Hartford Distributors Shooting: Nine Dead In Workplace Massacre

STEPHEN SINGER   08/ 3/10 11:07 PM ET   AP

Beer Distributor Shootings

MANCHESTER, Conn. — A driver caught stealing beer from the warehouse where he worked agreed to resign his job Tuesday and then as "cold as ice," one of his victims said, went on a shooting rampage, killing eight people and injuring two before committing suicide.

Omar Thornton pulled out a handgun after a meeting in which he was shown video evidence of the thefts and was offered the chance to quit or be fired.

"Then he went out on this rampage," company vice president Steve Hollander told The Associated Press. "He was cool and calm. He didn't yell. He was cold as ice. He didn't protest when we were meeting with him to show him the video of him stealing. He didn't contest it. He didn't complain. He didn't argue. He didn't admit or deny anything. He just agreed to resign. And then he just unexplainably pulled out his gun and started blasting."

Hollander said he thinks Thornton, 34, had guns stashed in his lunch box. The executive said two people standing near him were shot in the head and killed, but he was only grazed in the jaw and the arm.

"He shot at me twice and hit me a couple times," he said. "By just the grace of God, I don't know how he missed me."

About 50 to 70 people were in the Hartford Distributors warehouse about 10 miles east of Hartford during a shift change when the gunman opened fire around 7 a.m., said Brett Hollander, Steve Hollander's cousin and a member of the family that owns the distributorship.

"I was on the phone with 911 and then I saw him running outside of my office window, shooting his gun, carrying his lunch box, which must have had his weapons in it," Steve Hollander said. "It doesn't seem real to me now, it seems like I'm watching a movie."

The shooting was over in a matter of minutes. The victims were found all over the complex, and authorities said they didn't know if Thornton fired randomly or targeted specific co-workers.

After shooting his co-workers, Thornton called his mother, who tried for 10 minutes to talk him out of killing himself, his uncle Will Holliday told reporters.

"He said, 'I killed the five racists that was there that was bothering me,'" Holliday said. "He said, 'The cops are going to come in so I am going to take care of myself.'"

Thornton was alive when police got to the scene but killed himself before officers got to him, Manchester police Chief Marc Montminy said. A police sharpshooter had approval to fire on Thornton when he killed himself, an official with knowledge of the scene told the AP on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to discuss it.

Workers had flooded out of the building as three teams of police officers raced into it, Montminy told the town's board of directors Tuesday evening.

"Some were hiding in the woods and some were hiding under cars," he said.

State police found weapons in the suspect's car, Montminy said, without providing details.

Steve Hollander said Thornton killed "many good people today for absolutely no reason at all, people who've never said an unkind word to him. ... He was just shooting at anyone that was near him and just cruelty beyond cruelty."

Joanne Hannah, of Enfield, said her daughter, Kristi, had dated Thornton for the past eight years and had told her daughter he was being racially harassed. Kristi Hannah did not return calls for comment.

"Everybody's got a breaking point," Joanne Hannah said.

Thornton, who was black, had complained of racial harassment and said he found a picture of a noose and a racial epithet written on a bathroom wall, Hannah said. Her daughter told her that Thornton's supervisors told him they would talk to his co-workers.

Annette Levine, cousin of Thornton's mother, says Omar Thornton's last words to his mother were he loved her and the Hartford Distributors warehouse where he worked had "pushed him over the edge."

"He said the company was prejudiced and they pushed him," Levine said. "Those were the last words he told his mom: He loved her and they pushed him over the edge."

But Levine said the shooting was not justified.

Thornton's uncle Henry Holliday said Thornton's mother was crying all day and was too distraught to talk. He called the shooting a tragedy for everyone involved.

Holliday described his nephew as quiet and hardworking, saying he had two jobs. He said he had a daughter.

"Right now there are no words," Holliday said of Omar's mother. "It's all tears. It's a tragedy all around for everybody."

Brett Hollander said, "I can assure you there has never been any racial discrimination at our company." A union official said Thornton had not filed a complaint of racism with the union or any government agency.

"This is a disgruntled employee who shot a bunch of people," Teamsters official Christopher Roos said.

Thornton was not a problem employee and had not had any previous disciplinary issues, said Gregg Adler, a lawyer for the Teamsters Local 1035. He said he was not aware of how much beer Thornton was alleged to have stolen.

Kristi Hannah had been with him Monday night and had no indication he was planning anything violent, her mother said.

