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Florida shooting: Disgruntled over being fired, man shoots five at his old office, commits suicide

A man fired from his warehouse job in April returned to his old workplace near Orlando on Monday and fatally shot five people before killing himself, OC Sheriff Jerry Demings said.

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Investigators work the scene of a multiple shooting at an area business in an industrial area on June 5, 2017 northeast of downtown Orlando, Florida. According to published reports, five people were killed in the attack by a man police described as a disgruntled former worker at Fiamma, Inc., which makes accessories for campers and other recreational vehicles
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A man fired from his warehouse job in April returned to his old workplace near Orlando on Monday and fatally shot five people before killing himself, Orange County Sheriff Jerry Demings said.

The 45-year-old suspect was armed with a handgun and knife when he entered a business called Fiamma, which describes itself as one of the world's largest manufacturers of awnings for recreational vehicles.

The unidentified assailant shot and killed five people before turning the gun on himself, Demings said at a press briefing. Three men and one woman died at the scene, and another man died at an area hospital, while seven others were not injured. There was no indication that he used the knife on his victims.

The unidentified assailant had a history of misdemeanor criminal offenses but was not linked to any terror organizations, said the sheriff, who described the shootings as workplace violence.

"He was a disgruntled employee that came back to this business this morning," Demings said. "It appears this incident has nothing to do with any global terror activities."

In June 2014, Orange County deputies investigated a report that the man battered another employee at the warehouse, but no charges were brought, Demings said.

Local television station WFTV on Monday interviewed a woman they identified as Shelley Adams, who said her sister was in a washroom when she "heard a bang" in the office. She emerged and saw someone on the floor.

"My boss is dead," the worker told her sister during a cellphone call.

Adams told reporters her sister was not shot but was treated for shock.

The shooting comes almost a year after 49 people were killed at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando on June 12, 2016, the deadliest mass shooting in modern U.S. history. At least 58 people were also injured.

"Over the past year, the Orlando community has been challenged like never before," Florida Governor Rick Scott said in a statement. "I ask all Floridians to pray for the families impacted by this senseless act of violence."

 

 

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