The
man who was killed Wednesday by Nashville police after he allegedly
went after moviegoers with a hatchet and pepper spray had been committed
to a mental institution four times, police spokesman Don Aaron told
reporters.
More than a dozen gunshots, fired in rapid succession, can be heard in a video recorded during the fatal shooting.(courtesy CNN News)
Vincente David
Montano was committed twice in 2004 and twice in 2007, said Aaron,
citing officials in Rutherford County. Montano had been arrested
Murfreesboro, Tennessee, in 2004 in a case of assault and resisting
arrest, police said.
"We have no motive for (Wednesday's attack)," Aaron said.
Montano
had an airsoft pistol with him that he aimed and fired at police in the
theater, Aaron said. Such a weapon looks like a semiautomatic pistol
but fires plastic or BB pellets.
Montano's
mother filed a missing person's report with Texas Rangers two days ago
and they had notified authorities in Tennessee, Aaron said.
In the report, his mother, Denise Pruitt, told authorities that Montano was diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia in 2006.
"Ms.
Pruitt advised Vincente has several other health issues and has a hard
time taking care of himself," the report says. It lists his address as
"homeless."
Pruitt, who lives in Florida, last saw her son in Illinois in March 2013.
Aaron
told reporters that one patron at the screening of "Mad Max: Fury Road"
suffered a minor cut on a shoulder from a hatchet before officers
killed the suspect.
Police Chief Steve Anderson said that
Montano was 29 years old. He had an identification card that listed a
Nashville address, Anderson said, but authorities want to check
fingerprints to confirm his identity.
The wounded man had a superficial injury to his arm, fire department spokesman Brian Haas said.
The
man, who was identified as Steven, told reporters that police did a
"phenomenal job" in responding to the calls for help. He was one of
eight people in the theater, and one of three who were pepper sprayed by
the assailant. He said his daughter was also sprayed.
"I am very, very grateful that no one else got injured here today -- other than the person who perpetrated this," Steven said.
No
one was transported to a hospital, Haas said, but Steven, his daughter
and another woman suffered irritation from pepper spray apparently used
by the suspect, who was wearing a surgical mask. The pepper spray
contained red dye, Anderson said.
The
suspect had two bags -- a backpack and a satchel -- with him, Aaron
said. The bomb squad destroyed the backpack, which contained a "hoax
explosive device," Anderson told reporters.
Police were called to the Carmike Hickory 8
movie theater complex in the Nashville suburb of Antioch at 1:13 p.m.
CT. Two officers were already at the mall working a car accident when
people came running toward them. The officers were inside the complex
withing two minutes, Aaron said.
One
officer -- who entered the theater and fired at the man before backing
away -- said Montano pointed the airsoft pistol at him and pulled the
trigger.
The SWAT team arrived and had
to don gas masks due to the heavy chemical spray in the theater, Aaron
said. The man tried to flee out the back door.
Brad
Ransom, who told CNN he works across the street from the theater, said
he saw four or five officers along the side of the building around the
time of the fatal shooting.
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