Eight die in US church shooting

A gunman opened fire yesterday at a church service in the US, killing seven people before taking his own life, authorities said…

A gunman opened fire yesterday at a church service in the US, killing seven people before taking his own life, authorities said.

The shooting happened at a suburban Milwaukee hotel

Officers found four people and the gunman dead when they arrived about 1 p.m. at the Sheraton hotel Three others died later at a hospital, said Daniel Tushaus, chief of the Brookfield Police Department.

"There is nobody else being sought at this time as a suspect," he said.

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The victims were all in the same room at the hotel, Tushaus said. The suspect, a man of about 45 who was armed with a handgun, was affiliated with the church, which had been meeting at the hotel every Saturday morning for four or five years.

Police did not identify the victims but gave approximate ages. Two boys ages 15 and 17, a 72-year-old man and a 55-year-old woman died at the hotel. Three men ranging in age from 44 to 58 died later at a hospital.

Four other people were hospitalized in serious condition.

Some hotel guests remained locked in their rooms after police surrounded the building and would not allow anyone to enter or leave.

Karen Suick, 48, said she arrived at the hotel Friday night with 15 players and parents for a hockey tournament.

"One of our hockey dads' two daughters are still in there," she said. "They called his cell phone. They were OK, but they were told to go back to their room. So that's what they did."

After the shootings, police removed a pickup truck from the hotel parking lot.

New Berlin Mayor Telesfore Wysocki said police told him the gunman lived in his community just south of Brookfield. The gunman lived with his mother and sister, who were being interviewed by officers as police collected evidence at their house, Wysocki said.

"We are in total shock and disbelief," the mayor said.

Investigators searched a two-story house in New Berlin, but authorities declined to comment on whether the home was connected to the shootings, saying they would not release any more information until a Sunday morning news conference.

At the hotel, a small memorial began to take shape Saturday evening. Someone placed a red-and-white cross in a snow bank in front of the building. Another person left two stuffed animals and a note.

At least two church groups were holding meetings in the hotel at the time of the shootings, police said.

The shootings took place during a meeting of the Living Church of God, a group based in Charlotte, N.C.

AP