Eight people fatally shot after Mississippi family quarrel
Mississippi Governor issues statement calling the shootings a 'tragedy'
WASHINGTON:
A gunman on a rampage during a domestic dispute in rural Mississippi fatally shot eight people, including a sheriff's deputy, US news reports said on Sunday.
The shootings took place late Saturday in two small hamlets, Brookhaven and Bogue Chitto, both about 60 miles from the city of Jackson.
Although details were still murky, the gunman -- Willie Cory Godbolt, 35 -- told The Clarion-Ledger newspaper after his arrest on Sunday that he had gone to a home in Bogue Chitto to talk about getting custody of his children.
After the conflict escalated, neighbors called police, and Godbolt shot the arriving deputy.
16 children were shot every day across US in 2012: report
"My pain wasn't designed for him. He was just there," Godbolt said of the officer.
"We was talking about me trying to take the children home," he told the newspaper while sitting on the ground at one of the shooting scenes, arms cuffed behind his back.
"Somebody called the officer," he added. "It cost him his life. I'm sorry."
Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant issued a statement Sunday calling the shootings a "tragedy" and hailing law enforcement officers who "sacrifice to protect and serve their communities."
A gunman on a rampage during a domestic dispute in rural Mississippi fatally shot eight people, including a sheriff's deputy, US news reports said on Sunday.
The shootings took place late Saturday in two small hamlets, Brookhaven and Bogue Chitto, both about 60 miles from the city of Jackson.
Although details were still murky, the gunman -- Willie Cory Godbolt, 35 -- told The Clarion-Ledger newspaper after his arrest on Sunday that he had gone to a home in Bogue Chitto to talk about getting custody of his children.
After the conflict escalated, neighbors called police, and Godbolt shot the arriving deputy.
16 children were shot every day across US in 2012: report
"My pain wasn't designed for him. He was just there," Godbolt said of the officer.
"We was talking about me trying to take the children home," he told the newspaper while sitting on the ground at one of the shooting scenes, arms cuffed behind his back.
"Somebody called the officer," he added. "It cost him his life. I'm sorry."
Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant issued a statement Sunday calling the shootings a "tragedy" and hailing law enforcement officers who "sacrifice to protect and serve their communities."