San José Shooter Held Big Grudges
San José Shooter Held Big Grudges
SAN JOSE, CALIFORNIA — An employee carrying multiple guns opened fire on co-workers at a Valley Transportation Authority light rail facility in San Jose on Wednesday morning, killing nine and injuring several other workers.
Here are the details: The shooting began just after 6:30 A.M.
On the morning of Wednesday 26 May in the city of San Jose in California.
At that time, several 911 calls reported shots being fired near a maintenance yard of the Valley Transit Authority.
Members of a union representing VTA workers were meeting in the yard when the shooting began, and some reports suggest that the shooting started at the meeting.
The attacker was identified as 57-year-old Sam Cassidy.
Most of the shooting happened in the maintenance yard of the facility.
Police rushed to the scene and confronted the shooter within minutes of the start of the incident.
Officers say the shooter had more than one gun and was shooting single shots when they approached him.
When the shooter saw the police, he shot himself immediately, leaving nine victims dead and many injured.
A fire started at a house that authorities believe to be Cassidy's home, at around the same time as the shooting started.
Cassidy's ex-wife told The Associated Press that he had a bad temper and would rail about being treated unfairly at work.
The nine victims were all employees of the Valley Transportation Authority.
Their names and ages were Alex Ward Fitch, 49: Michael Rudometkin, 40; Lars Lane, 63; Paul Megia, 42; Taptejdeep Singh, 36; Adrian Balleza, 29; Jose Hernandez, 35; Timothy Romo, 49; and Abdolvahab Alaghmandan, 63.