Joanne Hannah described Thornton as an easygoing guy who liked to play sports and video games. She said he had a pistol permit and had planned to teach her daughter how to use a gun.

Police declined to release the names of those killed.

Among the dead was Bryan Cirigliano, 51, of Newington, president of Teamsters 1035, according to the union. He had been Thornton's representative at Tuesday's disciplinary hearing, the union said.

Another victim was warehouse worker Doug Scruton, 56, who had worked there for nearly 30 years, said his wife, Mikal O'Brien. Anticipating his upcoming retirement, the couple had recently moved to a retirement home in Middleton, N.H., where he loved to visit the White Mountains and beaches. He stayed with a friend in Connecticut during the week.

"It was part of our plan for him to be able to retire in the place that he loved. But he's never going to be able to enjoy that now," she said. "He was just the sweetest, gentlest, kind soul, and I can't believe he's gone."

Bill Ackerman, a 51-year-old warehouseman, also was killed, said his girlfriend, Stephanie Laurin.

"I was like, 'Where's Billy, where's Billy?' and they said they hadn't seen him. And then one of his co-workers told me ... that he saw the shooter go to where Billy's room is that he works in," she said.

Ackerman, who enjoyed playing golf and rooting for the Boston Red Sox, had worked for the company for about 20 years, she said.

The Hartford Courant identified other victims as Victor James, 59, of Windsor; Edwin Kennison Jr., 49, of East Hartford; and Craig Pepin, 50, of South Windsor.

Steve Hollander was treated at Hartford Hospital and released. Another person was being treated there, but the hospital would not comment on the patient's condition.

It was the nation's deadliest shooting since 13 people were killed at Fort Hood, Texas, in November. A military psychiatrist is charged with 13 counts of premeditated murder and 32 counts of attempted premeditated murder in that case.

In Connecticut, a state lottery worker gunned down four supervisors in 1998 before committing suicide, and six people were killed in 1974 in botched robbery at a bakery in New Britain. Two men were convicted of that crime.

On Tuesday, a few dozen relatives and friends of the victims gathered a few miles away at Manchester High School. Outside, people talked, hugged and cried. Police and fire vehicles surrounded the warehouse, on a tree-lined road in an industrial park just west of a shopping mall.

A fire broke out shortly after the shooting, but police didn't think it was set.

Thornton listed Hoffman's Gun Center & Indoor Range in Newington as one of his interests on his Facebook page. A company official declined to comment.

Thornton filed for bankruptcy protection a decade ago. His petition in 2000 listed $4,850 in assets, including a 1994 Chrysler Concorde, and more than $15,000 in liabilities – primarily debt on credit card and student loan payments. His debts were discharged in March 2001 and the case was closed the following month.

The Connecticut Commission on Human Rights and Opportunities said Hartford Distributors has never had any complaints filed against it.

The Hollander family is widely respected in Manchester, said state Rep. Ryan Barry, a lifelong resident. He said the family-owned Hartford Distributors sponsors local sports teams.

"Ten seconds before he started shooting, if you had asked me, does he look like he's going to react in any way? I would have said no, he seems calm," Steve Hollander said. "It makes no sense the people he killed. Why would somebody do such a thing? They were his co-workers, they never ... harmed him in any way."

___

Associated Press writers Everton Bailey Jr. in Manchester; Michelle R. Smith, Susan Haigh and Dave Collins in Hartford, Conn.; John Christoffersen in Enfield, Conn.; Lynne Tuohy in Concord, N.H.; and Eric Tucker in Providence, R.I., contributed to this report.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
07:05 PM on 08/05/2010
The comments here are either it's the gun's fault or the racists fault. How about it's the crazy guy's fault?
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03:44 PM on 08/05/2010
G_ddammit! I've always said in regard to murder-suicides:

If you are that filled with rage, kill yourself first. If you still are left with your murderous impulses afterward, then you have my blessing to go nuts.
07:36 PM on 08/04/2010
I find it astounding how so many here take this tragedy with a complete lack of seriousness at the deaths of these innocent people. This is real life and not a game. How heartless and cruel so many have become. Bad Karma will follow you all.
rikilii
Hush, was the first word you were taught...
01:19 PM on 08/04/2010
guffman 1 hour ago (12:06 PM)
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You mentioned the issue of parole because it was the deflection closest at hand. And do you really think that screening potential gun owners for mental health issues is unreasonable? Do you feel that many gun rights advocates share that contention? I think we might have just uncovered a problem.

