What's new

California festival gunman killed 2 children and 1 adult with assault-style rifle, police say

UniverseWatcher

FULL MEMBER
Joined
Sep 6, 2015
Messages
432
Reaction score
0
Country
Pakistan
Location
United States
Gilroy, California (CNN)A 6-year-old boy, a 13-year-old girl and a man in his 20s were killed when a gunman opened fire with an assault-type rifle at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in northern California on Sunday night, Gilroy Police Chief Scot Smithee said.

The weapon, an AK-47-style rifle, was purchased legally by the gunman in Nevada on July 9, Smithee told reporters at a news conference Monday.
The suspect -- identified as Santino William Legan, 19 -- also injured at least 12 others before he was fatally shot by three officers who responded within a minute of the gunfire beginning, Smithee said. He apparently entered the annual festival, which attracts about 100,000 people every year, by cutting through a back fence and then began shooting at random, he said.
Instagram posts bearing the name of the gunman mentioned a white supremacist book and showed a picture of people walking around the event shortly before the shooting began.
Smithee credited a heavy police presence for saving lives as chaos descended on the decades-old festival in Gilroy, a city about 30 miles south of San Jose.
"We had many, many officers in the park at the time this occurred ... which accounts for a very, very quick response time," Smithee said.
Victims whose conditions ranged from fair to serious were transported to area hospitals, hospital officials said. Santa Clara Valley Medical Center received seven patients with gunshot wounds ranging in age from 12 to 69, according to Joy Alexiou, a spokeswoman for Santa Clara County Health System. Five patients remain in their care, including one in critical condition.
Witnesses reported seeing a second individual who has not yet been identified or found. Authorities haven't yet determined how or if a second person was involved, Smithee said.
The killings were the latest addition to a bloody list of American mass shootings that have targeted anywhere and everywhere people congregate: at festivals, schools, places of worship, movie theaters, workplaces and bars.


An Instagram account bearing the suspect's name, created four days ago, posted two messages shortly before the attacks, including a reference to a white supremacist text.
One post was a photo of people walking around the Garlic Festival with the words "Ayyy garlic festival time Come get wasted on overpriced sh**." The other post, made about an hour later, showed a sign of Smokey Bear saying "Fire Danger High Today."
"Read Might is Right by Ragnar Redbeard," the caption said. "Why overcrowd towns and pave more open space to make room for hordes of mestizos and Silicon Valley white tw**s?"
A "mestizo" is a person of mixed descent, usually white and Hispanic, or white and American Indian. "Might is Right" is a book published in the late 1800s which has been described as a white supremacist text that promotes anarchy, vilifies Christianity and calls Jesus the "true Prince of Evil." The natural order, according to the book, is a world at war in which the strong must vanquish the weak, and white men must rule over those of color.
They thought the pops were fireworks
Over the course of the three-day festival, families sampled garlicky foods like pasta con pesto and garlic-laced calamari and scampi, kids posed with festival mascot "Herbie" and a series of musicians performed, including Colbie Caillat and her band, Gone West.
The pop-pop-pop of gunfire began around 5:41 p.m. Sunday as the rock band TinMan played its last song.
"We ran off the stage (and) we crawled underneath it," TinMan singer Christian Swain said. "We could smell the gunpowder."

Videos of the aftermath show crowds of people screaming and fleeing as they sought safety.Lex De La Herran was walking away as the music on stage had begun winding down, he said.
"I turned around for a quick moment and I hear the gunshot sounds," he said. "At first I thought it was fireworks but a man behind me screamed that 'those are real, those are real.'"
"I just froze like a deer in the headlights," he said.
De La Herran said a piece of shrapnel hit him in the head. Then, he started running among the crowds.
"I saw people jumping over the fence, people trampling over each other, it was just widespread chaos," he said. "People were definitely in shock ... some people were visibly shaking."
Cynthia Saldivar also said she initially thought the sounds were fireworks.
190728223739-02-gilroy-garlic-festival-shooting-exlarge-169.jpg


