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Teh One Who Knocks
06-05-2019, 11:18 AM
Al Jazeera


https://i.imgur.com/HrL0hcg.jpg

A gunman was arrested after killing four people and wounding several others on Tuesday in the northern Australian city of Darwin.

Prime Minister Scott Morrison said a suspect was in custody.

"This is a terrible act of violence that has already, I'm advised, taken the lives of four people," Morrison told reporters in London, where he was on a visit to take part in D-Day commemorations.

"Our advice is that this is not a terrorist act. There is nothing to suggest that that is the case whatsoever."

Four men have been killed and one woman wounded, police said.

'Known to police'

The 45-year-old man taken into custody following the shooting had been released from prison on parole in January and was wearing a monitoring bracelet, Northern Territory (NT) Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw said.

"He is an individual who's well known to police and has a number of interactions adverse with the police," Kershaw said.

"Today, June 4, 2019, has been a devastating day in the Northern Territory," NT chief minister Michael Gunner told reporters.

"Five crime scenes, four people deceased, one injured. This is not the Darwin we know," he added.

A man fired a pump action shotgun at the Palms Hotel in the Darwin suburb of Woolner in the late afternoon, Australian Broadcasting Corporation reported.

"He shot up all the rooms and he went to every room looking for somebody and he shot them all up, then we saw him rush out, jump into his Toyota pick-up and rush off," witness John Rose was quoted as saying.

Another witness said she helped a bleeding women "with holes all in her skin" after a boyfriend carried the victim from the same hotel.

Police said the attacker went on a shooting spree in five different locations using a vehicle between sites that included pubs, a park, and a shop.

The alleged gunman remained at large in the tropical city of 100,000 for an hour before he was apprehended.

An ABC reporter said she saw police tackle and taser the suspect at a busy intersection.

Kershaw said the suspect was armed with a shotgun, but could not confirm what type.

Pump action shotguns have been virtually banned from private ownership in Australia along with other rapid-fire weapons under the country's tough gun laws designed to prevent mass shootings.

Two people were taken to the Royal Darwin Hospital with gunshot wounds and both were in stable condition, a Health Department statement said.

Hal-9000
06-05-2019, 02:38 PM
That's a distressing picture if that's not his blood.

fricnjay
06-10-2019, 04:00 PM
June 5, 20191:25 PM ET

NPR-SASHA INGBER

https://i.imgur.com/MolCYTQ.jpg
Police block off an area along a street after a shooting in Darwin, Australia, on Tuesday. Authorities said a lone gunman killed at least four people and wounded one more.

Four people have died in Australia after a gunman opened fire in multiple locations in an urban business district, an attack that has shaken a country often touted for its strong gun control laws.

The hourlong shooting happened Tuesday night in Darwin, the capital city in Australia's Northern Territory. It turned a park, bars and other locations into crime scenes.

On Wednesday, Northern Territory Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw told reporters that the suspect had used a 12-gauge pump action shotgun, a banned firearm that he said might have been stolen as far back as 1997 — when Australia was beginning a tectonic shift to stricter gun legislation.

Police said the suspect was taken into custody within an hour of the shooting. They described him as being known to law enforcement and on parole since January. In fact, Kershaw said the gunman had been wearing an electronic monitoring bracelet at the time of the shooting.

The police commissioner said the man contacted a police duty superintendent Tuesday night and asked to be placed into protective custody. "We do believe he may have been trying to hand himself in," Kershaw said during a news conference Tuesday night. "We're not too sure."

https://i.imgur.com/1TBqi7G.jpg

Marietta Martinovic, a criminology expert from Australia's RMIT University, told NPR it is a "real anomaly" for someone to commit a crime while wearing a monitoring bracelet.

"It's extremely uncommon for someone to make a decision to reoffend and not cut the bracelet," Martinovic said, as it puts them right at the scene of the crime. She said the bracelet could easily be removed using a pair of scissors.

Michael Gunner, chief minister of the Northern Territory, said his office asked the Parole Review Board for a report about what happened, according to the Australian Broadcasting Corporation. "And we have asked for everyone who is on parole and on electronic monitoring to also be reviewed," he said.

Australian media outlets identified Hassan Baydoun, a 33-year-old taxi driver, as one of the victims in the attack. He had moved from Lebanon to Australia to study at a university and had recently graduated with a masters in information technology. He was reportedly shot during a food break.

The three other people killed in the attack were men aged 52 to 75, according to ABC. A 22-year-old woman reportedly was also wounded.

Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison called the shooting a "terrible act of violence."

Australia tightened its gun laws after a mass shooting at Port Arthur in the state of Tasmania in 1996. A 28-year-old man armed with a semi-automatic rifle killed 35 people at the popular tourist destination.

After the massacre, Australia cracked down on firearms. It bought back hundreds of thousands of weapons through a national program, banned automatic and semi-automatic weapons and required long waiting periods on gun purchases. People with unregistered firearms risk hefty fines and prison sentences. Some 57,000 illegal weapons were collected in a three-month amnesty in 2017 alone, the government said.

Tuesday's attack has been described in Australian media as one of the country's worst in decades.

"I can't imagine [Australia's] laws becoming any more restrictive," Martinovic told NPR. "I think as a nation we're pretty happy with where our gun laws are."

Teh One Who Knocks
06-10-2019, 04:02 PM
http://www.tehfalloutshelter.com/showthread.php?100787-At-least-4-killed-in-gun-rampage-in-northern-Australia

fricnjay
06-10-2019, 04:04 PM
I looked and didnt see this, sorry

Teh One Who Knocks
06-10-2019, 04:09 PM
I looked and didnt see this, sorry

Were your eyes open when you looked? :-k



:dance:

fricnjay
06-10-2019, 04:17 PM
Were your eyes open when you looked? :-k



:dance:

It was further back than I looked. :slap:

But this is a HUGE story and event for the global political stage in regards to the effectiveness of "gun control" on mass shooting.

Hal-9000
06-10-2019, 04:23 PM
It was further back than I looked. :slap:

But this is a HUGE story and event for the global political stage in regards to the effectiveness of "gun control" on mass shooting.

How many mass shootings has that country had since 97 and Port Arthur? I'll be kind and say a few less than other countries.

DemonGeminiX
06-10-2019, 10:06 PM
If those 4 people that the shooter killed had guns, they could have fought back and could possibly still be alive right now.

Instead of calling it a mass shooting, you should call it what it actually is: murder. The tool used to do the deed doesn't change what the deed is.

lost in melb.
06-11-2019, 08:59 AM
Imagine if he had access to some real firepower like that maniac in New Zealand :shock:

Teh One Who Knocks
06-11-2019, 10:07 AM
I hate to do this, but I'm going to preemptively lock this thread. It hasn't yet, but I don't want it to devolve into yet another gun control argument. Tempers almost always flare up and it brings about hard feelings between friends that shouldn't be there otherwise. It is safe to say that neither side is going to change the other side's mind and I just don't want any arguing going on.

Thank you for your understanding.