Man in a Santa Suit Kills at Least 8 at a Party
http://www.nytimes.com/2008/12/26/us/26Santa.html?_r=1&th&emc=th
COVINA, Calif. — A man in a Santa Claus outfit opened fire on a
Christmas Eve gathering of his in-laws in this Los Angeles suburb and
then methodically set their house ablaze, killing at least eight
people and injuring several others, the authorities said Thursday.

The attack occurred during a Christmas Eve gathering.
Shortly after the attack, the gunman, identified as Bruce Jeffrey
Pardo, 45, killed himself with a single shot to the head at the home
of his brother in the Sylmar section of Los Angeles, the police said.


In addition to the eight people whose bodies were found in the ashes
of the house here, none of whom were identified, at least one other
person was thought to be missing, and perhaps as many as three. Among
the total of dead or missing were the couple who owned the home and
their daughter, the estranged wife of the gunman, the police said.


Investigators continued to search the charred structure Thursday, and
coroners said dental records would be needed to identify some of the
remains.


The frenzied shooting occurred just before midnight Wednesday at the
two-story house, set on a cul-de-sac in this middle-class town about
22 miles east of Los Angeles. Lt. Pat Buchanan of the Covina Police
Department said Mr. Pardo, armed with one or two handguns and fire
accelerant, had gone to the house looking for his former wife,
Sylvia,
with whom he was finalizing a contentious divorce after only a year
of
marriage.


People who escaped the house got out by smashing through glass and
jumping. One woman broke an ankle when she leapt from a second-floor
window.


The house was owned by James and Alicia Ortega, an elderly couple who
were retired from their spray-painting business and who often invited
their large extended family over for parties, particularly around
Christmas.


Relatives said about 25 people, among them many children, were inside
the home celebrating when Mr. Pardo knocked on the door around 11:30
p.m. He had apparently disguised himself as a hired entertainer for
the children in order to gain access.


When a guest opened the door, Lieutenant Buchanan said, Mr. Pardo
stepped inside the house, drew a semiautomatic handgun and
immediately
started shooting, beginning with an 8-year-old girl who was hit in
the
face but who survived, as did an older girl who was shot in the back.


As Mr. Pardo unleashed a barrage of gunfire in the living room,
relatives smashed through windows, hid behind furniture or bounded
upstairs. Then he sprayed the room with accelerant, using a device
made of two pressurized tanks, one of which held pressurized gas.
Within seconds, the house was ablaze.


Joshua Chavez of Seattle was visiting his mother’s house, which sits
behind the Ortegas’, when he heard a loud explosion. “Then I saw
black
smoke and this large flame,” he said.


Mr. Chavez ran out to the backyard and heard three girls, including
the one who had been shot in the back, trying to climb over his
mother’s wall. “There’s some guy shooting in there,” he said one of
the girls told him.


“About 20 seconds after that,” he continued, “the house was totally
on
fire. One girl said that a guy dressed as Santa started shooting.”


Another neighbor, Jeannie Goltz, 51, saw three more partygoers
fleeing
the burning home. One of them, a young woman, had escaped upstairs
from the living room but broke her ankle when she jumped out a
second-
story window.


SWAT teams arrived shortly after Ms. Goltz had shepherded these three
survivors into another neighbor’s house, but by that time Mr. Pardo
was on his way back to Los Angeles.


Police officers said they could not recall so horrific a crime in
Covina, and neighbors said they would never have imagined anything so
grisly on their quiet block.


The Ortegas had lived in the house for more than two decades and were
known for their family spirit, their generosity and their dog, which
frequently escaped their yard.


“I would generally play Santa for the family every year,” said Pat
Bower, a neighbor of the Ortegas for 25 years. “The family was always
together. Brothers and sisters, aunts and uncles were always in the
house. They were a gigantic family. We all envied them, actually.”


Robert and Gloria Magcalas lived next door to the Ortegas for 11
years
but were celebrating Christmas Eve with relatives in Los Angeles.
Their own home was barely spared the flames.


“They were a big, loving family,” Mrs. Magcalas said. “We usually
exchanged gifts with them today. They gave us tamales and cookies
every Christmas.”


The police said they had found two handguns in the ruins, and an
additional two pistols at the scene of Mr. Pardo’s apparent suicide.
Officials said they would continue to search the crime scene Friday,
seeking information about the identities of the dead






--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Thanks for being part of "PoliticalForum" at Google Groups.
For options & help see http://groups.google.com/group/PoliticalForum

* Visit our other community at http://www.PoliticalForum.com/  
* It's active and moderated. Register and vote in our polls. 
* Read the latest breaking news, and more.
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to