Two NY firefighters shot dead while responding to house fire
A man convicted of killing his grandmother decades ago ambushed firefighters on Monday, fatally shooting two of them as they arrived to battle a blaze in upstate New York, police said.
Two other volunteer
firefighters were wounded in the attack in the Rochester-area town of
Webster. A police officer from the nearby town of Greece suffered minor
shrapnel wounds when his vehicle was hit by gunfire.
Investigators say that William Spengler, 62, deliberately lured firefighters to the house fire. |
Investigators believe the
suspect, William Spengler, 62, set the original fire, then likely set
himself up on a berm with a clear view of the scene and started
shooting.
"It appears that it was a
trap," Webster Police Chief Gerald Pickering said. "There was a car and
a house that were involved in flames, probably set by Mr. Spengler, who
laid in wait in armament and then shot the first responders."
Authorities do not know
how Spengler -- who was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound
hours after the four firefighters were shot -- obtained the weapon or
weapons he used or why he opened fire, Pickering told reporters. As a
convicted felon, Spengler was not allowed to legally possess weapons,
but he had "several different types of weapons" Monday, the police chief
said.
Spengler was convicted in
1981 of first-degree manslaughter in the death of his grandmother and
had been released on supervised parole, Pickering said.
He is believed to have
lived in the home where the original fire erupted with his sister, who
has not yet been accounted for, Pickering said. Their mother died
sometime in the past year, the chief added.
In chilling audio heard
over the scanner, a West Webster Fire Department firefighter reported
"multiple firemen shot" -- including himself, with wounds to his lower
back and lower leg -- and "shots still being fired."
"I'm pretty sure that we
have two DOAs" -- the term for dead on arrival -- "on the street," the
wounded firefighter said. "... They're down and not good."
For several hours after
that Monday, the threat of gunfire stopped firefighters from battling
the blaze and forced police SWAT teams to evacuate 33 people in the
neighborhood of small, waterfront homes.
Eventually, seven houses
were "totally destroyed" by the fire. Although the fires were under
control as of 2:30 p.m. ET, by then authorities still hadn't been able
to get in any of the homes. Pickering said it's possible more victims
could be inside.
"I'm hoping that everyone was able to escape from the inferno," he said. "Those houses were close together."
With 'raging inferno' and gunfire, scene described as 'chaos'
Firefighters first arrived at the Webster fire before 6 a.m., said Rob Boutillier, the town's fire marshal.
By then, Spengler had
set up himself somewhere above the scene in a "natural hollow, a
position of cover to actually be a sniper," Pickering explained.
The calls from
firefighter came in soon after, reporting that four of them had been
shot. Police officers rushed to the scene, and one of the first ones
there exchanged fire, "in all likelihood, (saving) many lives,"
according to the police chief.
"When we get there, we have people down, we have raging fires, and we have gunshots going off," Pickering said.
"It's chaos. It's chaos."
Authorities worked
quickly to set up a perimeter, trying to contain the situation and the
shooter. Neighborhood residents were first told to "shelter in place"
because the gunman was at large, but some left their homes because of
the fire.
Several people could be
seen running. Police tracked some of them down, found they were
neighbors seeking safety and escorted them out. Eventually, residents
were whisked from the area in armored personnel carriers. All the while,
there was "this raging inferno, with black smoke everywhere," Pickering
said.
No more gunfire was
exchanged after that initial burst, though police did see a man they
believed to be Spengler moving at times. The police chief said he didn't
know if the police officer hit Spengler early on, but he said the
medical examiner indicated that Spengler died after shooting himself in
the head.
Two firefighters also died at the scene.
Police have identified one of the firefighters killed as Lt. Mike Chiapperini. |
One of them, Lt. Michael
Chiapperini, was a veteran of the West Webster Fire Department and a
police lieutenant. He'd been named Firefighter of the Year just two
weeks ago, and not long before that, he had volunteered to go to Long
Island to help those suffering after Superstorm Sandy, according to Lt.
Gov. Bob Duffy.
The other slain
firefighter was Tomasz Kaczowka, who was also a 911 dispatcher. He'd
been with the West Webster Fire Department for just more than a year,
fire department spokesman Al Sienkiewicz said.
One firefighter escaped
from the scene in his own vehicle about an hour after he was shot and
was taken to a hospital by an ambulance from another location,
Boutillier said. Another wounded firefighter was conscious and speaking
when he was removed from the scene, he said.
The wounded firefighters were in intensive care Monday at Strong Memorial Hospital in Rochester, New York, officials said.
The other person wounded
was a Greece, New York, police officer who was on his way to work when
his car was fired upon. He suffered shrapnel wounds that Pickering
described as minor.
"We work with these
people everyday; they're like our brothers," said Pickering of the slain
firefighters, as he fought back tears. "It's terrible."
New shooting spurs more talk on gun control
Authorities have not
said what weapons were found with Spengler, though Pickering said
"probably at least a rifle was used" to shoot the first responders.
"I know that many people
are going to be asking, 'Were they assault rifles?' I don't know that. I
can't answer that at this time," he told reporters.
The shooting occurred
amid a renewed gun control debate after the December 14 elementary
school massacre in Newtown, Connecticut, that killed 26 people, most of
them children. The gunman in that case, Adam Lanza, also killed his
mother and himself.
The head of a lobbying group that represents first responders said the Monday shooting was "senseless and cruel."
"The firefighters who
responded today were performing a selfless, meaningful service to their
community, unaware that a cold-hearted maniac was planning to ambush
them and take their lives," said Harold Schaitberger, general president
of the Washington-based International Association of Fire Fighters.
"Coming on the heels of the horrific tragedy in Newtown, Connecticut,
and on Christmas Eve, this shooting is even harder to comprehend."
New York Gov. Andrew
Cuomo described the Webster shooting as "horrific." And the state's
attorney general called it a "senseless tragedy"
President Barack Obama has set a January deadline for "concrete proposals" to deal with gun violence in the wake of the Newtown school shooting.
Sen. Dianne Feinstein,
D-California, has said she will introduce legislation to reinstate the
assault weapons ban that expired in 2004, while National Rifle
Association CEO Wayne LaPierre has said his group will fight any new gun restrictions, saying most gun laws now on the books are rarely enforced.
Pickering, the Webster
police chief, said it was important -- in the wake of the shooting in
his town and others -- to "get a handle on gun control." He also said
more needs to be done to make sure that dangerous people aren't in
society, where they can kill.
"For the last 20 years
we have been turning people loose and deinstitutionalizing people, and I
think we've swung too far," he said. "I think there are still people
that need to be in institutions that are a danger to themselves or
others. And this is a classic example."
CNN's Chuck Johnston, Jake Carpenter and John Fricke contributed to this report.
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