Another screengrab taken from video and uploaded to Twitter appears to show people scrambling at the Gilroy Garlic Festival.
"We looked toward the area that it was coming from and everyone stood still for a second and realized it was gunshots," she told CNN. "Everyone started running out towards us up the hill to the street to be safe. Then I saw some people shot, some doing CPR on others."
It felt like a nightmare, Miquita Price said.
The shooter stood about 15 feet away from her and was blocking her only possible escape route, she told CNN.
"I started running, we hit the ground and I literally laid down on the ground," she said. The shooter stopped firing for a couple of seconds, multiple people reported, and when he began to shoot again, Price said she took off running.
The woman running next to her was hit and Price said she continued until she found a truck to hide behind.
She's still in shock.
"(There) was blood everywhere," she said. "I read about this but I never thought I would be in it."
A 7-year-old boy whose parents are funnel cake vendors told CNN affiliate KPIX that he hid under a table until police got to the suspect.
"I thought I was going to die," Paul Davies said.
A 6-year-old killed
Stephen Romero, 6, was killed during the shooting, Gilroy City Councilmember Fred M. Tovar told CNN.
Tovar said he was "deeply saddened by the news."
190729110956-01-garlic-festival-shooting-victim-stephen-romero-exlarge-169.jpg


Stephen Romero, 6, was killed during the shooting at the Garlic Festival in Gilroy, California.
"I pray that God will grant his family strength. My most sincere condolences. I will keep your family close in my thoughts and prayers in the coming weeks as you are going through the process of grieving," he said in a statement.
Stephen's grandmother spoke to CNN affiliate KRON about the boy's death.


6-year-old Stephen Romero was a 'happy kid.' He was shot and killed at the Gilroy Garlic Festival

"This is really hard, there's no words to describe (it)," Romero's grandmother told the affiliate. "He was such a happy kid, I don't think that this is fair."
Stephen's father, Alberto Romero, told CNN affiliate the San Jose Mercury News newspaper that he was at home when his wife called to say that she, her mother and their son had been shot.
"I couldn't believe what was happening, (I thought) that what she was saying was a lie, maybe I was dreaming," he said.
The dad went to a hospital to see his son.
"They told me he was in critical condition and that they were working on him," he said. "Five minutes later they told me he was dead."
Officers confronted suspect in minutes
Swain said police seemed to secure the area within five minutes from when the shooter began firing.
"We know the event was well-covered with security and we'd seen them as we came in to set up and play," he told CNN. "At least in my head, I knew they would be there and sure enough that seems to be what happened."
Officers were in the area when the shooting began, Smithee said, and engaged the suspect "in less than a minute."
190729002944-09-gilroy-garlic-festival-shooting-0729-exlarge-169.jpg


Police stay focused on a target after a deadly shooting at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Northern California.
"I can't speak enough about the courage of police and first responders are showing at this moment," Tovar said. "My thoughts and prayers are with the families of those who (lost) their lives, and those recovering in the hospital."
Chief Smithee said it appeared that the suspect entered the festival via a creek that borders a parking area. The suspect used a tool to cut through a fence and get into the area undetected.
Police recovered a firearm and rifle ammunition from the shooting scene, a law enforcement source told CNN.
190728230619-03-gilroy-garlic-festival-shooting-exlarge-169.jpg


Police at the Garlic Festival viewed from a helicopter.
The FBI Evidence Response Team from San Francisco arrived on scene late Sunday night, a law enforcement official told CNN. ATF's San Francisco Field Division is also assisting in the case.
"It is just incredibly sad and disheartening that an event that does so much good for our community has to suffer from a tragedy like this," Smithee said.
'Our annual family reunion'
The multi-day festival attracts about 100,000 people annually to Gilroy, the self-proclaimed garlic capital of the world, according to attendance records. There's food, live music, cooking competitions and thousands of community volunteers who bring it all together.
The event has raised more than $11.7 million for local charities since 1979, organizers said. In 2018, organizers donated more than $255,000 to 170 different groups, including churches and school sports teams.
This year -- the festival's 41st -- featured celebrity chefs Tom Colicchio of "Top Chef" and Gerron Hurt of "MasterChef."
190729140425-01-file-gilroy-garlic-festival-exlarge-169.jpg


