White gunman fatally shoots nine people at historic black church in South Carolina
According to the church's website,
Emanuel AME Church -- often referred to as 'Mother Emanuel' -- is the
oldest AME church in the south and has one of the largest
black congregations south of Baltimore, Maryland.
"This is a hate crime," Charleston
Police Chief Gregory Mullen said early Thursday near the scene at
Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church. Among the victims was the
church's pastor, the Rev. Clementa C. Pinckney, 42, a Democratic member
of the state Senate, two sources told NBC News.
Mullen described the suspect as a slender 21-year-old white man with sandy blond hair, wearing a gray sweatshirt or hoodie, jeans and Timberland boots. A reward will be offered later Thursday, he said.
Mullen said information was slow to develop because there was a report
that "there might have been a secondary explosive device in the scene."
That threat was over, he said, offering no further details.
"This is the most unspeakable and heartbreaking tragedy," Mayor Joe Riley Jr. said early Thursday, saying the gunman had to be a "hate-filled person."
The church played an important role in the state's history, including the slavery era and the Civil Rights movement.
Mullen described the suspect as a slender 21-year-old white man with sandy blond hair, wearing a gray sweatshirt or hoodie, jeans and Timberland boots. A reward will be offered later Thursday, he said.
At least six ambulances were seen in the area of the shooting.
"This is the most unspeakable and heartbreaking tragedy," Mayor Joe Riley Jr. said early Thursday, saying the gunman had to be a "hate-filled person."
Known as "Mother Emanuel," the church is the oldest AME church in the South, having been founded in 1816 under the leadership of abolitionist minister Morris Brown, the second bishop of the AME Church in the U.S. The Gothic Revival-style church is on the National Register of Historic Places.
"I can't imagine a human being doing something like this," she said.
The Rev. Thomas Dixon, a pastor with the activist group People United to Take Back Our Community, that a Bible study session likely would have been in progress, as is common in the African-American church "on any given Wednesday night."
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