Police say NY immigrant shooter’s act no surprise

BINGHAMTON, NY (Reuters) – Authorities  identified the gunman who killed 13 people and himself at an  immigrant services center on Friday as Jiverly Wong, 41, a  Vietnamese immigrant who had taken English classes there.
Binghamton Police Chief Joseph Zikuski said yesterday no  motive for the shooting had been determined, but he confirmed  reports that Wong, who also went by the name Voong, had felt  degraded by his inability to speak English and by a recent job  loss.
“From the people close to him … this action he took was  not a surprise to them,” Zikuski told a news conference.
“He felt degraded from his inability to speak English and  he was upset about that,” he added.

The city has received inquiries from representatives of  nine countries and two consulates about the victims, whose  identities have not yet been released, Mayor Matthew Ryan  said.
On Friday morning, Wong barricaded the back door of the  building with a car and, wearing body armour, entered the front  and opened fire on two receptionists, killing one. He then went  to a classroom and fired, killing another 12 people who were  taking English language instruction before killing himself.

Zikuski said the massacre was over quickly, before police  had even arrived at the scene, where they removed dozens of  survivors who hid from the carnage. Survivors said Wong did not  speak before opening fire. The four wounded, including a  receptionist who called police, were expected to survive.
The massacre in Binghamton, a town of some 45,000 people  about 150 miles (240 km) northwest of New York City, was the  worst US mass shooting since the 2007 massacre at Virginia  Tech.

hat this tragedy should have happened in our community to  our friends who only wanted to advance their knowledge and love  of America is unbearable,” a spokeswoman for the American Civic  Association said in a statement.
The American Civic Association building is used to teach  English and provide other services to recent immigrants to the  United States who are preparing for US citizenship.

There have been several mass shootings in recent years in  the United States, where guns are widely available for purchase  and the right to own weapons is enshrined in the Constitution.

Zikuski said Wong was “heavily armed” and had held a permit  since 1995 or 1997 for two handguns recovered at the scene.

Last month a man killed 10 people, many of them family  members, in a shooting rampage in Alabama, and yesterday  several police officers were shot and some reportedly killed in  Pittsburgh.