Vendors sell locally-grown garlic at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Gilroy, Calif., on July 24, 2004.
"To have seen this event end this way this day is just one of the most tragic and sad things that I've ever had to see," Gilroy Garlic Festival Executive Director Brian Bowe said.
Gilroy, a city of about 58,000 people, is a "tightly-knit," family-like community, Bowe said.
"And for over four decades that festival has been our annual family reunion," he said Sunday.
Shawn Keck, president of the 2019 Gilroy Garlic Festival, thanked the police and first responders who came to their aid.
"We are heartbroken that senseless violence brought this year's festival to such a terrible and tragic end," he said in a statement.
How politicians responded
President Donald Trump expressed "our deepest sadness and sorrow for the families who lost a precious loved one" in the shooting, he said in the Rose Garden on Monday.
Trump called the perpetrator "a wicked murderer" who "opened fire and killed 3 innocent citizens, including a young child."
"We're praying for those who are recovering right now in the hospital," Trump said, before thanking "the brave members of law enforcement."
A number of 2020 Democratic presidential candidates also reacted to the shooting.
California Sen. Kamala Harris said she was "grateful to first responders who are on the scene in Gilroy and keeping those injured by such senseless violence in my thoughts."
"My office is closely monitoring the situation," she tweeted.
Late Sunday night, former Vice President Joe Biden said "this violence is not normal."
"How many more families will have to lose a loved one before we fix our broken gun laws? We must take action, starting with real reform. Our thoughts are with everyone in Gilroy this evening. Enough is enough," he said.
CNN's Josh Campbell, Chelsea J. Carter, Shawn Cunningham, Sheena Jones, Eric Levenson, Gianluca Mezzofiore, Paul P. Murphy, Hollie Silverman, Amir Vera and Whitney Wild contributed to this report.
 
Sad incident but ironically how true the staement, "Lassan lag gaye" with reference to the festival


Gilroy, California (CNN)A 6-year-old boy, a 13-year-old girl and a man in his 20s were killed when a gunman opened fire with an assault-type rifle at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in northern California on Sunday night, Gilroy Police Chief Scot Smithee said.

The weapon, an AK-47-style rifle, was purchased legally by the gunman in Nevada on July 9, Smithee told reporters at a news conference Monday.
The suspect -- identified as Santino William Legan, 19 -- also injured at least 12 others before he was fatally shot by three officers who responded within a minute of the gunfire beginning, Smithee said. He apparently entered the annual festival, which attracts about 100,000 people every year, by cutting through a back fence and then began shooting at random, he said.
Instagram posts bearing the name of the gunman mentioned a white supremacist book and showed a picture of people walking around the event shortly before the shooting began.
Smithee credited a heavy police presence for saving lives as chaos descended on the decades-old festival in Gilroy, a city about 30 miles south of San Jose.
"We had many, many officers in the park at the time this occurred ... which accounts for a very, very quick response time," Smithee said.
Victims whose conditions ranged from fair to serious were transported to area hospitals, hospital officials said. Santa Clara Valley Medical Center received seven patients with gunshot wounds ranging in age from 12 to 69, according to Joy Alexiou, a spokeswoman for Santa Clara County Health System. Five patients remain in their care, including one in critical condition.
Witnesses reported seeing a second individual who has not yet been identified or found. Authorities haven't yet determined how or if a second person was involved, Smithee said.
The killings were the latest addition to a bloody list of American mass shootings that have targeted anywhere and everywhere people congregate: at festivals, schools, places of worship, movie theaters, workplaces and bars.


