Airforceone wrote:
Our borders are secure he came to this country under your POS president.
Now tell me how does a man deported 5 times walk into a gun shop in Texas and purchase an AR-15z. Check your
You never get anything right your a typical c*******t you should go back to Russian you could probably sell more nails and maybe get to visit your hero Putin
Nor do you. The White House conveniently failed to mention the Texas shooter is an i*****l i*******t. Those shot probably wish they had kept a gun to defend themselves. You can bet the survivors will be thinking about this.
https://nypost.com/2023/05/01/wilson-garcia-called-911-5-times-before-francisco-oropeza-allegedly-opened-fire/Man who lost wife, son in Texas massacre called cops 5 times before rampage
By Jesse O’Neill and Ronny Reyes
May 1, 2023 10:48am Updated
MASS SHOOTINGS
White House fails to mention Texas shooting fugitive is an i*****l i*******tFort Worth man living in fear after FBI wrongly put his photo online in hunt for Texas shooting suspect
Texas shooting fugitive who allegedly k**led 5 neighbors has been deported FOUR times
9-year-old boy k**led in Texas shooting was gunned down trying to protect his mom
The man who lost his wife and 9-year-old son in a Texas mass shooting called 911 five times before at-large fugitive Francisco Oropesa allegedly stormed his house and shot five people to death.
Wilson Garcia recalled at a Sunday night vigil how he and two neighbors had “respectfully” asked Oropesa to stop firing his gun in his yard late at night because his infant child was trying to sleep inside his home in the rural town of Cleveland.
When the gunman refused to comply, Garcia walked away and called the cops five times. Between 10 and 20 minutes later, Garcia said, he saw Oropesa load his AR-style rifle as he ran toward his family’s house.
“I told my wife, ‘Get inside. This man has loaded his weapon,’” Garcia said. “My wife told me to go inside because ‘He won’t fire at me. I’m a woman.’”
During the massacre as the adult victims tried to protect the children inside the home, Garcia said one of the women demanded he jump out a window to escape the carnage.
The grieving father said the victim told him he needed to survive “because my children were without a mother and one of their parents had to stay alive to take care of them.”
Garcia said that even though the gunman tried shooting him, with bullets flying everywhere, he was somehow able to avoid getting hit.
Garcia’s wife, Sonia Guzman, 25, was the first person to be slain in the rampage.
His son Daniel Enrique Laso, 9, was also k**led along with Diana Velazquez Alvarado, 21, Julisa Molina Rivera, 31, and Jose Jonathan Casarez, 18, police said. All of the victims were believed to be from Honduras, and they were all shot above the neck, according to officials.
Garcia crying during vigil
Mass shooting survivor Wilson Garcia becomes emotional during a vigil for his son, wife and three other mass shooting victims who shared his home.
AP
Daniel Enrique Laso, 9
Garcia’s son Daniel Enrique Laso, 9, was k**led in the massacre.
ABC13
Three other children in the home were found covered in blood but were uninjured.
San Jacinto County Sheriff Greg Capers said police had responded as quickly as possible, but noted he had three officers patrolling 700 square miles at the time.
By Monday, some 200 officers from different jurisdictions were searching for Oropesa, 38, but the FBI special agent in charge said the manhunt was not gaining traction.
“I can tell you right now, we have zero leads,” James Smith told reporters Sunday.
Detectives initially found clothes and a phone belonging to Oropesa while combing through a forested area, but tracking dogs lost his scent, Capers said.
Francisco Oropeza
Suspected mass murderer Francisco Oropesa, 38, remained on the lam Monday.
@FBIHouston/Twitter
Oropesa was identified by doorbell camera footage and a Mexican government identity card issued to citizens who live outside the country.
At least $80,000 in reward money was being offered for information about the suspected k**ler’s whereabouts. The reward was being advertised in bilingual billboards as officers went door to door in the area.
Oropesa’s alleged murder weapon was recovered but police did not know if he was carrying other weapons.
“It is kind of scary. You never know where he can be,” said Veronica Pineda, 34, a neighbor of Garcia and Oropesa.
Pineda said neighbors had called police on the suspect multiple times for firing guns in the five or six years since he and his family had moved in.
“We’re looking for closure for this family,” Capers said.