Re-posted, with scrappy koala Fisking by Nicholas Stix
Law enforcement and emergency personnel rush a man into an ambulance after a shooting and hostage situation in downtown Charleston on Thursday, August 24,2017. Leroy Burnell/Staff
• By Leroy Burnell lburnell@postandcourier.com
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'Disgruntled' man kills former co-worker at busy Charleston restaurant, takes hostage before being shot by police
By Andrew Knapp aknapp@postandcourier.com
Aug 24, 2017 Updated 40 min ago [circa 11:24 p.m.]
Post and Courier
SWAT team gather [sic] on Vanderhorst Street as they respond to a shooting and hostage situation at Virginia's On King on Thursday, Aug. 24, 2017, in Charleston. Grace Beahm Alford/Staff
• By Grace Beahm Alford gbeahm@postandcourier.com
[“'Disgruntled' man kills former co-worker at busy Charleston restaurant, takes hostage before being shot by police.” The killer wasn’t “disgruntled,” he was a black racist. And he didn’t kill a “former co-worker,” he killed his former boss. The only co-workers a dishwasher has are his fellow dishwashers. I say this as a longtime, world-class “Hobart engineer,” the affectionately joking title for dishwashers in the business when I worked in it during the 1970s and ‘80s, sandwiched around five years in West Germany. And if every pissed-off Hobart killed his executive chef, there wouldn’t be a chef left alive. Most chefs are insufferable, but it doesn’t occur to white Hobies that the proper response to an executive chef is to murder him. It’s a black thing; you wouldn’t understand.]
People flee businesses Thursday in the area where a gunman opened fire in Virginia's On King restaurant in Charleston. Andrew Knapp/Staff
A disgruntled man with a gun killed a former co-worker at a popular Charleston restaurant Thursday and took at least one other person hostage for hours until police shot him.
[We know that the killer is black, because: 1. The Post and Courier refused to identify him; 2. It called him “disgruntled’; and 3. It quoted someone as saying the murder was “random.” Refusal to identify a perp’s race, and use of racial code words like “disgruntled” and “random” are all giveaways that a perp is black. Oh, and Mayor John Tecklenburg gave us reason #4, when he denied that this was a hate crime. He would never have said that, if perp and vic had been the same race, or if the killer and vic had been white and black, respectively. Postscript reason #5: Mayor John Tecklenburg's rush to judgment, just like with Flight 587, in November 12, 2001, before the investigation had even begun, let alone concluded. In 2001, the feds simultaneously said it was too soon to say what the cause of the crash was, and that it was "not terrorism." Their panic gave away that, whatever had caused the crash of Flight 587, they were convinced that it had been an act of terrorism.]
Terrified lunchtime diners crawled and ran from Virginia’s On King after the gunman barged in after noon, locked the door and announced “I am the new king of Charleston,” witnesses said.
Police sirens wailed in the busy commercial district, and officers blanketed the downtown streets, a scene that served as a startling reminder of an episode two years earlier when a gunman shot nine church worshippers to death in a race-motivated crime a quarter of a mile away.
[It is obscene for “reporter” Andrew Knapp to bring up Dylann Roof’s racially-motivated mass killing, while acting as if this murder were not racially-motivated.]
Police block King Street during a shooting and hostage situation inside Virginia's On King on King Street on Thursday, Aug. 24, 2017. Michael Campina/Special to the Post and Courier
• By Michael Campina
But the officers contained the shooter on the second floor of the King Street restaurant before they could confront him during a tactical operation. The suspect, described as an older man, was critically wounded.
[How had the cops “contained” him? Hadn’t he gone there, on his own?]
No one else was hurt.
The Charleston County Coroner's Office identified the victim as 37-year-old Anthony Shane Whiddon, of Goose Creek.
Whiddon was the executive chef at Virginia's, the coroner's office said. He was transported to Medical University Hospital where he was pronounced dead.
Whiddon moved to Charleston to serve as opening chef for the now-closed Union Provisions. He previously held a line cook job at Charleston Grill. Before relocating to Charleston, he worked at Sea Island Company, a Georgia resort.
The father of two children, Whiddon joined Virginia’s in 2016. He was just getting comfortable in his role as executive chef, according to colleagues who cited his pride over a recent photo shoot at the restaurant.
John Aquino, who works in the Virginia's building, said a manager was texting co-workers from a closet as the gunman kept hostages.
“I heard that a dishwasher got fired and came back in and shot the chef," he said.
[Do you know how hard it is for a black dishwasher to get himself fired?]
The authorities offered conflicting accounts of how many people had been captive. One person was safely removed afterward, city officials said in a statement after initially indicating that a group had been held.
"This was not an act of terrorism. This was not a hate crime,” Mayor John Tecklenburg told reporters gathered 100 yards from where city leaders first addressed the world about the mass shooting in June 2015. “This was a tragic case of a disgruntled individual.
[He doth protest too much. Translation: This was an act of terrorism and a hate crime.]
"(He) took his anger into his own hands.”
["Anger"? If he were white, the Mayor would have used words like "hatred" and "racism."]
SWAT team members escort a man out of Virginia's On King toward the end of a stand-off Thursday afternoon. Brad Nettles/Staff
• Brad Nettles bnettles@postandcourier.com
The gunman, who Tecklenburg said had suffered mental health problems, was not identified by authorities on Thursday.
[They’re already playing the crazy card, before the killer’s public defender can do it. How accomodating.]
Officials, including Gov. Henry McMaster, commended the quick police response.
"We send our prayers to lift up the families affected by today's tragedy in Charleston,” McMaster said on Twitter. “As they always do, our law enforcement officers put their lives on the line today and likely prevented further loss of life."