An Instagram account bearing the suspect's name, created four days ago, posted two messages shortly before the attacks, including a reference to a white supremacist text.
One post was a photo of people walking around the Garlic Festival with the words "Ayyy garlic festival time Come get wasted on overpriced sh**." The other post, made about an hour later, showed a sign of Smokey Bear saying "Fire Danger High Today."
"Read Might is Right by Ragnar Redbeard," the caption said. "Why overcrowd towns and pave more open space to make room for hordes of mestizos and Silicon Valley white tw**s?"
A "mestizo" is a person of mixed descent, usually white and Hispanic, or white and American Indian. "Might is Right" is a book published in the late 1800s which has been described as a white supremacist text that promotes anarchy, vilifies Christianity and calls Jesus the "true Prince of Evil." The natural order, according to the book, is a world at war in which the strong must vanquish the weak, and white men must rule over those of color.
They thought the pops were fireworks
Over the course of the three-day festival, families sampled garlicky foods like pasta con pesto and garlic-laced calamari and scampi, kids posed with festival mascot "Herbie" and a series of musicians performed, including Colbie Caillat and her band, Gone West.
The pop-pop-pop of gunfire began around 5:41 p.m. Sunday as the rock band TinMan played its last song.
"We ran off the stage (and) we crawled underneath it," TinMan singer Christian Swain said. "We could smell the gunpowder."

Videos of the aftermath show crowds of people screaming and fleeing as they sought safety.Lex De La Herran was walking away as the music on stage had begun winding down, he said.
"I turned around for a quick moment and I hear the gunshot sounds," he said. "At first I thought it was fireworks but a man behind me screamed that 'those are real, those are real.'"
"I just froze like a deer in the headlights," he said.
De La Herran said a piece of shrapnel hit him in the head. Then, he started running among the crowds.
"I saw people jumping over the fence, people trampling over each other, it was just widespread chaos," he said. "People were definitely in shock ... some people were visibly shaking."
Cynthia Saldivar also said she initially thought the sounds were fireworks.
190728223739-02-gilroy-garlic-festival-shooting-exlarge-169.jpg


Another screengrab taken from video and uploaded to Twitter appears to show people scrambling at the Gilroy Garlic Festival.
"We looked toward the area that it was coming from and everyone stood still for a second and realized it was gunshots," she told CNN. "Everyone started running out towards us up the hill to the street to be safe. Then I saw some people shot, some doing CPR on others."
It felt like a nightmare, Miquita Price said.
The shooter stood about 15 feet away from her and was blocking her only possible escape route, she told CNN.
"I started running, we hit the ground and I literally laid down on the ground," she said. The shooter stopped firing for a couple of seconds, multiple people reported, and when he began to shoot again, Price said she took off running.
The woman running next to her was hit and Price said she continued until she found a truck to hide behind.
She's still in shock.
"(There) was blood everywhere," she said. "I read about this but I never thought I would be in it."
A 7-year-old boy whose parents are funnel cake vendors told CNN affiliate KPIX that he hid under a table until police got to the suspect.
"I thought I was going to die," Paul Davies said.
A 6-year-old killed
Stephen Romero, 6, was killed during the shooting, Gilroy City Councilmember Fred M. Tovar told CNN.
Tovar said he was "deeply saddened by the news."
190729110956-01-garlic-festival-shooting-victim-stephen-romero-exlarge-169.jpg


Stephen Romero, 6, was killed during the shooting at the Garlic Festival in Gilroy, California.
"I pray that God will grant his family strength. My most sincere condolences. I will keep your family close in my thoughts and prayers in the coming weeks as you are going through the process of grieving," he said in a statement.
Stephen's grandmother spoke to CNN affiliate KRON about the boy's death.


6-year-old Stephen Romero was a 'happy kid.' He was shot and killed at the Gilroy Garlic Festival

"This is really hard, there's no words to describe (it)," Romero's grandmother told the affiliate. "He was such a happy kid, I don't think that this is fair."
Stephen's father, Alberto Romero, told CNN affiliate the San Jose Mercury News newspaper that he was at home when his wife called to say that she, her mother and their son had been shot.
"I couldn't believe what was happening, (I thought) that what she was saying was a lie, maybe I was dreaming," he said.
The dad went to a hospital to see his son.
"They told me he was in critical condition and that they were working on him," he said. "Five minutes later they told me he was dead."
Officers confronted suspect in minutes
Swain said police seemed to secure the area within five minutes from when the shooter began firing.
"We know the event was well-covered with security and we'd seen them as we came in to set up and play," he told CNN. "At least in my head, I knew they would be there and sure enough that seems to be what happened."
Officers were in the area when the shooting began, Smithee said, and engaged the suspect "in less than a minute."
190729002944-09-gilroy-garlic-festival-shooting-0729-exlarge-169.jpg


