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Suspect in Washington's Holocaust Museum Shooting Is a White Supremacist
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Ed. Note: Update from TalkingPointsMemo: "On December 7, 1981 a man named James W. von Brunn pulled out a sawed-off shotgun at the Federal Reserve Board headquarters, claiming to have planted a bomb and threatening to take members of the Board hostage. That was 40 years to the day after the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor, though it's unclear whether that's a coincidence or not. ... At the time of his sentencing in March, 1983, he was 63 years old. He ultimately served six and a half years in prison, which seemingly did nothing to change his extreme views on race. Almost 20 years after he was released, he stormed the secured entrance of the Holocaust Museum in Washington D.C. with a shotgun and opened fire, wounding one guard. He was ultimately shot himself."
Two wounded in Washington Holocaust museum shooting
WASHINGTON (AFP) - A gunman opened fire at the Holocaust museum here Wednesday hitting a security guard before being wounded himself, sparking panic in Washington's tourist area, officials and witnesses said.
The gunman and security guard were taken to a hospital with gunshot wounds, a police spokesman said. A third person was slightly wounded, possibly by breaking glass, but did not need further treatment.
While the motive for the shooting remained unclear, Fox and NBC television reported that its correspondents had been told the gunman was 89 years old and may have links to a white supremacist organization.
As helicopters whirred overhead and police closed off nearby roads, police Sergeant David Schlosser told reporters the gunman had walked into the building carrying "a long gun."
"The man that initially entered the museum fired at one of the security officers. So, both that security officer and the gunman have received gunshot wounds," Schlosser told reporters.
"My understanding is that two other security officers at the museum returned gunfire at the man that had entered the museum.
"Both the security guard that was initially shot and that gunman have been transported to George Washington University hospital, and I don't know the condition of them."
Witness Angela Andelson, 22, visiting from San Francisco, told AFP she heard possibly five shots fired. "I was by the entrance when the gunman came in. I was walking toward the exit on the other side of the entrance," she said.
"I heard a shot and thought it was sort of a loud, like someone had dropped something. So I kind of turned to look.
"And I see all these security guards kind of like ducking. I kind of glanced again and saw a gunman coming in … a long looking kind of gun. I just ran in to one of the exhibits to try to take cover.
"I heard the first one. When I turned and looked there were maybe two to four more shots that I heard," said Andelson, adding "people were screaming and ducking down getting on the floor, getting under benches."
Another witness, Maria Hernandez, had been with her grandparents walking through the haunting exhibits which chronicle the Holocaust and the genocide of six million Jews under the Nazis.
"We were in the exhibit 'Remember the Children' and we heard rounds fired and through the glass doors I saw a security guard firing towards the shooter and a man on his belly on the floor and when I looked back again, we were heading toward the exit, I saw blood all over the floor," she told AFP.
"He was hit real bad."
The shooting comes just days after US President Barack Obama visited the Middle East and pressed Israel to halt the settlement building in the West Bank, and also paid tribute to those killed in the Holocaust with a visit to a Nazi death camp.
A spokesman for the museum told AFP the building, which is about 500 meters (yards) from the White House, had been evacuated as the first shots were heard.
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