Man who had been accused of groping opens fire on Tallahassee yoga class, killing two, police say November 3 at 1:23 PM A man who has been ...
November 3 at 1:23 PM
A man who has been repeatedly accused of groping women walked into a yoga class and opened fire on Friday evening, according to Tallahassee police â" shooting six people and killing two of them despite an attempt to fight him off.
Police said the shooting suspect, Scott Paul Beierle, 40, killed himself minutes before they arrived at the Hot Yoga studio, which sits above a row of restaurants at a northern Tallahassee shopping center.
âIn my public service career, I have had to be on some bad scenes. This is the worst,â City Commissioner Scott Maddox wrote after viewing the attackâs aftermath. âPlease pray.â
About a dozen people were inside Hot Yoga when a man with a black bag walked in around 5:30 p.m., the Tallahassee Democrat reported. The studio had advertised a Pilates certification class for the weekend.
Among the students were 21-year-old Maura Binkley and 61-year-old Nancy Van Vessem â" respectively a student and a faculty member at Florida State University, which would later mourn them both.

Scott Paul Beierle. (Leon County Sheriff's Office, via AP)
Police were still determining a motive behind the shootin g.
Beierle had been arrested twice in the past six years by the universityâs police, according to criminal records. The first time was in 2012, when two women accused him of grabbing their buttocks on campus, the Democrat reported. He was detained again two years later for trespassing in a dining hall.
Both charges were dismissed, but Beierle was arrested by Tallahassee police in 2016 and that time agreed to a plea deal for misdemeanor battery. He had asked a sunbather at his apartment if he could put lotion on her, the Democrat reported, and groped her when she refused.
Survivors said Beierle kept walking in and out of the yoga studio as class began on Friday evening, according to Melissa Hutchinson, who works at a restaurant below Hot Yoga and later cleaned a survivorâs blood off the kitchen floor.< /p>
âThey said he just kept coming in and out the doors and was a little sketchy,â Hutchinson told the Democrat. âBut nobody said anything.â
The man eventually stopped in the studioâs doorway, pulled a gun from the bag and loaded it in front of the students. Only then did people try to flee or fight.
âEveryone started pounding on the windows and th e walls,â Hutchinson said. âI heard a couple people at Riccardoâs heard the pounding. They werenât sure what it was. They said it sounds like someone was hitting sheet metal."
Then the reports of gunshots filtered through the ceiling of Riccardoâs pizzeria, Food Glorious Food and the other establishments on the shopping centerâs lower level.
Shanta Combs told the Democrat she was drinking with friends at Bar on Betton when heard the bartender yell: â'Active shooter, get down, get away from the window!"
Panicked and wounded people fled down a staircase from the studio and ran inside for shelter. Combs said she embraced a woman who couldnât stop hyperventilating. Then âI see this kid in a white T-shirt with blood coming out of his forehead,â she said.
The âkidâ had been pistol whipped while trying to fight off the gunman, police later said.
Another customer at the bar, Kristin Jacobs, was among several who prais ed his actions. âI am alive because one guy in a yoga class in his bare feet ran at a shooter,â she told the Democrat.
[A gunman opens fire in your building. What do you do?]
Police said the first officers arrived about three minutes after the 911 call, at 5:40 p.m. Seven people had been shot inside the studio, including Beierle, who appeared to have killed himself.
Four of the victims were expected to survive, including one whom the Democrat reported had been shot nine times.
Binkley and Van Vessem died of their wounds.
A doctor of internal medicine and director for Capital Health Plan, Van Vessem also worked for the same university that Binkley attended and the suspected gunman had been barred from after his first groping arrest.
âTo lose one of our students and one of our faculty members in this tragic and violent way is just devastating to the Florida State University family,â school president John Thrasher said in a statement to the Associated Press.
As his officers shuffled in and out of the shopping center behind him in the early morning, Tallahassee Police Chief Michael DeLeo told reporters he did not yet know what connection, if any, Beierle had to the victims.
The suspect had lately been living in Deltona, on the other side of the state, DeLeo said. Investigators were trying to figure out âwhat made him come to our community and commit this heinous act.â
Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum, who is the Democratic nominee for governor in Tuesdayâs election, left the campaign trail and returned to his city overnight to see survivors in the hospital.
âNo act of gun violence is acceptable,â he wrote on Twitter. His Republican opponent, Ron DeSantis, called the shooting âheartbreaking.â
The Tallahassee Democrat reported that a crowd stood outside the barricaded shopping center late into the night, some in tears.
âItâs awful that this is a thing,â Hutchinson told the newspaper, and laughed nervously. âItâs very terrible that this is a thing.â
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Source: Google News | Netizen 24 United States
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