The man who killed 4 people at a bank in Louisville, and injured 9 more, is known to us

An employee of a bank in Louisville, Kentucky, knows he’s leaving, but doesn’t know if he was going to die

The law enforcement source said that a 25-year-old bank employee in Louisville, Kentucky, knew he was going to be terminated and wrote a note to his family before opening fire at work, killing four people and wounding nine others.

Officers responded to the mass shooting within three minutes of being dispatched and found the suspect still firing, he said. They exchanged gunfire with the suspect, who died at the scene, although it was unclear if he was killed by an officer or died of a self-inflicted gunshot.

Several victims remain hospitalized, including a police officer who was critically wounded in the bank shooting, as investigators piece together what led up to the attack.

Gerald Neal, who represents the district where the shooting happened, told CNN that the bank is on the fringe of the downtown business district. He said that he wouldn’t expect anything to happen at this location.

Video from the scene taken by CNN affiliate WDRB shows a large police presence in the area as well as shattered glass at the entrance of the Old National Bank.

The employee, identified as Connor Sturgeon, had been recording the shooting and was live- streaming it to his followers. The bank’s manager told CNN that he opened fire during a staff meeting in the conference room.

Curd said he was walking his dog on East Main Street when he saw people running in his direction. Several gunshots can be heard in a video he took at the scene.

The Investigative Investigation of a 17-year-old Officer’s Collision in Louisville, KY, after Opening a Bank Account on Instagram

The Louisville metro area had a population of 630,000 as of the 2020 census, which is located along the Kentucky-Indiana border. A bank, dentist’s office, furniture store, and the Louisville Ballet can be found on the 300 block of East Main Street.

Andy Beshear says he is going to the scene of the shooting. He asked for prayers for the families impacted and for the city of Louisville.

Sturgeon had worked at the bank for more than a year, according to a law enforcement source familiar with the investigation. He livestreamed his attack on Instagram, a video that has since been removed from the platform.

The four victims, all between the ages of 40 and 64, were identified as Joshua Barrick, Juliana Farmer, Tommy Elliott and James Tutt, the chief said. Gov. Andy Beshear said Elliott, a senior vice president at the bank, was one of his closest friends.

Of the nine people injured, three are hospitalized in critical condition, including Nickolas Wilt, a 26-year-old police officer who graduated from the police academy just 10 days ago. The man was shot in the head during a confrontation with another man and was taken to the hospital, where he underwent surgery.

The chief said that three of the injured were in non-critical condition. Five of the nine people injured had gunshot wounds, a hospital spokesperson said.

Connor Sturgeon in Louisville, KY: A basketball student who had trouble fitting in at school, was killed by an unarmed bank employee in August 2018

Sturgeon wrote on his LinkedIn profile that he interned at Old National Bank in Louisville for three consecutive summers between 2018 and 2020 before joining full time in June 2021.

The shooting was live-streamed on Instagram and has since been taken down. Police are in possession of the video, according to the law enforcement source.

“I will say this, that the suspect was live streaming. That is tragic. To know that that incident was out there and captured,” Gwinn-Villaroel said.

Sturgeon played basketball and ran track for his high school, and was named a semifinalist for a National Merit scholarship in 2015, according to local news reports.

This is not what I expected. He was a really good kid who came from a really good family,” said the classmate, who asked not to be identified and has not spoken with Sturgeon in recent years. “I can’t even say how much this doesn’t make sense. I can’t believe it.

In a 2018 college essay posted to the website CourseHero, a user identified as a University of Alabama student named Connor Sturgeon wrote that he had had trouble fitting in at school.

The author wrote that in college, he had “begun to mature socially and am beginning to see improvement in this area,” and that he hoped to “be more self-aware and start becoming a ‘better’ person.”

Source: https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/10/us/connor-sturgeon-louisville-bank-mass-shooting/index.html

The father of a gunman who shot himself in the foot: Will Congress act to protect us? The Louisville bank shooting tragedy unfolds at 4:30 am ET ET

The father who was the head coach of the men’s basketball team at the University of Indianapolis for 10 years was also a history teacher and coach at his son’s high school.

While attending the meeting virtually, Buchheit-Sims watched in horror as the shooting began on her computer screen.

Police say Deana Eckert, who was one of the three people hospitalized, died later in the day.

The source said the gunman left behind a note for his parents and a friend indicating he planned to carrying out a shooting at his workplace, though it is unclear when the message was found.

Monday’s massacre is the 146th mass shooting so far this year, according to the Gun Violence Archive, as such tragedies continue to strike at the hearts of American communities while they go about their daily lives. It falls in the middle of a national debate about gun control two weeks after several people were killed at a Christian school in Tennessee.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear has ordered flags across the state to fly at half-staff until Friday evening in honor of the victims, but some Democratic lawmakers are concerned that the expressions of grief will come and go without meaningful gun violence solutions.

“My worry is that everybody will raise their fists in anger and mourn and then in six weeks, eight weeks we go back to doing the same – nothing,” state Sen. David Yates told CNN Monday. I hope they don’t have to die in vain like many of the other victims. Maybe something positive can arise from it.

“Too many Americans are paying for the price of inaction with their lives. When will Republicans in Congress act to protect our communities?

Source: https://www.cnn.com/2023/04/11/us/louisville-kentucky-bank-shooting-tuesday/index.html

The Shooting of a Louisville Bank Employee During the First Day of the Louisville Shooting: Jimmy Neal, Craig Greenberg, and Jesse Beshear

On Monday after the shooting, Jim Ryan and other members of the executive team were in Louisville.

Ryan said in a statement that the company was providing employee assistance support as they waited for more information.

The shooting began around 8:30 a.m., police said, about 30 minutes before the bank opens to the public. The bank manager said that staff were holding their morning meeting in the conference room when the shooter opened fire.

The gun used in the shooting was an AR-15-style rifle, a federal law enforcement source told CNN. The most popular rifle in the US is the Semi- Automatic rifle with 30 percent of gun owners reporting having owned a similar-style rifle, according to the National Firearms Survey. The AR-15 and its offshoots have been the weapon of choice in many of the most horrific mass shootings in recent memory, including the Covenant school shooting in Nashville just two weeks ago.

Despite the shooting in Kentucky, Neal thinks discussions about gun control in the state will go on.

Tommy Elliot was remembered as a beloved leader in the community and a close mentor by many local and state leaders.

“Tommy was a great man. He placed good people in good positions to do great things. State senator Yates said he was embraced by him when he was young. He was constructing people up.

Craig Greenberg, Mayor of Louisville, said he spent Monday morning at the hospital with Elliott’s wife.

Greenberg spoke with CNN’s Jake Tapper about the pain of it for all of his families. It just hits home when you know one of the victims.

Beshear remembered Elliot an “incredible friend” and also called the others who were killed “amazing people” who will be missed and mourned by their communities.

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