Police stay focused on a target after a deadly shooting at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Northern California.
"I can't speak enough about the courage of police and first responders are showing at this moment," Tovar said. "My thoughts and prayers are with the families of those who (lost) their lives, and those recovering in the hospital."
Chief Smithee said it appeared that the suspect entered the festival via a creek that borders a parking area. The suspect used a tool to cut through a fence and get into the area undetected.
Police recovered a firearm and rifle ammunition from the shooting scene, a law enforcement source told CNN.
190728230619-03-gilroy-garlic-festival-shooting-exlarge-169.jpg


Police at the Garlic Festival viewed from a helicopter.
The FBI Evidence Response Team from San Francisco arrived on scene late Sunday night, a law enforcement official told CNN. ATF's San Francisco Field Division is also assisting in the case.
"It is just incredibly sad and disheartening that an event that does so much good for our community has to suffer from a tragedy like this," Smithee said.
'Our annual family reunion'
The multi-day festival attracts about 100,000 people annually to Gilroy, the self-proclaimed garlic capital of the world, according to attendance records. There's food, live music, cooking competitions and thousands of community volunteers who bring it all together.
The event has raised more than $11.7 million for local charities since 1979, organizers said. In 2018, organizers donated more than $255,000 to 170 different groups, including churches and school sports teams.
This year -- the festival's 41st -- featured celebrity chefs Tom Colicchio of "Top Chef" and Gerron Hurt of "MasterChef."
190729140425-01-file-gilroy-garlic-festival-exlarge-169.jpg


Vendors sell locally-grown garlic at the Gilroy Garlic Festival in Gilroy, Calif., on July 24, 2004.
"To have seen this event end this way this day is just one of the most tragic and sad things that I've ever had to see," Gilroy Garlic Festival Executive Director Brian Bowe said.
Gilroy, a city of about 58,000 people, is a "tightly-knit," family-like community, Bowe said.
"And for over four decades that festival has been our annual family reunion," he said Sunday.
Shawn Keck, president of the 2019 Gilroy Garlic Festival, thanked the police and first responders who came to their aid.
"We are heartbroken that senseless violence brought this year's festival to such a terrible and tragic end," he said in a statement.
How politicians responded
President Donald Trump expressed "our deepest sadness and sorrow for the families who lost a precious loved one" in the shooting, he said in the Rose Garden on Monday.
Trump called the perpetrator "a wicked murderer" who "opened fire and killed 3 innocent citizens, including a young child."
"We're praying for those who are recovering right now in the hospital," Trump said, before thanking "the brave members of law enforcement."
A number of 2020 Democratic presidential candidates also reacted to the shooting.
California Sen. Kamala Harris said she was "grateful to first responders who are on the scene in Gilroy and keeping those injured by such senseless violence in my thoughts."
"My office is closely monitoring the situation," she tweeted.
Late Sunday night, former Vice President Joe Biden said "this violence is not normal."
"How many more families will have to lose a loved one before we fix our broken gun laws? We must take action, starting with real reform. Our thoughts are with everyone in Gilroy this evening. Enough is enough," he said.
CNN's Josh Campbell, Chelsea J. Carter, Shawn Cunningham, Sheena Jones, Eric Levenson, Gianluca Mezzofiore, Paul P. Murphy, Hollie Silverman, Amir Vera and Whitney Wild contributed to this report.
 
Before trolls say he was Iranian. Legan is a celtic surname found in celtic Ireland and celtic Northern Italy.

https://www.johngrenham.com/records/rc_church.php?parish=Legan&churchid=169

https://www.mappadeicognomi.it/en/index.php?sur=Legan&s=Search

Nearly every single mass shooting is from these celtic Western Europeans. Having an Iranian half-mother does not effect their homicidal ways, they are still celts. Gallagher, the navy seal, who shot kids for sport was another celt.

