Police: Gunman Said Jews Were Committing Genocide

People gather for a vigil on Murray and Forbes Avenues, blocks from where an active shooter shot multiple people at Tree of Life Congregation synagogue on Saturday, Oct. 27, 2018, in the Squirrel Hill section of Pittsburgh. (Stephanie Strasburg/Pittsburgh Post-Gazette via AP

BY MARK SCOLFORO, ALLEN G. BREED & CLAUDIA LAUER

PITTSBURGH (AP)
ā€” The suspect in the mass shooting at a Pittsburgh synagogue told officers that Jews were committing genocide and that he wanted them all to die, according to a charging document made public early Sunday.

Robert Gregory Bowers killed eight men and three women inside the Tree of Life Synagogue on Saturday during worship services before a tactical police team tracked him down and shot him, police said in the affidavit, which contained some previously unreported details on the shooting and the police response.

Calls began coming in to 911 from the synagogue just before 10 a.m. Saturday, reporting ā€œthey were being attacked,ā€ the document said. Bowers shot one of the first two officers to respond in the hand, and the other was wounded by ā€œshrapnel and broken glass.ā€

A tactical team found Bowers on the third floor, where he shot two officers multiple times, the affidavit said. One officer was described as critically wounded; the document did not describe the other officerā€™s condition.

Two other people in the synagogue, a man and a woman, were wounded by Bowers and were in stable condition, the document said.

Bowers told an officer while he was being treated for his injuries ā€œthat he wanted all Jews to die and also that they (Jews) were committing genocide to his people,ā€ the affidavit said.

Bowers was charged late Saturday with 11 counts of criminal homicide, six counts of aggravated assault and 13 counts of ethnic intimidation in what the leader of the Anti-Defamation League called the deadliest attack on Jews in U.S. history.

It wasnā€™t clear whether Bowers had an attorney to speak on his behalf. Law enforcement officials planned to discuss the massacre at a news conference Sunday morning.

The nationā€™s latest mass shooting drew condemnation and expressions of sympathy from politicians and religious leaders of all stripes. With the midterm election just over a week away, it also reignited a longstanding and bitter debate over guns.

Pope Francis led prayers for Pittsburgh on Sunday in St. Peterā€™s Square.

ā€œIn reality, all of us are wounded by this inhuman act of violence,ā€ he said. He prayed for God ā€œto help us to extinguish the flames of hatred that develop in our societies, reinforcing the sense of humanity, respect for life and civil and moral values.ā€

President Donald Trump said the outcome might have been different if the synagogue ā€œhad some kind of protectionā€ from an armed guard, while Pennsylvaniaā€™s Democratic Gov. Tom Wolf, up for re-election, noted that once again ā€œdangerous weapons are putting our citizens in harmā€™s way.ā€

Calling the shooting an ā€œevil anti-Semitic attack,ā€ Trump ordered flags at federal buildings throughout the U.S. to be flown at half-staff in respect for the victims. He said he planned to travel to Pittsburgh, but offered no details.

In the city, thousands gathered for a vigil Saturday night. Some blamed the slaughter on the nationā€™s political climate.

ā€œWhen you spew hate speech, people act on it. Very simple. And this is the result. A lot of people dead. Senselessly,ā€ said Stephen Cohen, co-president of New Light Congregation, which rents space at Tree of Life.

Little was known about Bowers, who had no apparent criminal record but who is believed to have expressed virulently anti-Semitic views on social media. Authorities said it appears he acted alone.

Worshippers ā€œwere brutally murdered by a gunman targeting them simply because of their faith,ā€ said Bob Jones, head of the FBIā€™s Pittsburgh office, though he cautioned the shooterā€™s full motive was not yet known.

Scott Brady, the chief federal prosecutor in western Pennsylvania, pledged that ā€œjustice in this case will be swift and it will be severe.ā€

The gunman targeted a building that housed three separate congregations, all of which were conducting Sabbath services when the attack began just before 10 a.m. in the tree-lined residential neighborhood of Squirrel Hill, about 10 minutes from downtown Pittsburgh and the hub of Pittsburghā€™s Jewish community.

The synagogue door was unlocked on the Sabbath ā€œbecause people are coming for services, and the bell would be ringing constantly. So they do not lock the door, and anybody can just walk in,ā€ said Marilyn Honigsberg, administrative assistant for New Light. ā€œAnd thatā€™s what this man did.ā€

Michael Eisenberg, the immediate past president of the Tree of Life, said synagogue officials had not gotten any threats that he knew of before the shooting. But security was a concern, he said, and the synagogue had started working to improve it.

Zachary Weiss, 26, said his father, 60-year-old Stephen Weiss, was inside the synagogue but was unharmed. Weiss said his father told him that he and Tree of Lifeā€™s rabbi helped congregants take shelter and follow the active shooter response training theyā€™d received months earlier. Stephen Weiss made it out of the building and used a janitorā€™s cellphone to call his family at home.

The attack, his son vowed, ā€œwill not define our congregation and will not define our city.ā€

Breed reported from Raleigh, North Carolina, and Lauer reported from Philadelphia. Contributing to this report were Associated Press writers Mark Gillispie and Gene Puskar in Pittsburgh, Eric Tucker and Michael Balsamo in Washington, Marc Levy in Harrisburg, Michael Kunzelman in Silver Spring, Maryland, and Michael Rubinkam in northeastern Pennsylvania.

For APā€™s complete coverage of the Pittsburgh synagogue shootings: https://www.apnews.com/Shootings

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