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Who Is DeWayne Craddock, the Suspect in the Virginia Beach Shooting? Who Is DeWayne Craddock, the Suspect in the Virginia Beach Shooting?
(32 minutes later)
Before DeWayne Antonio Craddock stormed a Virginia Beach municipal complex on Friday, where law enforcement officials said he slaughtered a dozen people and injured several others, he had made his living in public service.Before DeWayne Antonio Craddock stormed a Virginia Beach municipal complex on Friday, where law enforcement officials said he slaughtered a dozen people and injured several others, he had made his living in public service.
Mr. Craddock, 40, who was killed during a protracted shootout with the police, had been an engineer with the Department of Public Utilities, the city’s water and sanitary sewer services branch. Mr. Craddock, 40, who was killed during a protracted shootout with the police, had been an engineer with the Department of Public Utilities, the city’s water and sanitary sewer services branch, where he helped maintain the mundane but crucial underpinnings of a vibrant coastal city.
Nothing had seemed amiss when he entered the agency’s building on Friday because he had worked with the department for about 15 years, officials said. No one had suspected that he was armed. Many of the people he would kill or wound that afternoon were his colleagues. Nothing had seemed amiss when he entered the agency’s building on Friday because he had worked with the department for about 15 years, officials said. No one had suspected that he was armed, and many of the people he would kill or wound that afternoon were his colleagues.
At a Saturday morning press briefing, Dave Hansen, the Virginia Beach city manager, said that the suspect “was still employed” by the city at the time of the attack. He “was still employed” by the city at the time of the attack, according to David L. Hansen, the Virginia Beach city manager. “He had a security pass like all employees had and he was authorized to enter the building,” Mr. Hansen said.
“He had a security pass like all employees had and he was authorized to enter the building,” Mr. Hansen said. It remains to be seen what the suspect was after. City officials declined to discuss a possible motive for the attack, but they did say there was no immediate indication that the gunman had targeted anyone. The police chief, James A. Cervera, quelled rumors on Saturday that the suspect had recently been fired, and declined to say whether there had been friction between him and other employees.
City officials declined to discuss a possible motive for the attack, but they did say that there was no immediate indication that the suspect had targeted anyone in particular. But a person close to Virginia Beach’s city government, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said that the suspect had no history of behavioral problems until recently, when he had begun acting strangely and getting into physical “scuffles” with other city workers.
A person close to Virginia Beach’s city government, who was not authorized to speak publicly, said that Mr. Craddock had no history of behavioral problems until recently, when he had begun acting strangely and getting into physical “scuffles” with other city workers. The person said that tensions had escalated in the past week, adding that the man had gotten into a violent altercation on city grounds and was told that disciplinary action would be taken.
The person said that tensions had escalated in the past week, adding that the suspect had gotten into a violent altercation on city grounds and was told that disciplinary action would be taken. Officials said that the suspect was armed with two .45-caliber guns, at least one of which had a sound suppressor attached to it, and that both weapons had been purchased legally. He used extended magazines, which hold more ammunition than standard models, and reloaded several times in what the Virginia Beach police chief called “a long-term gun battle” with officers.
Officials on Saturday said that the suspect was armed with two .45-caliber guns, at least one of which had a sound suppressor attached to it. He used extended magazines, which hold more ammunition than standard models, and reloaded several times in what the Virginia Beach police chief called “a long-term gun battle.” At least one officer was wounded in the exchange, and his bulletproof vest, the chief said, had probably saved his life. Two more firearms were found at the suspect’s home, officials said.
Officials said that additional weapons had been found at the scene and at the suspect’s home. Few details in the suspect’s past point to the staggering violence that would mark the end of his life. He had no obvious criminal history, court records show, only several traffic violations over the years.
The suspect had no obvious criminal history, court records show, although he did have several traffic violations over the years. He had a bachelor of science degree in civil engineering from Old Dominion University in Virginia. In 1996, he enlisted in the Virginia National Guard, where he was assigned to the First Battalion, 111th Field Artillery Regiment, in Norfolk as a cannon crew member, according to a state National Guard spokesman. He was discharged in 2002 at the rank of specialist. (The spokesman declined to specify the nature of the discharge.)
He earned a bachelor of science degree in civil engineering from Old Dominion University in Virginia. Before his job with the city, the suspect worked for private firms specializing in site planning and infrastructure, and had held a professional engineer license from the state since 2008. One of his hiring notices said that his engineering experience included storm water management and utility design for private and public systems. Employment listings also showed that he had worked for the Army Training and Support Center.
In 1996, he enlisted in the Virginia National Guard, where he was assigned to the First Battalion, 111th Field Artillery Regiment, in Norfolk as a cannon crew member, according to a state National Guard spokesman. He was discharged in 2002 at the rank of specialist. Several news releases issued by the city this year about road closings because of utility work listed the suspect’s name as the contact person for further information. He was the man who took residents’ questions, whose name was a public point of reference.
Before his job with the city, the suspect worked for private firms specializing in site planning and infrastructure. One of his hiring notices said that he “has engineering experience as a project engineer for site design, storm water management and public and private utility system design.” Employment listings also showed that he had worked for the Army Training and Support Center. But on Saturday, after identifying him once as the man who plunged the city into grief, officials said they would never again utter his name in public.
Several news releases issued by the department this year about road closings because of utility work listed a DeWayne Craddock as the contact person for further information. According to records, he had held a professional engineer license from the state since 2008.
Chief James Cervera of the Virginia Beach Police Department also said on Saturday he did not intend to say the name of the suspect again in public.