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Aurora gunman opened fire on his coworkers as soon as he lost his job

Posted at 6:21 AM, Feb 17, 2019
and last updated 2019-02-17 09:21:47-05

Illinois gunman Gary Martin brought a pistol to his termination meeting at the sprawling Henry Pratt Co. in Aurora. When he found out he'd been fired Friday, he started killing the people in the room, authorities said.

After fatally shooting several people in the room at the manufacturing business he'd worked for 15 years, he stormed into the warehouse, witnesses said. There, he shot at more employees.

In a rampage that lasted about 90 minutes before police killed him in a shootout, Martin killed five people and injured six people -- including five officers.

"During this meeting he was terminated and my understanding from the witnesses is that he opened fire right after the termination," Aurora Police Chief Kristen Ziman said at a news conference Saturday. "We believe that several people who were involved in that meeting are the ones who are deceased."

Gunman had been written up before firing

While it is not known whether the gunman knew he would be fired when he brought a firearm into his workplace, a company official said he had been going through a discipline procedure and had been written up before.

Scott Hall, the CEO of Mueller Water Products, which owns the Henry Pratt Co., said the company has a progressive discipline process that can result in termination.

"In order to be at the final step, he would have been through previous steps," Hall said. The gunman was being terminated for the culmination of various workplace rules violations, he said.

"The only thing I know is that he was called in," Ziman said. "Once again we can surmise that he was speculative about what was going to happen as evidenced by him arming himself with a firearm. ... I don't know exactly what was communicated to him."

He 'went ballistic' and opened fire

Martin was "running down the aisle" gunning down people with a pistol that had a green laser sight on it, an employee told CNN affiliate WLS .

"As soon as I saw the green thing and heard the shots, we left," said John Probst, who has worked at the plant for 40 years. "He started opening up on the room, and he was just shooting everybody."

Probst said one of the victims who ran out with his arm bleeding told him the gunman "went ballistic."

Four minutes after the first call to 911, police officers arrived on the scene and came under immediate fire, possibly from a window, police said.

All those who were killed or hurt by gunfire -- except for the gunman -- appear to have been hit in the first few minutes of the incident, Ziman said.

The shooting stopped as Martin apparently hid deeper within the warehouse. He was found about an hour and a half into the hunt in a rear machine shop, police said. He opened fire and officers fired back, killing him, authorities said.

The victims

Police released details about the victims. They included a plant manager, a human resources manager, an intern on his first day, and two other workers who were gunned down in the attack. Another of the gunman's colleagues was wounded.

He also shot at responding police, wounding five. Police released the names of the five workers killed at the industrial valve manufacturer's 29,000-square-foot warehouse:

• Clayton Parks of Elgin, Illinois, the human resources manager.

• Trevor Wehner of DeKalb, Illinois, a human resources intern and a student at Northern Illinois University.

• Russell Beyer of Yorkville, Illinois, a mold operator.

• Vicente Juarez of Oswego, Illinois, a stockroom attendant and forklift operator.

• Josh Pinkard of Oswego, Illinois, the plant manager.

The names of the five wounded police officers and the wounded worker -- all men -- were not immediately released. Of the wounded officers, four were shot and one had shrapnel wounds, police said.

At least three of the officers were still hospitalized Saturday, police said.

He didn't legally own the gun

The gunman did not legally own the pistol he used in the attack, police said.

He had been issued a firearm owner's identification card, or FOID card, in January 2014, and in March of that year passed a background check and purchased a .40-caliber Smith & Wesson handgun from a dealer, according to Ziman.

But when he applied for a concealed-carry permit later that month, his fingerprints for another background check flagged him for a felony conviction, Ziman said.

Authorities discovered that the gunman was convicted of aggravated assault in Mississippi in 1995. Ziman said his concealed-carry permit was rejected and his FOID card was revoked. State police sent him a letter telling him to voluntarily relinquish his weapon to police, Ziman said.

How the gunman ended up keeping the gun will be part of the investigation of the incident.

"We're looking into whether we followed up on that, and what agencies followed up on that," she said.

2 million victims a year

More than 2 million Americans each year report being victims of workplace violence, according to the federal government. Many more cases go unreported.

"The point of termination is perhaps the greatest opportunity for deadly workplace violence," said Kathleen Bonczyk, the founder and executive director of the Florida-based non-profit Workplace Violence Prevention Institute .

Bonczyk said the firing of longer-term employees can involve the greatest risk.

"It's almost like a divorce from a family," she said. "Americans today tend to spend more time at work than they do even at home. They tend to have more lunches, dinners, meals, time spent with their coworkers. You're severing perhaps the most stable relationship that the employee may have."

In 2017, about 77% of workplace homicides involved a firearm, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics . And, even as workplace homicides decreased over the past decade, the number of killings has increased in recent years .