________________________________

I'm still waiting for you to explain how people could be fairly, accurately, and efficiently screened for mental health issues. It's not like there's a convenient blood test. A far more effective and fair method of reducing violence in our nation would be to stop releasing repeat violent offenders from prison on parole.

Should we also screen people for mental health issues, narcolepsy, and alcoholism before we issue driver's licenses?
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01:37 PM on 08/04/2010
Absolutely. Oh, and "top o' the thread!" to you.
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03:39 PM on 08/05/2010
@ "rikilii"
2:35 PM CST

Quote :

..."I'm still waiting for you to explain how people could be fairly, accurately, and efficiently screened for mental health issues."...

You don't have to "wait". It's called an (MMPI-2-RF)...Minnesota Multiphase Personality Inventory, Restructured Form (They've really fined tuned it since my early days)...it's long but fundamentally simple to give and easy enough for a serious psych major/clinical intern to interpret. The questions are loaded with obvious indicators of pathology; harmless/mild to severe requiring clinical assessment, but the young and clueless are usually oblivious to those indicators.

Either (MMPI-2-RF), or some facsimile thereof, should be state by state mandated for anyone carrying a handgun. Hunting rifles/hunters could be exempt for starters, maybe, depending on statistics and demographics.

J.B.
8/5/10
rikilii
Hush, was the first word you were taught...
04:09 PM on 08/05/2010
Interesting suggestion. How much does the test cost to administer, and are there any serious criticisms of its objectivity? The concern I would have with such a test is if it has a significant potential to be used arbitrarily to deny people their rights, or if it is too expensive, to effectively deny those with lower income of their rights.
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Elrancho2
Nature boy
11:15 AM on 08/04/2010
The gun lovers in America talk as if their right to own a gun is written somewhere in the bible they pretend to live by. I doubt that not until one of their own family is a victim of a senseless killing (a killing that was made so easy and so possible because of the availability of a gun) will they perhaps question the gun laws in America. I am so glad that I live in a country where it's not my 'right' to own a gun. Not my right to be slain in the workplace by a disgruntled colleague. Not my right to be massacred at the mall. Not my son's right to be gunned down in the classroom.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rooster Coburn
Less Gov't + More Responsibility = A Better World
12:18 PM on 08/04/2010
And this all happens on what planet?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Skotyman
My micro-bio tches
01:06 PM on 08/04/2010
I've seen this before, you keep repeating it don't you. I've had friends killed by inattentive drivers and yet they keep issuing licenses to morons. And I don't LOVE my gun...we're just friends with benefits.
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Elrancho2
Nature boy
02:52 PM on 08/04/2010
Mine was a new post but I did write something similar before. And this tragedy was not a car accident caused by an inattentive driver. Enjoy your little friend.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
commonsense333
11:06 AM on 08/04/2010
Hey, back off the NRA and guns. Guns don't kill people, people kill people. Guns are a vital part of our heritage in some ways. Back in the olden days, that's how people got their meat, was shooting it. Now, we don't have to do that, although it's much healthier to eat fresh venison and such than the crap they sell in the stores. Sure, less damage with a knife, but then what's next? Someone kills 2 people with a knife, then they will want to outlaw knives! I would much rather have a gun to protect myself, after all, if guns become illegal, criminals will still have them just like they do now. There is no right answer, it's a matter of degrees. When Australia had their gun turn in, violent crimes shot up.. Would you like that to happen in America?
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11:14 AM on 08/04/2010
Your grab-bag of rationales conspicuously avoids the issues raised by this latest mass shooting.
rikilii
Hush, was the first word you were taught...
11:30 AM on 08/04/2010
What issues? That Connecticut's gun laws are among the strictest in the nation and still did not prevent this from happening?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DSOTM
Legalize it, now!
01:54 PM on 08/04/2010
I doubt the DC Sniper would have been as effective if he was throwing knives from 100's of yards away.
04:42 PM on 08/04/2010
he could have just placed litlle remote controlled packages everywhere and then watched from a distance.
07:35 PM on 08/04/2010
And I'm sure he would have abided by every gun law and ban and not have found or built a weapon.
10:15 AM on 08/04/2010
Everybody doesn't turn the other cheek when it comes games and being disrespected. Not to condone his behavior but this goes to show you what can happen when go racial with the wrong one.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RevJimIII
Open Carry Oklahoma!!
01:21 PM on 08/04/2010
The shooter appeared to believe that being caught stealing equates to racism.. the company had no prior charges of discrimination and the shooter had never filed any complaints..
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01:43 PM on 08/04/2010
Thank for that interpretation, "Rev". If it's all the same to you, though, I think I'll wait for the results of the investigation before I dismiss the shooter's claim. Racial harassment in the workplace isn't entirely unheard of, as much as you would like to believe otherwise.
07:46 PM on 08/04/2010
We don't know that yet. While I don't know this company, I know the city of Manchester is fairly mixed and working class.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DSOTM
Legalize it, now!
10:12 AM on 08/04/2010
Guns and a crumbling society don't mix.
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OLJW00
right is right
11:11 AM on 08/04/2010
Actually they do - quite well thank you
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DSOTM
Legalize it, now!
12:09 PM on 08/04/2010
Your reply only reaffirms my statement.
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OMEGA MAN
A wise man learns by the mistakes of others, a foo
09:48 AM on 08/04/2010
Someone just doesn't just wake up some day and do this type of crime. This happened in my area. An ex-employee came back after a two years and shot the CEO and two VP's in the head at their homes with a hunting rifle from the woods. At first the police thought they were random crimes. The gunman committed suicide also.
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jeffrey678
You don't happen to make it. You make it happen.
09:53 AM on 08/04/2010
I remember that ! The gunman used public property records to find their homes.
08:59 AM on 08/04/2010
Let me see if I can explain this to you NRA members, "Shooting spree not good"
rikilii
Hush, was the first word you were taught...
10:07 AM on 08/04/2010
Are you too mentally challenged to respond to reasonable inquiry, or are you just content to keep trolling?

