Shooting suspect in custody after Charleston church massacre

CHARLESTON. KAZINFORM - Before he allegedly opened fire on members of a Bible study group at a church in Charleston, South Carolina, Dylann Roof sat with them. He might have prayed with them.
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A Snapchat video from Wednesday night at the historic African-American church shows Roof at a table with the small group. Nothing in the footage suggests the carnage to come. Police say Roof shot and killed nine people inside the historic Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church, near the heart of Charleston's tourist district. Eight died at the scene; a ninth died at a hospital. Authorities were shocked not only by the killings but that the violence occurred in a house of worship. "People in prayer Wednesday evening. A ritual, a coming together, praying, worshiping God. An awful person to come in and shoot them is inexplicable," said Charleston Mayor Joe Riley. Six women and three men were killed, including the church's politically active pastor, the Rev. Clementa Pinckney. Sylvia Johnson, a cousin of Pinckney, said she heard about what happened inside the church from a survivor, a close friend. Johnson told CNN her friend recounted the man coming into the church, asking for the minister. "My cousin, being the nice, kind, welcoming person he is, he welcomed him to his congregation, welcomed him to the Bible study, and he sat there for an hour ... At the conclusion of the Bible study, they just heard just a ringing of a loud noise, and it was just awful from what I heard," Johnson said. When the son of her friend pleaded with the shooter to stop, Johnson said the gunman replied: "'No, you've raped our women, and you are taking over the country ... I have to do what I have to do.' And he shot the young man." Her friend pretended she was dead. "But she watched her son fall and laid there. She laid there in his blood," Johnson said. From what she heard, the gunman reloaded five times. Before he left the church, he asked one of the elderly members whether he had shot her, and she said no. "And he said good, because we need a survivor because I'm going to kill myself," Johnson told CNN. A law enforcement official said witnesses told authorities the gunman stood up and said he was there "to shoot black people." The president of the NAACP expressed his outrage at the violence. "There is no greater coward than a criminal who enters a house of God and slaughters innocent people engaged in the study of scripture," Cornell William Brooks said. The suspect Roof, 21, of Lexington, South Carolina, was arrested Thursday morning about 245 miles (395 kilometers) away in Shelby, North Carolina. He waived extradition and arrived back in South Carolina late Thursday. He was taken into custody without incident shortly before 11 a.m., Shelby police said in a statement. Authorities got a call about a possible sighting of the suspect. A local newspaper filled in some of the details. Police got a tip from Debbie Dills, who reportedly spotted Roof on her way into work. She followed him for 35 miles, the Shelby Star reported. "I had been praying for those people on my way to work," Dills told the newspaper about victims of the church shooting. "I was in the right place at the right time." At 10:43 a.m., officers saw the suspect's vehicle, and stopped it at 10:44 a.m., police said. Roof was the vehicle's only occupant. He was armed with a gun when he was arrested, according to a law enforcement official briefed on the investigation. It's not clear if it's the same firearm used in the shooting. It's uncertain who bought the gun Roof used. A senior law enforcement source told CNN the suspect's father had recently bought him a .45-caliber gun for his 21st birthday in April. But Roof's grandfather says it was just "birthday money" and that the family didn't know what Roof did with that money. Police are searching for more information about Roof, and they are trying to determine whether he had any links to hate groups. Authorities released a mug shot of him from Lexington County on Thursday. It was taken after a trespassing arrest in April. According to an arrest warrant from a February incident, Roof had an unlabeled pill bottle with a drug believed to be suboxone, which is used to treat opiate addiction. Roof told police a friend gave him drugs. The status of the cases is unclear. In an image tweeted by the Berkeley County, South Carolina, government, Roof is wearing a jacket with what appear to be the flags of apartheid-era South Africa and nearby Rhodesia, a former British colony that was ruled by a white minority until it became independent in 1980 and changed its name to Zimbabwe. Read more on CNN.com

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