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Fresno shooting spree suspect "callous," laughed recounting killings, chief says

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« Kori Muhammad is not a terrorist, but he is a racist, and he’s filled with hate, » Fresno police chief says of man accused of targeting white men at random
Last Updated Apr 19, 2017 9:48 PM EDT
FRESNO, Calif. — One man had just started a new job with the gas company and was riding in a utility truck. Another was carrying a bag of groceries after stopping at a Catholic Charities center. The third man was in the charity’s parking lot.
Police say racial hatred, not terrorism, is the likely motive behind a shooting spree in Fresno, California, Tuesday that left three white men de…
All three were shot and killed at random by a black gunman who police say wanted to kill as many white people as possible. Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer told reporters Wednesday that Kori Ali Muhammad spoke about the killings in a callous way as he went with officers to the Motel 6 where he is accused of killing a security guard, and back to the scene of Tuesday’s three killings.
“When he spoke about the shootings, he did so in a very callous manner,” Dyer said. “In fact, multiple times he laughed as he described what transpired.”
Zackary Randalls was the first to die when Muhammad walked up to a Pacific Gas & Electric truck and fired into the passenger seat. The driver sped to the police department for help, but Randalls could not be saved.
Friend Eddie Valencia said Randalls was excited to start work as a customer-service representative and was doing a ride-along Tuesday. He described the 34-year-old as an open-minded person with a sharp wit and a big heart.
Police at the scene of one of the shootings where suspect Kori Ali Muhammad, 39, killed the passenger inside a Pacific Gas & Energy truck on Tue., April 18, 2017.
He said his friend, who left behind two preschoolers and a wife in Clovis, would not want people to feel anger toward the shooter.
“He wouldn’t want people to be divided by this,” Valencia said. “There were no boundaries with race, religions, beliefs, with anything. If you were a good person and basically could have a good conversation, he would call you a friend. He was a stand-up guy.”
The three men killed Tuesday happened to be on the same block at the same time, but had no known connection to each other or to the shooter, who told police about his goal of killing white people after he was arrested. He is expected to be arraigned Friday.
Mark Gassett, 37, of Fresno, had just picked up groceries at a Catholic Charities building when he was gunned down. His body was draped in a blanket on the sidewalk leading to Stephen Hughes’ home.
The scene of one of the deadly shootings by suspect Kori Ali Muhammad who was arrested shortly after on Tue., April 18, 2017.
“It looks like a guy carrying his groceries home from the store,” said Hughes, 66, who rushed home after receiving a frantic call about the shootings from a neighbor.
Troy Gasset and his brother Layton are trying to raise money for their father’s funeral using a GoFundMe page.
“He was always loving caring always supported me when I was down and I’ll never forget that,” Troy said.
CBS News asked Rosie Wagner, Mark Gassett’s mother: If you could say something to the man who killed your son, what would that be?
“You took a big part of my heart when you took my only son … that was my only son I had,” she said. “I’ll never ever get to see him again.”
David Jackson, 58, of Fresno, was gunned down in the parking lot of the charity’s building.
Police say three shooting victims in Fresno, California, were chosen at random, but had one thing in common: they were white men. Authorities arr…
“These were unprovoked attacks,” Dyer said.
Two Latina women and a child also crossed paths with Muhammad, who pointed the gun at them as they sat in their car trying to flee, but he did not shoot.
Muhammad, 39, was arrested shortly after the rampage. He is expected to be charged with four counts of murder – one each for Tuesday’s three victims plus the slaying of a white Motel 6 security guard who was killed last week.
Police had been looking for Muhammad in the death of the guard, 25-year-old Carl Williams. Dyer said Muhammad had gotten in a verbal alteraction with Williams and shot him because he felt “disrespected.”
The suspect then fled and hid on a gas station roof. Dyer says he watched detectives investigate, then left and hid by a dumpster. Muhammad said seeing his name and picture in a news release Tuesday morning spurred the attacks in which he fired 16 rounds in less than two minutes at four places within a block.
“Once he saw he was wanted for murder, he said he was not going to go down for shoting a security guard…he was going to kill as many white males as possible,” Dyer said. “He said he didn’t like white men and white men were responsible for keeping black men down.”
Muhammad allegedly told investigators that he hid out in a ravine and practiced voodoo rituals after the Motel 6 slaying. He also told investigators he is Muslim, but he prays to seven different gods and hasn’t been to a mosque in 25 years. When he was arrested, Dyer said Muhammad had pendants he called amulets that he said “were for the purpose of protecting against evil.”
Muhammad admitted the killings to officers as they arrested him, according to the chief.
During the arrest, Muhammad shouted “Allahu akbar,” or “God is great,” but Dyer said the shootings had “nothing to do with terrorism in spite of the statement he made” and were based solely on race.
Muhammad allegedly told investigators he was not a terrorist, Dyer said, because he is “not a coward” and a terrorist kills people but dies for that cause.
“Kori Muhammad is not a terrorist, but he is a racist, and he’s filled with hate,” Dyer said.
Dyer said investigators allowed Muhammad to speak on the phone to his mother, who was crying.
“He told her not to cry, he is still alive, and his magic was powerful, and he started laughing,” Dyer said.
Muhammad told his family there was a war going on between blacks and whites in America. He posted on social media about black separatism, reparations, the “Black Lives Matter” movement and white devils.
Muhammad’s father, Vincent Taylor, told the Los Angeles Times that his son believed he was part of an ongoing war between whites and blacks and that “a battle was about to take place.”
Police were searching for the revolver Muhammad said he tossed into a pile of clothing. The gun was then picked up by a man who was seen on security camera, according to Dyer, who urged the man to turn himself in to authorities.
According to police, Muhammad referred to the .

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