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Police identified the suspect as 50-year-old Timothy Dale Johnson of Searcy, a town about 50 miles (80 kilometers) northeast of
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Chairman Bill Gwatney died four hours after the shooting. The 48-year-old former state senator had been planning to travel to the Democratic National Convention later this month as a super delegate. He had backed Hillary Rodham Clinton but endorsed Barack Obama after she dropped out of the race.
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Clinton and her husband, former President and former Arkansas Gov. Bill Clinton, issued a statement saying Gwatney was "not only a strong chairman of Arkansas Democratic Party, but ... also a cherished friend and confidant."
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Witnesses said the gunman entered the party offices shortly before noon and said he wanted to see Gwatney.
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"He said he was interested in volunteering, but that was obviously a lie," said 17-year-old party volunteer Sam Higginbotham. He said that when the suspect was refused a meeting with Gwatney, he pushed past employees to reach the chairman’s office.
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Police said after leaving the office, the suspect pointed a gun at a worker at the Baptist headquarters seven blocks away. When asked what was wrong, the man said "I lost my job" said Dan Jordan, the group’s business manager.
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After the suspect avoided spike strips and a roadblock along U.S. 167 near Sheridan, police rammed his car, spinning it, said Grant County Sheriff Lance Huey. He got out of his truck and began shooting, and state police and sheriffs deputies fired back, striking him several times, he said.
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There was a busy signal Wednesday night at a phone number listed under Johnson’s name.
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The state Capitol was locked down for about an hour until police got word the gunman had been captured, said Arkansas State Capitol police Sgt. Charlie Brice.
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Gov. Mike Beebe, a Democrat who served with Gwatney in the state Senate, had been on a flight to
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Karen Ray, executive director of the Republican Party of Arkansas, sent her workers home early "out of an abundance of caution".
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"Our hearts go out to everyone at the Democratic headquarters. What a tragedy," Ray said. "This is just a very upsetting, troubling and scary thing for our staff as well."
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Sarah Lee, a sales clerk at a flower shop across street from the party headquarters, said that around noon Gwatney’s secretary ran into the shop and asked someone to call 911.
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Lee said the secretary told her the man had come into the party’s office and asked to speak with Gwatney. When the secretary said she wouldn’t allow him to meet with Gwatney, the man went into his office and shot him, Lee said.
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Last November, a distraught man wearing what appeared to be a bomb walked into a
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The confrontation brought
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Photo: AP