NASA Tragedy: Gunman Kills Self and Hostage

by brock | April 20, 2007 at 12:02 pm
2619 views | 5 Recommendations | 9 comments

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Building 44 at NASA Space Center, Houston

Building 44 at NASA Space Center, Houston

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A gunman took two hostages in building 44 at NASA's Johnson Space Center Friday. The gunman shot a male hostage, identified as David Beverley, and hours later killed himself as a Houston SWAT team broke through a door he had barricaded, said Capt. Dwayne Ready of the Houston Police department. A female hostage, identified as Fran Crenshaw, was found alive after having been bound to chair with duct tape.

The shooter was identified by police as William "Bill" Phillips, a NASA contractor, who worked for Jacobs Engineering, a Pasadena, California firm with $8 billion in annual revenue.

Officials had little to say about Phillips, who had worked at NASA for 12 or 13 years, according NASA officials, except to say that "up until today he was a good employee." There was no immediate motive for the shooting; nor did officials know of any direct ties among the three people involved in Friday's incident.

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The Shooter Was "A Nice Guy"
The 60-year-old Phillips reportedly entered Building 44, the Communication and Tracking Development Laboratory, in the early afternoon and was seen by some employees there carrying a handgun. Phillips shot Beverley early on in the crisis and took Crenshaw hostage, officials said.

Although attempts were made to negotiate with Phillips, Houston police said they made established voice communication with him. After breaking into the room where Phillips was holding his hostages, police said there was a message "scribbled" on a dry erase bulletin board; the contents of that message weren't revealed. Phillips also apparently left a list of names and telephone numbers to be contacted. Phillips, who wasn't married and has no children, had no immediate relatives to contact. A NASA administrator said a cousin of Phillips' had been contacted; that cousin was listed on Phillips' personnel records as next of kin, NASA said.

Friday night Houston police were at Phillips' house and to gather evidence, looking for motive, looking for any clues as to what might have set the gunman off.

Neighbors have told reporters on the scene that he was "a nice man, always waved... was a friendly man." However, his neighbors don't appear to have known him all that well; when reporters at the scene were asked where Phillips worked, none of them knew he worked at NASA. Neighbors said he lived alone.

Security at the Space Center was beefed up in the aftermath of 9/11 said Michael Coats, director of the Johnson Space Center. And after the shootings at Virginia Tech earlier this week, the center had again reviewed those security procedures, "and concluded that we wouldn't change anything."

Although there is no known link among the three involved in Friday's shooting, Coats, during a news conference, ironically noted that apparently the three, along with a fourth unidentified person, "had lunch earlier today."

Below was among the first reports of the shooting incident:

A building at NASA's Johnson Space Center in Houston was evacuated Friday amid reports that an armed person was spotted there, the space agency said.

NASA security personnel as well as Houston police responded to "a report about a person with a weapon" at Building 44 on the space center's campus, agency spokeswoman Lynette Madison told MSNBC.com. She said that personnel were evacuated from the building, and that the situation was "ongoing." Police commandos were surrounding the building and searching inside.

KPRC, Houston's NBC affiliate, quoted authorities as saying a gunman was reportedly barricaded in a second-floor office. However, police told NBC that they could not yet confirm that a gunman was inside.

Here's an overhead of building 44 as it sits on the NASA campus.

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recommend This comment thread is now closed
0
babblingdweeb

brock, thanks for getting this story out so quickly. It will now show up on the home page for four hours. If new developments justify it, I'll renew this flag for another cycle.

Kaitlin
Kaitlin
flagged this story as Good Stuff

at 12:26 on April 20th, 2007

Thanks for posting this brock. Nice work.

0
indierockcafe

Read continuously updated reports.


SWAT members have just entered the facility at Johnson Space Center:


 http://www.monkeytypesthebible.com/2007/04/gunman-lose-at-johnson-space-center.html

0
René

Watch the live feed from KHOU-TV

Announcers claim they are trying not to release info useful to the gunman. But...What do you think of their broadcast? 

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Jordan Yerman

No confirmation on whether anybody has been shot; the standoff has been going on for three hours. As René says, it looks like the police are assuming that the gunman has access to a television and can see whatever we see.

0
Jordan Yerman

as this is still a developing story, we'll keep it visible. Shots have been fired, but no mored on casualties. Details as they emerge.

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Kaitlin

brock, thanks for getting this story out so quickly. It will now show up on the home page for four hours. If new developments justify it, I'll renew this flag for another cycle.

0
Actual News Geezer

brock, thanks for getting this story out so quickly. It will now show up on the home page for four hours. If new developments justify it, I'll renew this flag for another cycle.

0
brock


This story was created over 3 months ago, the comment thread is now closed.

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