facebook-pixel

Police looking for motive behind fatal shooting at Mormon meetinghouse in Nevada

Fallon, Nev. • Police in the northern Nevada city of Fallon were trying to determine Monday why a 48-year-old man opened fire Sunday on his Mormon church, killing one man and injuring another.
Fallon Police Chief Kevin Gehman said it does not appear that 48-year-old gunman John Kelley O’Connor was targeting the church but instead was focused on an individual victim.
It was unclear if the target was Charles E. “Bert” Miller, 61, who was killed, or another unidentified man who was shot in the leg. Authorities have not released the second man’s name, but they say he has been discharged from the hospital.
O’Connor was charged with murder and battery with substantial harm and was being held at the Churchill County Jail on a $1,050,000 bond, the police chief said Monday morning.
It’s wasn’t clear Monday if he had an attorney. No one could be reached to comment on his behalf at O’Connor’s listed phone number.
O’Connor is scheduled to make his first court appearance later this week, Gehman said.
O’Connor sat in the church for at least part of the services before opening fire shortly after it started, city spokeswoman Kaitlin Ritchie said. City officials didn’t have details about exactly where O’Connor and Miller were located.
After the shooting, O’Connor walked to his home around the corner from the church. Police and sheriff’s deputies surrounded his home. A hostage negotiator spoke to O’Connor over the phone, and the man agreed to exit and surrender with his hands up, police said.
Gehman said police seized a handgun that appeared to match one used at the church and several other items from O’Connor’s home but did not yet know the man’s motive.
“We are trying to piece together the information we have to determine the reasons,” Gehman told The Associated Press.
Miller was a 35-year veteran of the volunteer fire department, according to police.
“I don’t know why you’d ever want to shoot Bert Miller. He’s the nicest guy in the world,” church member Rich Hutchings told the Deseret News. “It’s absolutely shocking.”
Another church member, Steve White, told the newspaper that when the shooting started, “pandemonium broke out. People were screaming and hitting the ground.”
Jacquie Hettinger, who lives across the street from O’Connor, told the AP that she’s known him for more than a decade as a kind man who helped her care for her husband when he was sick.
I’m just devastated,” Hettinger said. “I don’t know what happened.”
She was in the church during the shooting, but she said she was sitting in the center of the room and the shooting happened off to the side. She said she didn’t see anything because it happened so fast but heard four to six gunshots.
There were about 50 people in the church at the time of the shooting.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints does not allow guns in church meetings.
“We express our love to those in this congregation and our prayers for the victims and their families," church spokesman Eric Hawkins said in a statement. “Local leaders are ministering to them at this time.”
Zachary Taylor, a neighbor of O’Connor’s, said he didn’t know the man well but often saw him working outside in his garage tinkering with a personal watercraft.
“It’s pretty shocking,” Taylor said. “I saw him the day before the shooting, and he didn’t seem unstable or violent or particularly unhappy.”
O’Connor ran for the state Legislature in 2010 and 2014, first as a Democrat and then as a Libertarian.
An archived version of his campaign website shows O’Connor campaigned in 2014 on a platform of increased term limits for public officials, less federal regulation of firearms, and the transfer of public lands from the U.S. government to state control.
Fallon, which is about 60 miles (96 kilometers) east of Reno, has a population of about 8,700 people, according to the U.S. Census Bureau.

Price reported from Las Vegas.