Despite what Biden says, this violence is quite normal. These Western Europeans find themselves shooting brown people very often, usually in the Mideast.

One death is a tragedy, one million deaths is a statistic.

What you are dealing with these celts is they are naturally violent. Then Legan, a celt, goes to white nationalist sites that makes fun of Italians, Greeks and Iranians as non-whites. Legan is none of these, his mother was Iranian, Legan is of Legan's father's tribe which is celtic, which is prone to violence.

Usually when these violent individuals break, they kill more than one person:

https://www.irishtimes.com/news/sci...na-marker-proof-of-ancient-genocide-1.1426197

Three individuals, one celt and two slavs, see Europe - populated with perhaps millions of people, and these three killed off 90% of the men of Europe, and become 90% of the seedlines of Europe. This took the Romans and Germans to bring that number down to under 70% of the seedlines.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/science...n-descended-just-trio-Bronze-Age-leaders.html

Mass killings is how they took over Europe, so that is in their blood, to do mass killings. And if the rape and theft of Europe thousands of years ago, was not wrong to these individuals. Why would they believe anything different to mass killings today.

The mass shooter's maternal grandparent changed their surname, there is no indication that this mass shooter is not a Legan or LeGan, thus a celt. And even if Legan was not a celt, which no records indicate this, this would be one exception out of dozens of mass shooters who were celtic.

Northern Italians are imposters who hate Southern Italians. The Lega is the manifestation of this hatred. Southern and Central Italians plot closest to the Romans, not the celtic northerners. Romans are the Neapolitans. Same with the rest of the South. So having ancestors in Milan does not make one Roman (Italian). Naples is Roman, Milan is celtic/mass shooters.

A chance that this Legan is an individual of these:

As in Europe, it looks like the steppe migrants were largely young, male and violent.

https://www.newscientist.com/articl...s-people-of-all-time-revealed-in-ancient-dna/

This could be a case of infighting among the celts on what it means to be fake 'white'. This Legan did not feel white and hated trump supporters.
 
Hmm both a White Supermacist and Radical Islamist. Hey no reason not to call him a terrorist now..he seems to have covered everybody’s definition!


https://thehill.com/homenews/state-...e-supremacy-radical-islam-materials-in-gilroy

Investigators find white supremacy, radical Islam materials in Gilroy shooter's home

Investigators in Nevada have found evidence indicating an intent to carry out a large-scale attack as well as white supremacist literature in the home of a man suspected of committing a deadly Sunday shooting at a festival in California.

The San Francisco Chronicle reported Tuesday that a search of 19-year-old suspect Santino William Legan's home in Walker Lake, Nev., turned up empty ammunition boxes, a gas mask, a knife, reading materials about radical Islam and white supremacy, and a camouflage backpack.

Also found at the home was an empty bottle of Valium, according to the Chronicle. Authorities are now searching computers and other electronic devices at the home for more evidence of Legan's online activities and possible further connections to white supremacist movements.

“We continue to try to understand who the shooter was, what motivated him, and whether he was aligned with any particular ideology,” FBI Special Agent Craig Fair said at a press conference Tuesday, according to the Chronicle.

“Reviewing digital media, historically, has been very revealing in terms of somebody’s mind-set, ideological beliefs, intentions,” Fair continued. “We’ve got to get into the computers, the towers, the thumb drive, the phone, to get a holistic picture of him and who he was in touch with, what sentiments and thoughts he shared with others, what he cataloged for his own consumption.”

Three people were killed and more than a dozen were injured Sunday when a suspect, who police say was Legan, opened fire on the Gilroy Garlic Festival. One of the victims was just 13 years old.

The shooter used a semiautomatic rifle during the attack, according to police. Police say the rifle and a shotgun found in his car after the attack were purchased by Legan from gun stores in Nevada.

Legan was shot and killed by police.
 
Last edited:
thanks to morons like Legan we were heading towards restrictions on gun ownership
 
Back
Top Bottom