Birthday party crasher kills 4, himself

MIAMI — A man barged into a birthday party early Sunday, shot his estranged wife and three other people to death, then went home, set his truck and house on fire and killed himself, police said.

Witnesses described a chaotic scene that started when the man showed up uninvited at the party and told about a dozen people that he blamed them for his wife leaving him, said homicide detective Ervins Ford.

Then he opened fire. Some took cover while others, including a pregnant woman, ran into the street.

The man also killed his 51-year-old wife’s mother and daughter, along with her daughter’s boyfriend, whose birthday they were celebrating, Ford said.

Police did not release the victims’ names because other family members had not been notified. They said the man and his wife were married about four years and they weren’t sure when she left him.

Officers got a call shortly after midnight that numerous shots had been fired and a red pickup truck had been spotted leaving the scene.

Juan Sosa, who lives a block away, was out walking his dog early Sunday when he heard two shots and saw people running toward him, screaming. Then he heard as many as two dozen more shots and ducked behind a large tree to call police.

Soon after, someone called 911 to say a building about three miles away was on fire and more shots had been fired. That’s where officials found the gunman dead. Ford said he set fire to both his truck and the building he lived in before shooting himself.

Janseen Almodovar, who lives across the street, rushed outside when he heard people screaming and honking. He said the entire building and a truck out front were in flames.

“We thought the truck was going to blow up,” Almodovar said.

Panicked neighbors weren’t sure if anyone was inside the one-story ivory stucco building, but they couldn’t knock because the fire was so intense.

Landlord Abel Loredo, who owns the building where the gunman shot himself, declined to identify the man but said he had moved from Cuba about a decade ago and seemed very nice. The man was a cook at a restaurant in nearby Little Havana for a time before becoming an electrician a few years ago.

Neighbors said there had never been any problems with police and the man and his wife were often seen in their yard barbecuing.

Loredo said the man’s wife and her son had lived with him at some point, but he didn’t know if they were still living there.

Sosa, who lives in the quiet neighborhood where the family gathering took place, said about 20 people ran into the street after the shots were fired. The last person he saw was a limping man who got into a red pickup truck and sped away without turning his lights on.

Sosa said he had seen the truck driving around the neighborhood earlier and that his father remembered seeing it several times in the last few weeks.

He did not know the people who were killed but said he felt badly for them.

“I feel sorry for the family,” he said. “There’s no excuse for that.”

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