriminated against to let someone explain him the truth.
     

    jedi

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    makes me wonder if anyone ever explained that to him? or if he was too set on the fact he was being discriminated against to let someone explain him the truth.

    Well he sued the feds in 2008 over the issue and in 09/09 a federal course finally closed the case so suspect he must have been informed to some degree.

    If his motive was indeed to harm the SSA he targeted the wrong building. The federal court house that deals with SSA hearings is actually across the street from the federal court house he walked into.

    From what I'm reading, however, there was no way to stop the killing of the seucirty guard since as soon as the doors opened, he walked into the building and started shooting. So unless they setup check points OUTSIDE the bldg (aka the parking lot, etc..) I don't see a way for the security gaurd to have survived being that close of a range to the shooter with the SG. :xmad:
     

    jedi

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    Your welcome. "It touched you" why? Did you know any of those involved? The area? The agency? etc? I'm just being noisy. If you want to PM that is fine and if you don't want to answer any of the questions that is OK as well.

    --ADD ON--
    Welcome to the board BTW!
     

    jedi

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    Rambone in this case nothing could have prevented it. The guy was not going their for a "mass" killing of unarmed people. He was on a single mission of killing as many SSA employees as possible before being killed. At 66 I guess he figured e had lived long enough and just wanted SSA to PAY for it.

    From the news articles as soon as he opened the door (he was the first one into the bldg) he opened fired. No way the 1st guard could have not been shot. Sadly the guard did not have a vest one, although not sure if a SG blast would have been stopped. =(
     
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