(USA) - An ex-student suspected of opening fire at a small Christian college in California, killing seven people and wounding three, was targeting a school administrator and former classmates who he felt had treated him unfairly, police said on Tuesday.
Oakland police chief Howard Jordan told a news conference that One Goh, a 43-year-old who had been expelled from Oikos University, had been cooperative but “not particularly remorseful” following his arrest in the killings at the school.
“We know that he came here with the intent of locating an administrator, and she was not here,” Jordan said. “He then went through the entire building systematically and randomly shooting victims.”
The mid-morning attack at Oikos, a small Oakland college that has links to the Korean-American Christian community, was the deadliest shooting rampage on a U.S. college campus since 32 people were killed at Virginia Tech University in April 2007.
Jordan said those killed included six women and a man, ranging in age from 21 to 40. The victims came from Korea, Nigeria, Nepal and the Philippines. Six were students and one was a secretary, he said.
He said Goh, a Korean-American, had been expelled from the school two months earlier for “behavioural problems and anger management” issues, but he was not aware of any particular incident that had led to his removal.
“We’ve learned that the suspect was upset with the administration at the school,” Jordan told ABC’s “Good Morning America” in an interview.
“He was also upset that students ... in the past when he attended the school, mistreated him, disrespected him and things of that nature,” he told the program. “We’ve learned this was a very chaotic, calculated and determined gentleman that came there with specific intent to kill people.”
SURRENDER AT GROCERY STORE
Witnesses said Goh returned to the small college on Monday morning, entered a reception area and opened fire. He then walked into one of two classes in session, telling former classmates to line up and that he was going to kill them.
Goh, who police said acted alone, surrendered at a Safeway grocery store several miles from the college.
Police expect to deliver the results of their investigation to prosecutors on Wednesday, and they will decide what charges to file.
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