What does the NRA have to do with this, and when did any NRA member say that a shooting spree was good?
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10:17 AM on 08/04/2010
The NRA promotes gun proliferation. That's what they have to do with this. And the poster merely stated that shooting sprees are not good, not that anybody in the NRA said they were.
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OdinsEye
Korean-Latino cop and combat vet
09:34 PM on 08/04/2010
"Let me see if I can explain this to you NRA members, "Shooting spree not good""

Let me explain this to you: "The NRA does not think shooting sprees are good."
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08:51 AM on 08/04/2010
A "gun" did not kill anyone, Omar Thornton did. There are no good guns. There are no bad guns. Any gun in the hands of a bad man is a bad thing. Any gun in the hands of a decent person is no threat to anybody -- except bad people...
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fromdnorth
OK I checked my micro-bio (didn't know I had one
09:01 AM on 08/04/2010
Or insane, or abused, or bullied...
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09:05 AM on 08/04/2010
Any gun in the hands of a bad man is a bad thing. Any gun in the hands of a decent person is no threat to anybody -- except bad people...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
DSOTM
Legalize it, now!
10:13 AM on 08/04/2010
I doubt the carnage would have been as devastating had he used a knife or a rolling pin. The only reason I mention those two items is because I've heard that defense from gun owners for 30 years.
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10:47 AM on 08/04/2010
You'll hear it for another 30. No question.
07:29 AM on 08/04/2010
There is a violent anger just under the surface for many people these days. You see it in all the violent acts perpetrated on children, women, the elderly, and animals.

The fact that someone could kill 8 people over stolen beer is a bad sign for all of us.
07:02 AM on 08/04/2010
sense
grammar police are after me
07:29 AM on 08/04/2010
You are correct. :)
07:01 AM on 08/04/2010
Firearms are here to stay
your spinning your wheels

please google between full auto and semi, then when you post you might make since.

I would lay odds libs do not know what it takes to buy a full, let alone what states allow them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
drricklippin
physician-activist-poet
06:57 AM on 08/04/2010
These acts while different from terrorism deserve equal attention from us. Implications for improved US mental health services and gun laws.

Dr. Rick Lippin
Southampton,Pa
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08:56 AM on 08/04/2010
25 States allow anyone to buy a gun, strap it on, and walk down the street with no permit of any kind: some say it's crazy. However, 4 out of 5 U.S. murders are committed in the other half of the country: so who is crazy?
07:38 PM on 08/04/2010
That's true. At the same time, I think we coddle some mental health patients when it comes to privacy. Virginia Tech had no idea their shooter was so crazy, because by law they weren't allowed to know.