Posted on 06/28/2003 7:24:14 PM PDT by Mr. Mulliner
Man Opens Fire in San Francisco Hotel; Three Killed
Published: Jun 28, 2003SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A man opened fire in the lobby of a residential hotel Saturday, killing three people and critically wounding another, police said.
The shooting apparently followed an argument at the hotel, San Francisco police Sgt. Neville Gittens told KCBS radio. Details remained unclear, and the name of the hotel was not immediately known.
Two victims were pronounced dead at the scene and a third died at a hospital, Gittens said. A fourth victim was in critical condition.
The gunman, believed to be a resident at the hotel in the city's Tenderloin District, fled. Police closed nearby streets as they searched for him, Gittens said.
AP-ES-06-28-03 2204EDT
Skid Row is an actual street in LA.
Or was it the evil Saturday Night Special?
It was neither, it was one of the Pocket Rockets that Diane Feinswine has been warning everyone about, she has tried to get legislation passed against Pocket Rockets and now, finally, she can stand up and say "I Told You So, This Is What I Warned You About"
Shooting kills three in San Francisco, suspect found dead (06-28) 19:57 PDT SAN FRANCISCO (AP) --
Three people were killed and another critically injured when a man opened fire in the lobby of a residential hotel Saturday, police said.
The suspect, who lived at the hotel in the city's Tenderloin District, was later found dead in his room, apparently from a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to authorities.
The shooting at the Dalt Hotel apparently followed an argument there earlier in the day, San Francisco police Sgt. Neville Gittens told KCBS radio. Details remained unclear.
Two victims were pronounced dead at the scene and a third died at a local hospital, Gittens said. He said a fourth victim was in critical condition. Victims' names were not immediately released.
The suspect, John Bravard, 53, fled the lobby after the shooting, police said. Teams of officers searched the hotel, and about an hour later found Bravard's body in his room, authorities said.
Affordable Housing.
I thought "affordable housing" was a polite liberal euphemism for slaves' quarters... could it be both?
Yep.
Pictures are available there as well.
Killer of 3 was known for temper
He usually kept away from others at Tenderloin hotel
Harriet Chiang, Chronicle Staff Writer
Scott Thomas always considered the Dalt Hotel in San Francisco's Tenderloin district a haven in a rough neighborhood, the kind of place where tenants would watch out for each other. But that sense of security was shattered late Saturday afternoon when John Bravard, who had lived at the Dalt for 14 years, gunned down three fellow tenants and critically wounded a fourth. The 5 p.m. shootings happened after Bravard had gotten into an argument with a fellow tenant, Paul Howard, for bumping into him. Dalt manager Ruth Clarke said it wasn't unusual for Bravard to jostle another person as he went by, just to see how they would react. "You could at least say 'Excuse me,' " a resident said Howard told Bravard. Several hours later, Bravard, who police say had a history of mental illness, came back armed and began shooting. He gunned down Louis Williams from the street as Williams stood in the entrance of the lobby. Bravard then entered and shot Howard, Joseph Garcia and Carlin Satterwhite, all tenants. Garcia, whose wife is a desk clerk at the hotel, was with his 6-year-old son at the time. A nursing supervisor at San Francisco General Hospital said Sunday that he was in critical condition. Bravard later went to his fourth-floor room and fatally shot himself. On Sunday, the door to his room was covered with a piece of plywood. The blood in the lobby had been washed away. The only sign of what had happened was in the lobby, where there were three lit candles with the names of each of the victims. "This is a very close community," said Thomas as he sat in the hotel lobby, a popular place for people to gather and gossip. Most of the tenants are disabled or senior citizens. But everyone tried to steer clear of Bravard, 53, said to be a moody figure with a hair-trigger temper. Residents say he was a Vietnam veteran who generally kept to himself, wearing his headphones and carrying his bicycle as he headed for a video store on Market, where he would spend most of his time. Clarke said he could be very generous and had a 25-year-old son in the military of whom he was proud. "But he had a very dark side," she said. He used to brag to her that he was "trained in hand-to-hand combat." "He had kind of an attitude," she said. But she said that she didn't evict him because he paid his rent on time and generally stayed away from people. "I knew not to mess with him," Clarke said. Howard, 54, was the night clerk at the Hotel Vincent, which Clarke also manages. He was always buying her gifts -- vases, jewelry boxes and stuffed animals. He kept things in order and was strict with the rules, which ticked off some of the tenants who tried to sneak people into their rooms. "The good tenants loved him," Clarke said. "The bad ones probably have mixed feelings." Although Howard was openly gay, she doesn't think that's what prompted Bravard to shoot him. "He was just a sweet man." John Landas, who has lived at the Dalt Hotel for 10 years, said victim Satterwhite had been knocked down by Bravard about six months ago for no apparent reason. Landas said he and another tenant had reported Bravard to the police, but Bravard wasn't arrested. Satterwhite was a large, gentle man from Georgia who received regular packages from his mother. "He didn't have a mean bone in his body," Landas said. Williams, who liked to hang out with Howard, never had any run-ins with Bravard, according to Clarke. After spending years battling drugs and alcohol, Williams was finally starting to get his act together, tenants say, working as a cook at Glide Memorial Church. Thomas said every Thursday night Williams would bring him a big batch of fried chicken. And he had just spent $300 on clothes for a trip to Reno today. Tenants say they weren't surprised when they heard what Bravard had done. "He was a disaster waiting to happen," Thomas said. E-mail Harriet Chiang at hchiang@sfchronicle.com. |
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