Witnesses paint a graphic picture of the Walmart massacre
According to Jessica Wilczewski, Andre Bing knew who he wanted to kill when he entered the break room at the start of the evening shift on Tuesday in Chesapeake, Virginia.
He was single-outing folks from the manner he observed their faces and carried out his actions.
Wilczewski continued, “What I do know is that he made sure who he wanted to be killed, was dead. After shooting already-dead bodies, he returned. to be certain.
According to a witness to the horrific massacre on Thursday, the deranged Walmart manager who killed six people was “hunting” for particular employees.
Wilczewski’s graphic description of Bing’s quest coincides with reports that the shooter left a manifesto on his phone from WAVY News and that a “kill list” was discovered in the trash at his house by the Daily Mail. Several of Bing’s coworkers’ names were circled on that list, including Tyneka Johnson, 22, who was one of six people shot dead in the Tuesday night shooting.
Wilczewski, who had only been working for Walmart for five days, claimed that Bing told her to leave after spotting her hiding under a table. She obeyed his instructions to leave the shop.
Six persons were slain by Bing, 31, including Tyneka, Randy Blevins, 70, Kellie Pyle, 52, Lorenzo Gamble, 43, and Brian Pendleton, 38. Along with Blake Williams, 23, who is fighting for his life on a ventilator, six other people were hurt.
The insider told nearby TV station WAVY that Bing complained to other employees about being harassed about recent, unexplained changes to his employment position in his phone contract.
One of the station’s correspondents tweeted that first responders “discovered a list beside the shooter’s body of employees he presumably wanted to target.”
Coworkers, meanwhile, have said that they were aware that the shooter was not normal.
When Bing arrived and started shooting, Donya Prioleau, who was in the break room, reported that he “spoke a lot of disturbing things.”
Bing was “very rude to a lot of us,” according to Prioleau, who also called him “condescending” and that he lacked “strong communication skills.”
Bing had made terrifying threats years before he became the most recent mass shooter in America, according to Joshua Johnson, a former maintenance worker at the Chesapeake business, who spoke to CNN.
Johnson, who worked there until 2019, recalled that the man promised to take revenge if he was ever fired from his position.