The Louisville bank shooter who killed five and injured eight was seeing a counselor for depression and anxiety, a family friend said Thursday.
“His family was working with him and through it,” Peter Palmer, an Indiana-based lawyer who is friends with the shooter’s father, said in a phone call. “That’s about the extent of what they’re comfortable sharing at this point.”
Palmer is not representing the family and is a spokesperson on their behalf. He said he does not know how long the shooter, Connor Sturgeon, had been seeking treatment and is unaware of any medication he may have been taking.
In a statement Tuesday, the family said Sturgeon had “mental health challenges” that they were “actively addressing.”
The five people killed were identified as bank employees: Tommy Elliott, 63; Juliana Farmer, 45; Jim Tutt, 64; Josh Barrick, 40; and Deana Eckert, 57.
Among the eight injured were two police officers.
Officer Nickolas Wilt, 26, was shot in the head, underwent surgery and was listed in critical condition. The other officer, Cory Galloway, was grazed on his left side, police said.
Sturgeon, an employee at the bank, opened fire with an AR-15 style rifle during a board meeting. Officers were dispatched at 8:38 a.m. and arrived at the bank at 8:41 a.m. Police made entry into the building confirming the shooter was down at 8:45 a.m., according to a timeline shared by police in body-camera footage.
Authorities also released several 911 calls, including one from the shooter’s mother. In it, she said her son had a gun and was headed to the bank. She said she received a phone call from her son’s roommate who was concerned.
“I need your help,” she told the operator.
At the time the mother made the call, the shooter was already at the bank and other 911 calls were coming in.
Palmer said the family had no indication Sturgeon was planning the attack and did not know he owned a gun. Police said the shooter purchased the weapon from an authorized seller on April 4.
Shortly before…
Read the full article here