'A crazy look'
Like many Charleston restaurants, Virginia’s specializes in Southern dishes like fried chicken with collard greens or shrimp and grits.
The restaurant is part of Holy City Hospitality, a company founded by local businessman Michael Bennett in 2001. Its sister restaurants, including 39 Rue de Jean and Coast Bar & Grill, are nearby.
Virginia’s takes up two stories in a building on the corner of King and Hutson streets.
To workers there, Thursday seemed like a normal, calm lunch hour.
But about 12:15 p.m., two waitresses and three kitchen staffers hurried past tables on the first floor and went through the front door, saying nothing to the diners inside, witnesses said.
[Translation: Like previous racist, black killers, the killer let all black employees go, and thus the five who left immediately were black.]
Many were enjoying their meals when a man in his 50s or 60s emerged from the back of the restaurant. Clad in an apron, he also resembled a kitchen worker, the witnesses said.
But at first glance, the diners knew something was wrong.
The man was carrying a small revolver in his left hand. Some witnesses said he had called himself the “new king of Charleston.” Other accounts varied.
"There's a new boss in town,” he said, according to Tom and Patsy Plant, who had been eating with their daughter.
To Patsy Plant, he looked like an “ordinary grandpa.”
“But he had a crazy look,” she said. “It was very crazy."
He told about 30 customers to get down.
Bill Rosene of Mount Pleasant, who had been eating cornbread with his wife, looked up and saw the man walk down an aisle. Then Rosene saw the gun clutched at his side.
“Everyone get on the floor!” the man said, according to Rosene. “Get on the floor!”
No one screamed.
“But everyone was kind of frantic,” his wife, Tia, added.
As people ducked down, the gunman changed his mind.
“No,” he said, “everyone go to the back,” the Rosenes recalled.
They quickly obliged. People move through the dining room. Some crawled.
“We did not want to give him a good target,” said Peter Siegert IV, 45, of Maryland, who had been eating there with his father.
But as they herded away from the gunman, the patrons found two side exit doors.
“Then,” Bill Rosene said, “everyone just ran out the door.”
The first-floor diners scurried away, not knowing if more were still inside.
Police respond to a reported shooting scene on King Street in Charleston. Grace Beahm Alofrd [sic]/Staff
'I just ran'
It was unclear when the gunfire went off.
Cato Roemo was having lunch nearby when he heard three shots. He saw a body in the street, he said.
"I just ran," he said.
When officers from the Charleston Police Department arrived, the wounded person was inside, Interim Chief Jerome Taylor said.
The man was taken to the street, where paramedics did CPR. He was taken to Medical University Hospital, but he later died.
Officers, sheriff’s deputies and federal agents converged on the restaurant. They drew their pistols and slung rifles over their shoulders.
SWAT team snipers set up in nearby buildings and on rooftops.
Richard Sikoral, a construction worker at the Marion Square Hotel project across the street, led sharpshooters to the upper reaches of the unfinished building. Minutes later, two more SWAT members climbed scaffolding and took positions.
At a hair salon and other restaurants, people were told to stay inside. Doors were locked. Construction workers were ordered to leave. The Charleston Area Convention and Visitor's Bureau closed. Some area schools were locked down.
A man spoke on a cellphone, hoping to hear about his nephew who works near the scene.
Dozens of children and family members were kept inside the nearby Children’s Museum of the Lowcountry.
“The children (had) no idea,” visitor services associate Bobby LePire said.
Sarah Cobb, owner of MOSA Boutique on King Street, stuck her head through an open door to check on the commotion. The police told her to stay inside.
"We've got an active shooter," a policeman said while telling people to leave the street. "We don't want anyone else getting shot."
Officers showed up and broke a window to get inside, said Sandy Troeder, who works nearby.
Likening the quick police response to the mass shooting at Emanuel AME Church, Charleston County Sheriff Al Cannon said the officers managed to get inside the restaurant and stay there for most of the time while the gunman was upstairs with hostages.
Crowds gathered behind yellow police tape as the situation unfolded, hoping to reach their workplaces or to hear news that the situation was over.
'The norm'
About 2:30 p.m., two hours after the ordeal began, a loud bang echoed between the historic buildings, startling tourists standing outside a Meeting Street hotel.
The sound, Cannon said, was likely an intentional explosion meant to distract the gunman.
A Charleston police officer then shot the man, the police chief said.
The mayor said the man had “mental health challenges,” but he gave no details.
“We tragically lost a member of our community,” Tecklenburg said.
After an ambulance took the wounded gunman away, rain started to fall on Charleston. The sun poked through the clouds, and church bells rang.
“I’m glad to hear the bells of St. Matthew’s are ringing,” the mayor said.
Visitors in the popular tourist destination said the disturbance hadn’t tinged their opinion of the Holy City.
"It's just random," John Griffith of Wilmington, N.C., said as he surveyed the police vehicles on the normally bustling Upper King Street.
"But it's unfortunate (that) it's become the norm."
[What's become the norm? Black men murdering whites?]
Brooks Brunson, Michael Majchrowicz, Prentiss Findlay, Mary Katherine Wildeman, Glenn Smith, Hanna Raskin, Schuyler Kropf, Gregory Yee and Tony Bartelme contributed to this report.
Follow Brooks Brunson on Twitter @readthebrooks or reach her at 843-937-5433.
Andrew Knapp
Knapp is a multimedia reporter who covers public safety and breaking news. He previously worked as a reporter and copy editor at Florida Today, Newsday and the Bangor (Maine) Daily News. He also enjoys golf, thunderstorms and fatherhood.
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