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The death toll in a West Texas shooting rampage increased to seven on Sunday, 1 September, as authorities investigated why a man stopped by state troopers for failing to signal a left turn opened fire on them and fled, shooting more than 20 people as he drove before being killed by officers outside a movie theater.
Those killed ranged in age from 15 to 57, Odessa Police Chief Michael Gerke said at a news conference.
He said authorities have no definitive answers yet about a motive in Saturday's shooting. He also refused to say the name of the gunman publicly but said he would provide his identity later.
The shooting began Saturday afternoon with an interstate traffic stop where gunfire was exchanged with police, setting off a chaotic rampage during which the suspect hijacked a mail carrier truck and fired at random as he drove in the area of Odessa and Midland, two cities in the heart of Texas oil country more than 483 kilometers west of Dallas.
Police initially reported possible multiple shooters, but Odessa police Chief Michael Gerke later said there was only one male suspect.
The suspect shot "at innocent civilians all over Odessa," according to a statement from Odessa police.
Before the vehicle came to a complete stop, the driver "pointed a rifle toward the rear window of his car and fired several shots" toward the patrol car stopping him. The gunshots struck one of two troopers inside the patrol car, Texas Department of Public Safety spokeswoman Katherine Cesinger said, after which the gunman fled and continued shooting.
Two other police officers were shot before the suspect was killed. Authorities say the trooper was in serious but stable condition on Saturday, and the other officers were stable.
Gerke said there were at least 21 civilian shooting victims. At least two patients remained in critical condition at Odessa Regional Medical Center, while others were hospitalized elsewhere.
Witnesses described gunfire near shopping plazas and in busy intersections.
Shauna Saxton was driving with her husband and grandson in Odessa and had paused at a stoplight when they heard loud pops.
"I looked over my shoulder to the left and the gold car pulled up and the man was there and he had a very large gun and it was pointing at me," she told TV station KOSA.
Saxton said she was trapped because there were two cars in front of her. "I started honking my horn. I started swerving and we got a little ahead of him and then for whatever reason the cars in front of me kind of parted," she said, sobbing. She said she heard three more shots as she sped away.
Gerke did not go into detail about the chase, but the movie theater where the suspect was killed is more than 16 kilometres from where state troopers originally pulled over the gunman.
They were signed by Abbott during this year's legislative session that was praised by the National Rifle Association and followed a 2017 mass shooting at a Texas church that killed more than two dozen people, and a 2018 attack at a high school near Houston that left 10 dead.
Abbott, a Republican, has been noncommittal about pushing for new gun restrictions after the El Paso attack.
Saturday’s shooting brings the number of mass killings in the U.S. so far this year to 25, matching the number in all of 2018, according to The AP/USATODAY/Northeastern University mass murder database.
The database tracks homicides where four or more people are killed, not including the offender.
Dustin Fawcett said he was sitting in his truck at a Starbucks in Odessa when he heard at least six gunshots ring out less than 46 meters behind him.
He spotted a white sedan with a passenger window that had been shattered. That's when he thought, "Oh man, this is a shooting."
Fawcett, 28, an Odessa transportation consultant, "got out to make sure everyone was safe" but found that no one nearby had been struck by the gunfire. He said a little girl was bleeding, but she hadn't been shot, and that he later found out she was grazed in the face.
President Donald Trump has offered contradictory messages in reacting to recent mass shootings.
Days after the El Paso shooting, he said he was eager to implement "very meaningful background checks" on guns and told reporters there was "tremendous support" for action. He later backed away, saying the current system of background checks was "very, very strong."
However, some mental health professionals say such thinking is outdated, that linking mental illness to violence is wrong, and that the impact of more treatment would be helpful overall but would have a minor impact on gun violence.
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