Sunday, January 26, 2014

Police ID assailant in Columbia mall shooting - Washington Post


Darion Marcus Aguilar, a 19-year-old College Park resident, has been identified by police as the assailant in Saturday’s shooting at the Mall in Columbia, which left three people dead, including the shooter.


Although one of the victims, Brianna Benlolo, 21, also lived in College Park, police have not established a connection between Aguilar and the victims, Howard County Police Chief William J. McMahon said at a Sunday morning news conference.




McMahon said Aguilar was dropped off by a taxicab about 10:15 a.m. at the mall in suburban Maryland, about 25 miles northeast of Washington. The first shots rang out about an hour later. During that 60 minutes, Aguilar, who was dropped off at the upstairs level, was seen going downstairs, before returning upstairs, to where the shooting occurred at Zumiez, a clothing store for skateboarders and snowboarders.


McMahon said six to eight shots were fired, killing Benlolo and a fellow store worker, Tyler Johnson, 25, who had lived in Ellicott City but recently moved to Mount Airy.


Minutes later, when officers arrived, they found the shooter dead of an apparently self-inflicted wound.


McMahon said Aguilar’s weapon was a Mossberg 12-gauge shotgun, which he bought in Montgomery County in December. Police found the gun next to Aguilar’s body, which was laden with ammunition. In addition, they said, his backpack, which was found in the store, contained what they described as two crude devices that seemed to be an attempt to use fireworks to make explosives.


Police disabled the possible explosive devices, and, following standard procedure, searched the mall with K-9 units.


Although Aguilar had a large quantity of ammunition and had apparently tried to make explosives, police said it appeared that he did not target anyone else at the mall.


Police on Saturday night said they had identified the shooter and were working to obtain a warrant to search his Maryland home.


Five other people in the mall needed medical treatment, one for a shotgun wound that police said was described as non-life-threatening, the others for minor injuries suffered in the frantic mass exodus from the shopping complex.


Police said a victim who was shot in the foot told them that she was on the lower level of the mall, below Zumiez, when she was injured. Detectives were investigating how the wound occurred.


George Sliker, Johnson’s uncle, said he and other relatives frantically tried to contact Johnson after they heard about the shooting. Failing to reach him, Sliker said, they began calling hospitals. Then they drove to the mall.


“The odds kept narrowing,” said Sliker, 67, of Upper Marlboro. “They couldn’t get anybody to tell them anything. It was horrible for them.” He described his slain nephew as polite and upbeat — “a likable kid” — and said he could not fathom why anyone would want to shoot him.


“It’s very hard on the family, of course,” Sliker said. “He just seemed like an ordinary kid who was at the wrong place at the wrong time.”


Bryan Fischer, 34, said Johnson was a “kind of shy guy” who for the past several years had volunteered in an anti-drug program in Howard County schools. Johnson loved concerts and music, especially rave, dubstep and electronic dance.


“He was a very sensitive kid with a huge heart who was there to help anybody in need, always there with a smile or a joke, loving and caring, and one of the best friends anybody could ask for,” Fischer said.


Fischer said that Johnson did not socialize much with his slain co-worker, Benlolo, with whom he had worked at Zumiez since late last year.


Benlolo was an assistant manager at the store, according to Corey Lewis, who for the past two months was her housemate at a white duplex in College Park, just on the edge of the University of Maryland campus. Benlolo had a 2-year-old son who spent time with her at the duplex a few days a week, Lewis said, and posted numerous pictures of him on Instagram and Facebook.


“She was always kind and joyful,” Lewis said, noting that she had a smile on her face as she prepared to leave for work Saturday morning. “She never seemed like she had any negativity. This comes as a shock to everyone.”


Zumiez chief executive Rick Brooks said in a statement that the company is “deeply saddened by the violence” at the store. “The Zumiez team is a tight knit community and all of our hearts go out to Brianna and Tyler’s families,” he said.


Maryland Gov. Martin O’Malley (D) lamented the deaths in a statement, expressing his “deepest condolences to the families of the victims and all those affected by this senseless act of violence. Protecting the public’s safety is our most solemn obligation.”


At the suburban mall, a quiet Saturday turned to terror as the blasts jolted shoppers and employees, who hit the floor and scrambled into stores.


“It was pretty freaky,” said Robert Ashton, a 49-year-old Californian on a business trip to Maryland. He said he and two companions were in the first-floor food court, directly beneath Zumiez, when the shooting occurred. “You see these things on TV all the time,” he said. “But you never think you’re going to be in the middle of it.”


Ashton said he heard a boom from above that sounded like a table falling over. And then came more booms, at least three, he said. “We took off running” and found shelter at a Chick-fil-A with other mall patrons, including a woman with two toddlers and another with three children. They hid for about 45 minutes until police arrived.


Roger Aseneta, a manager at Auntie Anne’s pretzel shop, said he heard what he knew were gunshots about 11:15 a.m. He ushered his employees inside and locked the doors behind them. They went into a backroom where, on a surveillance camera, they could see people running in the food court outside.


“It’s a case of people running for safety,” he said. “It’s a really terrible thing. I never thought I would experience this. . . . I was shaking.”


Aseneta, 52, said he heard five or six shots. And “I heard screaming,” he said in the parking lot, still in a white Auntie Anne’s apron.


At 12:30 p.m., police led frightened shoppers and workers from the mall entrance at the food court. Many were coatless, and those without cars were ushered, many shivering and some holding babies, into warm vans from Howard and Anne Arundel county fire departments. Some held hands and were crying.


Police officers guarded each entrance off Little Patuxent Parkway to keep people from the nearly empty parking lots. Police said the mall will be closed Sunday.


Laura McKindles said she heard eight to 10 shots as she worked a booth on the second level overlooking the food court.


“People were yelling, ‘Someone’s got a gun!’ ” she said. “They were screaming.”


She said she ran across the corridor and into a perfume store, where she hid in a backroom for about 90 minutes until police gave the all-clear. She was with three other workers from her stall and from the store. “I was praying,” she said. “I was thinking about my family, my dog.” She had left her cellphone behind and couldn’t call anyone to tell them she was okay until after she got out.


“I think this country is in a lot of trouble,” said McKindles, who recently moved to Columbia from north of Baltimore. “I mean, what possesses someone to, on a Saturday afternoon, in this cold, to come to a mall and shoot people?


“Why? I just can’t understand what motivates that.”


Lori Aratani, Lynh Bui, Alice Crites, Jennifer Jenkins, Jenna Johnson, Victoria St. Martin, Carol Morello, Martin Weil, Clarence Williams and Matt Zapotosky contributed to this report.


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