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So Cal Edison Security Beefed Up After Deadly Office Shooting

So Cal Edison Security

NOAKI SCHWARTZ   12/19/11 11:08 PM ET   AP

LOS ANGELES — Southern California Edison said Monday it has stepped up security after an employee shot four co-workers and committed suicide at a utility office east of Los Angeles.

The facility in Irwindale remained closed and workers were being allowed to stay home, according to Edison spokesman Paul Klein.

He would not detail the additional security measures or say whether the moves were companywide.

Two victims died after the shooting Friday. Another was treated at a hospital and released.

A fourth victim, 46-year-old Angela Alvarez, was upgraded from critical condition to serious condition at County-USC hospital on Monday, said hospital spokeswoman Rosa Saca.

Authorities continue to search for a motive after saying Andre Turner methodically shot co-workers with a semiautomatic handgun then killed himself Friday inside the complex that houses more than 1,000 Edison employees.

Turner's death was ruled a suicide. A systems analyst at Edison, he had worked at the company for seven years, utility spokesman Steven Conroy said.

The shooting victims were all in supervisory roles at Edison, but it's unclear whether any of them were Turner's direct supervisors, Los Angeles County sheriff's Lt. Holly Francisco told KCAL-TV.

Abhay Pimpale, a 38-year-old independent contractor from Montebello who was shot but survived the shooting, declined to comment. Pimpale, the father of a 3-year-old son and a newborn baby, was released from the hospital Saturday.

He told KCAL-TV he only wanted to "spend time with my family."

The two men killed were Henry Serrano, 56, of Walnut, and Robert Scott Lindsay, 53, of Chino Hills, coroner and company officials said. Turner and Lindsay died at the scene. Serrano died while being taken to a hospital, the coroner's office said.

Lindsay was a manager in the IT division at Edison and worked for the company for 29 years, company officials said. He was married and was a father. Serrano, a manager in the same area, was with the company for 26 years.

All five people worked in the same area of the same building at the office park in Irwindale, a small industrial city in the San Gabriel Valley, authorities said.

In a 911 call released by authorities Monday, the operator says she could hear what was possibly gunfire while the security guard from the office park called to report the shooting.

"I heard a male voice in the background yelling," the operator said. "There's also some loud popping noises in the background."

Authorities have released no information on a possible motive for what the Edison statement called "one of the most horrific events the company has experienced in its 125-year history."

Turner's wife, Jean Turner, wrote in a brief statement given to KTLA: "We are in shock and still trying to process this tragic event. Our hearts and prayers go out to all the victims and their families."

While a motive was not clear, The Press-Enterprise reported Sunday that Turner bought a 5,000 square-foot, five-bedroom house near Hidden Valley Golf Club for $711,000 when it was new in 2004.

The Riverside County assessor's office shows its current value as $543,000 and it was put up for sale in November for $590,000, the newspaper said.

Edison said it was offering grief counseling for employees and is establishing a fund to support the victims' families. The company will donate $100,000 and seek employee contributions.

___

Associated Press writers Shaya Tayefe Mohajer, Christopher Weber and Denise Petski in Los Angeles, and Greg Risling in Irwindale contributed to this report.

Photos from Friday's shooting by Associated Press.
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People leave the scene where three people were killed and two more injured in a California office complex shooting, Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, in Irwindale, Calif. The suspected gunman was among the dead and is believed to have self-inflicted wounds, Baldwin Park police Capt. Michael Taylor said. (AP Photo/Mark J. Terrill)
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sdavidweaver
02:17 PM on 12/20/2011
Every time I hear about another of these incidents, where an individual decides to seek revenge upon co-workers or bosses who have supposedly 'wronged' him, it is so clear that the ease of using a rifle or handgun as the tool of that retribution is a major problem we continue to fail to address. The second amendment, and the way it has been interpreted by our current court, is an American tragedy.

If this man had been forced to use a knife, for example, it would have been much more difficult to physically vent his rage, and would also take much more courage. I doubt if this individual possesses courage. Thus, upon murdering the innocent around him, he cannot live with the act and must end his own life.

The mad Norway mass-murderer actually purchased his ammunition from the U.S., taking full advantage of our criminally lax laws. Mexico continues to suffer from the same, compounding upon our colossal appetite for drugs.

But... no hope for relief in sight.
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LegallyPalin
needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few
01:42 PM on 12/20/2011
Brilliant, step up security AFTER an employee shoots four co-workers and committs suicide, but not before.
10:08 AM on 12/20/2011
I urge all employees to shoot their managers.
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01:09 PM on 12/20/2011
I urge someone shoot you.
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Neechie
This is my micro-bio
07:19 PM on 12/19/2011
This was incredibly sad. I had friends in this building and it was not until late that I found out they were OK. Another guy at wits end in this economy. Why they have to take others down with them is beyond me. So tragic.
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wolflover3825
Hungry Like the Wolf.
08:40 AM on 12/20/2011
Maybe he blamed them for his troubles. Not saying it's correct, but he might have felt slighted by them, blaming them for a lost promotion or raise. There are several possiblities, or a combination of any or all of them.
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01:10 PM on 12/20/2011
Not saying he's correct. How magnanimous of you.