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'It's Insane. It's Crazy:' Gunman Kills Four, Then Himself, In Minneapolis

In shock: The scene outside a Minneapolis business Thursday. A gunman killed four people, wounded four others and then killed himself.
Richard Tsong-Taatarii
/
Minneapolis Star Tribune/MCT /Landov
In shock: The scene outside a Minneapolis business Thursday. A gunman killed four people, wounded four others and then killed himself.

"This is something we see on the news in other parts of the country, not here," Minneapolis Deputy Police Chief Kris Arneson said Thursday night as her department began investigating why a man apparently walked into a sign company, killed at least four people and then took his own life.

The early signs, as The Star Tribune reports, point to "a man who apparently had just lost his job" at the company as being the gunman. He apparently "opened fire, killing the company's founder and three others and wounding four others" before committing suicide. Three of the wounded are reported to be in critical condition.

St. Paul's Pioneer Press says "police radio traffic during the incident indicated the killer had been fired from Accent Signage Systems earlier in the day."

People who live in Minneapolis Bryn Mawr neighborhood, where Accent Signage had its offices, are in shock. "It's insane. It's crazy," neighbor Heather Buckingham told KARE-TV. "I know the guy, I know all the people."

The TV station adds that Accent Signage is a small company with a "rich history [and a] global impact." It "holds a patent for technology that imprints Braille on things like hotel room numbers and restroom signs ... employs about 30 people and earns $5 to $10-million dollars each year."

Minnesota Public Radio has a story and photo gallery here.

Update at 9 am. ET. Owner Of Company Was "Super Smart ... Charismatic."

According to Minnesota Public Radio:

"Reuven Rahamim, the owner of Accent Signage Systems Inc., where the shooting took place, was among the victims, said his son-in-law, Chad Bluemnfield.

"Mayor R.T. Rybak said he had toured the business about a month ago, and described Rahamim as a 'super smart' and 'charismatic' Israeli immigrant who had started 'a classic family business.' "

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Mark Memmott is NPR's supervising senior editor for Standards & Practices. In that role, he's a resource for NPR's journalists – helping them raise the right questions as they do their work and uphold the organization's standards.