Английская Википедия:2012 Seattle café shootings

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Use mdy dates Шаблон:Infobox civilian attack

On May 30, 2012, a spree shooting occurred in Seattle, Washington. The shootings began with a mass shooting at Café Racer, resulting in the deaths of four patrons and injuring a fifth. Another woman was killed not long after in a carjacking. The shooter, Ian Lee Stawicki, died by suicide the same day.[1]

Shootings

On May 30, 2012, just before 11:00 a.m., Stawicki walked into Café Racer in the University District of Seattle, Washington. The staff there recognized him from previously being thrown out, and reminded him of that. Stawicki lingered for a bit, and then walked near the door. He pulled one of his two pistols, both .45-caliber handguns, and shot his first victim in the back of the head. The man's body blocked the door, taking away an escape route. One man threw a bar stool and used a second to separate himself from Stawicki. The distraction allowed two or three people to escape through the door the shooter had blocked. Stawicki then went near the bar and shot the others execution-style, police say. As he left, Stawicki took a hat from one of the victims.[2] Stawicki killed a total of four patrons at the café and wounded the café's chef.[3]

Half an hour later, he killed another woman in a parking lot next to Town Hall Seattle on First Hill while carjacking her black Mercedes-Benz SUV. Later that afternoon just before 4:00 p.m., he died by suicide on a sidewalk in West Seattle as police closed in.[4] The perpetrator previously owned six handguns (three 9mm handguns and three .45-caliber handguns), including the Remington 1911 R1 pistol he used in the shootings. As a result of the shootings, several schools, including Roosevelt High School and Nathan Eckstein Middle School, were put on lockdown for student safety.

Perpetrator

Ian Lee Stawicki (September 16, 1971 – May 30, 2012) was the sole perpetrator of the shooting. Stawicki had prior contacts with police but a relatively short record. Police say he had charges for domestic violence interference, fourth-degree assault, malicious mischief, and a 1989 charge for unlawfully carrying a weapon. However, court records show only a 1995 case for driving with a suspended license, which resulted in an adverse finding.Шаблон:Fact

During the February 2008 case, police officers were called to the Magnolia home of Stawicki and his then-girlfriend to find the victim with a bloody nose and crying. She told police that he had struck her and destroyed several of her belongings, and that in recent months, he had begun breaking things and flying into rages, according to the police report.[2] Stawicki's father, Walt Stawicki, described his son as a very private person who was "disgruntled" and had been a frequent customer of the coffee shop where his rampage began.[1]

Victims

Файл:Meshugener Joe 01.jpg
Joseph Albanese
Файл:Shmootzi the Clod 01.jpg
Andrew Keriakedes
Dead
  • Joseph "Meshuguna Joe" Albanese (bassist of MIGHTY SPHINCTER), 52, at Café Racer[5]
  • Andrew "Schmootzi the Clod" Keriakedes, 49, at Café Racer[5]
  • Kimberly Lynn Layfield, 36, at Café Racer[5]
  • Donald Largen, 57, at Café Racer[5]
  • Gloria Leonidas, 52, on First Hill[5]
Injured
  • Leonard Meuse, 46, at Café Racer[6]

Aftermath

Café Racer had a somewhat rocky history after the incident, opening and closing at least twice over the next eight years, before definitively closing during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020. In its final closing in August 2020, owner Jeff Ramsey announced that the name would live on as a free online music station featuring "music from Washington and primarily Seattle."[7] In 2021, Café Racer reopened in the Capitol Hill neighborhood.[8]

In the Media

This incident and Ian's frame of mind from childhood all the way up to adulthood is chronicled by his father in the Discovery television program "Evil Lives Here", the 5th episode of the 5th season entitled "He's Still My Son".[9]

His father explains what possibly lead up to the event, the event ifself and the aftermath. In his father's words, Ian was a child who in elementary school wrote that when he grew up, he "wanted to be a hero". To do this later in life joined the US Army, but was discharged after an incident of violence occurred after Basic Training. The episode ends with his father claiming that he would rather have bad days with his son, rather than none at all.

References

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Шаблон:Mass shootings in the United States in the 2010s

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