Sebring Police Chief Karl Hoglund wipes his head as he listens to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speak during a news conference Wednesday in Sebring, Florida, after authorities said five people were shot and killed at a SunTrust bank branch. (AP Photo/Chris O’Meara)

Sebring Police Chief Karl Hoglund wipes his head as he listens to Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis speak during a news conference Wednesday in Sebring, Florida, after authorities said five people were shot and killed at a SunTrust bank branch. (AP Photo/Chris O’Meara)

Police describe execution-style killings inside Florida bank

A gunman reportedly made five women lie down on the lobby floor before shooting them.

  • By TERRY SPENCER Associated Press
  • Thursday, January 24, 2019 11:55am
  • Nation-World

By Terry Spencer / Associated Press

SEBRING, Fla. — A gunman who took over a SunTrust Bank branch in Florida apparently made the five women inside lie down on the lobby floor before shooting them in the backs of their heads, police said Thursday.

Authorities found no indication Zephen Xaver intended to rob the bank during Wednesday’s attack and no apparent connections between him and the bank or the victims, Sebring Police Chief Karl Hoglund said.

Xaver, 21, was charged with five counts of premeditated murder in the shooting deaths of the four bank employees and a customer.

After shooting the women, he called 911 and “told dispatchers that he’d killed everyone in the bank,” Hoglund said.

All the victims were found in the bank’s lobby, lying face down with gunshots to the backs of their heads. Shell casings from Xaver’s 9mm handgun were scattered on the floor, according to an affidavit.

This undated photo shows Zephen Xaver, who police say opened fire inside a Florida bank Wednesday, killing several people before surrendering to a SWAT team. (Highlands County Sheriff’s Office via AP)

This undated photo shows Zephen Xaver, who police say opened fire inside a Florida bank Wednesday, killing several people before surrendering to a SWAT team. (Highlands County Sheriff’s Office via AP)

Another customer, Victor Sparks, was quoted by the Highlands News-Sun as saying that he found the door locked during the attack, peered inside and saw people lying on the floor while someone walked around and between them. He turned and stepped away and heard gunfire. He said police arrived within two minutes after he and his wife called 911.

In his call to 911 dispatchers, Xaver said, “I have shot five people,” according to police.

But he refused to surrender and would not allow officers to reach the victims, the chief said. After more than an hour of negotiations, the chief ordered a SWAT team in. They used an armored vehicle to break through the front doors. Xaver was found in an office in the rear.

By then, all the victims were already dead, the chief said.

Hoglund identified two of the victims: customer Cynthia Watson and bank employee Marisol Lopez. In compliance with a newly passed victims’ rights law in Florida, the names of the other three victims were withheld at their families’ request.

The community is mourning the loss of “our sisters, our mothers, our daughters and our co-workers,” Hoglund said.

Authorities ended their news conference after only a few questions and did not respond when asked how Xaver obtained the gun.

Xaver was arrested in a beige T-shirt depicting the Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. On Thursday, he wore a black-and-white striped prison uniform as he was appointed a public defender and ordered held without bond.

His father said he’s “heartbroken for the victims” and that his son “wasn’t raised to be like this.”

“He’s always been a good kid. He’s had his troubles, but he has never hurt anyone ever before. This is a total shock,” Josh Xaver told CNN. The Associated Press sought interviews with both of Xaver’s parents but received no immediate response.

The shootings were not a shock to Alex Gerlach, who identified herself as Xaver’s former girlfriend. She said he’s long been fascinated with the idea of killing, but no one took her warnings about him seriously. For some reason, he “always hated people and wanted everybody to die,” Gerlach told WSBT-TV in South Bend, Indiana, near his former home in Plymouth, Indiana.

“He got kicked out of school for having a dream that he killed everybody in his class, and he’s been threatening this for so long, and he’s been having dreams about it and everything,” she said. “Every single person I’ve told has not taken it seriously, and it’s very unfortunate that it had to come to this.”

Gerlach was quoted by The Washington Post as saying that Xaver said he purchased a gun last week and “no one thought anything of it” because he had always liked guns.

Xaver had no apparent criminal record in the areas where he’s lived in Indiana and Florida, and his school records are spotty. Two school districts in northern Indiana said he attended for several years but did not graduate. Xaver also briefly studied online. A spokeswoman for Salt Lake City-based Stevens-Henager College confirmed that he was enrolled from September to December before withdrawing last year.

In Florida, he tried to be a prison guard. Department of Corrections records show he was hired as a trainee at Avon Park Correctional Institution on Nov. 2 and resigned Jan. 9. No disciplinary issues were reported.

Public records and neighbors say Xaver and his mother had moved to Sebring in the fall from Plymouth, Indiana. They lived in a pre-fabricated home about 4 miles (6.5 kilometers) from the bank. No one answered the door Wednesday night after police searched the home.

John Larose, who lives next door, said Xaver kept to himself, but he could hear him playing and yelling at video games in the middle of the night.

The bank attack was at least the fourth mass shooting in Florida resulting in five or more dead in the past three years. A gunman killed 49 at an Orlando nightclub in 2016. Five died at the Fort Lauderdale airport in 2017, and 17 died in February at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in a Fort Lauderdale suburb.

Associated Press Writer David Fischer in Miami contributed to this report.

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