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View Full Version : Deer Hunter opens fire, kills 5 other hunters in rampage.



the-ex-files
11-22-2004, 06:43 PM
Found this story in the local paper. Very sad. I wish we had the death penalty in Wisconsin. It's very shocking.

BIRCHWOOD, Wis. - Several deer hunters making their way through the woods came upon an intruder sitting in their tree stand. That's when the shooting started. When the gunfire stopped, five people lay dead, three were wounded and the intruder was under arrest.

The five killed and three wounded were part of a group of 14 or 15 who made their opening-weekend trip to Robert Crotteau's 400-acre property an annual tradition.

The visit was like any other until around noon Sunday.

When the two or three hunters spotted a man in their hunting platform in a tree, they radioed back to the rest of the party at a nearby cabin, and asked who should be there.

"The answer was nobody should be in the deer stand," Sawyer County Sheriff James Meier said Monday.

One of the men approached the intruder and asked him to leave, as Crotteau and the others in the cabin hopped on their all-terrain vehicles and headed to the scene.

"The suspect got down from the deer stand, walked 40 yards, fiddled with his rifle. He took the scope off his rifle, he turned and he opened fire on the group," Meier said.

There was no indication why.

One of the men who was shot called for help on his radio, but it was too late. The suspect opened fire again, hitting the people who had just arrived on ATVs.

The suspect was "chasing after them and killing them," Sawyer County Chief Deputy Tim Zeigle said. "He hunted them down is what he did."

About 20 shots were fired, but it's unclear whether anyone returned fire. The hunting party had only one gun among them.

The scene Meier described was one of carnage, the bodies strewn around 100 feet apart. Rescuers from the cabin piled the living onto their vehicles and headed out of the thick woods.

"They grabbed who they could grab and got out of there because they were still under fire," Meier said.

One victim saw the suspect's hunting license number pinned to his blaze-orange jacket and traced the number into a dusty ATV, Meier said.

The rescuers left the dead behind.

They were Crotteau, 42; his son Joey, 20; Al Laski, 43; Mark Roidt, 28; and Jessica Willers, 27. Three others were hospitalized Monday with gunshot wounds.

The shooter took off into the woods and eventually came upon two other hunters who hadn't heard about the shootings. Chai Vang, 36, a hunter from St. Paul, Minn., told them he was lost, and they offered him a ride up to a warden's truck, Meier said.

A warden recognized Vang's license number and apprehended him, Meier said.

The magazine on his SKS 7.62 caliber rifle, a cheap but powerful semiautomatic weapon that's good for a distance shot, was already empty.

Ilean Her, director of the St. Paul-based Council on Asian Pacific Minnesotans, said she heard Monday from some people in the city's Hmong community who said they knew Vang, though not well.

"They said he loves to hunt," Her said. "He is a hunting zealot."

Meier said Vang was only on the wrong tree stand because he had become lost and wandered unknowingly onto private property. The county has thousands of acres of public hunting land.

In the past Minnesota officials have reported some clashes between Southeast Asian and white hunters, who complain the former refugees don't understand the concept of private property. Authorities said they had not determined whether that played a role in Sunday's shooting.

Vang, a naturalized citizen, spoke good English and investigators said he was cooperating with them. The sheriff said he was "extremely calm."

In the Northwoods, where Wisconsin's deer hunt is steeped in tradition and pride, there were already signs of racial tension.

"I don't know what's wrong with everything. It's pathetic. They let all these foreigners in here, and they walk all over everybody's property," said Jim Arneberg, the owner of the Haugen Inn in nearby Haugen.

Jim Hill, the owner of Village Grocery in Haugen, estimated that three-quarters of the men in the area go hunting. Four-wheelers drive down the town's one street, and hunters step in and out of the grocery store in their hunting gear.

Hill said disputes over tree stands are common in the woods. He's often walked out to one of his stands to find somebody else there. Hill calls the sheriff when they won't leave.

A man who identified himself as the suspect's 32-year-old brother said it was out of character for his brother to blow up.

"Maybe something provoked him or something. He is a reasonable person," said the brother, who refused to give his name. "I still don't believe it. He is one of the nicest persons. I don't believe he could do that. We are so devastated right now."

He said Vang is a father of six who served in the U.S. Army.

Sheriff Meier said the shootings made no sense. "The demeanor makes no sense. The action makes no sense

BOONE450R
11-22-2004, 06:47 PM
http://www.exriders.com/vbb/showthread.php?s=&threadid=132273 theres one going