Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Here's What We Know About The Virginia Shooting Suspect

The man authorities said fatally shot Virginia reporter Alison Parker and cameraman Adam Ward live during a morning broadcast Wednesday is a former television reporter for the same station, WDBJ, officials said.

The Augusta County Sheriff's Department confirmed to BuzzFeed News that the shooting suspect's legal name is Vester Lee Flanagan II.

Flanagan, 41, who also used the name Bryce Williams, was employed at WDBJ between 2012 and 2013 as a multimedia journalist, the station's general manager, Jeff Marks, said on Wednesday.

Speaking Wednesday on air, his former WDBJ colleagues said that Bryce Williams was the name he used on television.

"Vester was an unhappy man. We employed him as a reporter and he had some talent in that respect and some experience," Marks said. "He quickly gathered a reputation of someone who was difficult to work with. He was sort of looking out to people to say things he could take offense to. Eventually, after many incidents of his anger, we dismissed him. He did not take that well. We had to call police to escort him from the building."

Marks said he believed that Flanagan fabricated complaints of racial discrimination at the station, saying they could not be corroborated by anyone at WDBJ.

LINK: Shooter Kills TV News Reporter And Cameraman During A Live Broadcast In Virginia

On Wednesday, after Parker and Ward's deaths, Twitter and Facebook accounts under the name Bryce Williams shared graphic video of the shooting filmed from the perspective of the gunman.

After sharing the videos, his Facebook and Twitter accounts were later suspended.

ABC News reported that between Tuesday night and Wednesday morning it had received 23 pages via fax from a man claiming to be Bryce Williams. ABC said it had turned the document over to authorities.

Moments after the shooting, Flanagan tweeted from an account under Bryce Williams that “Alison [Parker] made racist comments” and that he had filed a report with the EEOC."

LINK: Reporters Killed In Virginia Remembered As Hardworking Professionals

According to the Facebook account, he lived in Roanoke, near where the shooting took place.

Flanagan was born in 1973 in Oakland, California, where his mother worked as a teacher for more than 37 years, according to her 2008 obituary.

He wrote on Twitter that he was raised as a Jehovah's Witness and previously worked as a "high paid 'companion'" and model.

He stated that he attended San Francisco State University, with university officials confirming to BuzzFeed News a "Vester Lee Flanagan" graduated in 1995 with a degree in radio and television.

His LinkedIn account states that he began his career as a news intern in 1993, before working as a reporter and production assistant at various stations in the 1990s.

Between March 1999 and March 2000, he worked at WTWC-TV NBC 40 in Tallahassee, Florida.

In March of 2000, after losing his job, Flanagan filed a civil lawsuit in federal court against WTWC-TV for alleged racial discrimination. In the complaint, Flanagan said members of the station’s management called him “monkey,” suggested he had only been hired because of affirmative action, and asked him to “stop talking ebonics.”

The lawsuit was settled in Jan. 2001 under unspecified terms.

Facebook

Flanagan also said the station fired him after he threatened to contact the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission to complain about the alleged discrimination, and asked for $15,000 in damages. The station's general manager said an EEOC complaint was filed.

A spokesperson with the EEOC told BuzzFeed News the office could not confirm or deny that Flanagan had ever filed a report, due to Title VII confidentiality provisions.

Greg Sextro, a TV produced who worked with Flanagan in Florida and stayed in touch with him for a few years, remembered him as a “goofy,” “nice guy” who was constantly reprimanded by superiors for the quality of his reporting.

“He was not a good reporter,” Sextro told BuzzFeed News. “They would take his writing and rip it up.”

Sextro also said he never witnessed any racial discrimination against Flanagan.

“He made that crap up,” Sextro said of Flanagan’s claims that his bosses called him racial slurs.

WTWC-TV did not immediately return a request for comment from BuzzFeed News.

Twitter

After his suit against WTWC-TV, he worked in customer service for Bank of America and Pacific Gas and Electric Company, according to his LinkedIn, before returning to news in 2002. North Carolina station WNCT TV confirmed to BuzzFeed News he was an employee from 2002-2004.

Kontji Anthony, a former WNCT colleague who worked with Flanagan for eight months in 2003, told BuzzFeed News she was shocked to hear he was suspected of the shooting.

"I never would have thought he would do this, but when I look back and think back, there were signs," she said. "Nothing to this magnitude."

"He was always very kind to me, but I know that there were some tensions with other employees," Anthony said. "Back then he also had some work tension. He worried about cutting it as a reporter. He had some trouble going on inside even back then."

This is a developing news story. Check back for updates or follow BuzzFeed News on Twitter.



from BuzzFeed - USNews http://ift.tt/1LwHI0h

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