Thursday, January 12, 2012

Survivor: Ohio shooter spared him because of kids (AP)

LOGAN, Ohio ? A man who survived an Ohio murder-suicide that left four dead says he was spared because he has children.

A 911 recording captured Ralph Sowers telling a police dispatcher he was in the room when one of his aunts was shot.

Sowers says in the recording released Tuesday by the Hocking County Sheriff's Office that his stepfather let him leave because of his children.

The 36-year-old Sowers drove about half a mile to find a cell signal to make an emergency call, then apparently flagged down a state trooper.

Police say Sowers' stepfather, 63-year-old Paul Gilkey, killed Sowers' mother, Darlene Gilkey, and two aunts Monday before killing himself in a dispute over food being served Sowers' mother, who is dying of cancer. The ill woman was unhurt.

THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.

A dispute over whether a terminally ill woman should have been given tea and toast or an orange apparently upset her husband so much that he shot and killed two of the woman's sisters and his own son before killing himself, a sheriff said Tuesday.

The sick woman, Darlene Gilkey, witnessed the shootings from a hospital bed in her living room but wasn't hurt, Hocking County Sheriff Lanny North said. The 59-year-old is dying of cancer, he said.

The woman's son, Ralph Sowers III, survived the shooting after his stepfather, Paul Gilkey, ordered him out of the house, North said.

After the shootings Monday afternoon, Paul Gilkey, 63, stepped out onto his front porch, sat down in a chair and shot himself to death, the sheriff said.

Killed at the home were Darlene Gilkey's sisters, Barbara Mohler, 70, of New Straitsville and Dorothy Cherry, 63, of New Plymouth. Also killed was Paul Gilkey's son, Leroy Gilkey, 38, of Columbus.

North said events leading to the shootings began earlier in the day when some of the victims had apparently served Darlene Gilkey tea and toast after Paul Gilkey had already peeled an orange for her.

That led to an argument that escalated over a period of time and culminated in the shootings, the sheriff said.

"It was over her well-being, her care," the sheriff said.

As the argument heated up around 5 p.m. Monday, Paul Gilkey left the living room where his wife's bed was, went to a bedroom where he retrieved a gun, returned to the living room and started shooting.

The sheriff said Gilkey shot Mohler first, then ordered Sowers to leave. Gilkey then shot his son and again ordered Sowers to leave, before shooting Cherry.

Sowers fled the house and drove up the road seeking a cellphone signal to call for help.

After Gilkey shot himself, his body stayed upright and in the darkness police couldn't tell if he was alive, North said. That led to concerns about a hostage situation, although that wasn't the case.

Deputies who stormed the home around 9 p.m. Monday found Paul Gilkey dead on the front porch and the three other bodies on the living room floor, North said.

The house sits at the end of a gravel lane amid rolling, wooded hills dotted with farmland near Logan, about 50 miles southeast of Columbus.

Paul Gilkey, who went by David, served a decade in prison beginning in 1974 for killing a man in Athens County in May of that year, according to court records.

A cousin of Paul Gilkey said Gilkey was upset about other family members being in the house.

"They ? the two sisters and his son ? were staying out there, and he said he couldn't spend any time with her," Matthew Henderson, 45, said Tuesday.

Henderson said his own wife happened to call the home immediately after the shooting and spoke with Darlene Gilkey, who said that her 63-year-old husband "shot everybody" and then went outside.

"I said, `What's he doing?' (She said) `I think he's waiting on more people to come so he could kill them,'" Henderson recounted.

The wife didn't say why she'd been spared, Henderson said. "I think he thought if he would kill her he would go to hell," he said.

Henderson said his cousin had recently bought two or three plots at a cemetery, though it didn't seem unusual for a man whose wife had terminal cancer. He described Paul Gilkey as unpredictable and unstable and said that he might have taken some pills and been drinking before the shooting.

"I thought what would happen is that he would wait until she passed away and then he would shoot himself," he said. "I didn't think he would shoot other people, I thought he would take his own life."

Leroy Gilkey was a high school Spanish teacher in the Westerville school district in suburban Columbus.

Gilkey was "a very well loved and well respected teacher among students, among his colleagues and among the families that send their children to Westerville North (High School)," said Greg Viebranz, a spokesman for the school district.

Neighbors said they were shocked by the bloodshed. John Poling, who lives about a quarter-mile down the road, said he didn't know the couple but believed they had moved into their home within the past 10 years. He said he watched from a distance Monday night as law enforcement and SWAT officers closed in.

The killings have rocked the area, the sheriff said.

"This is normally a pretty quiet county," North said. "We have a few major crimes occasionally but nothing of this magnitude."

___

Associated Press writers Doug Whiteman and Andrew Welsh-Huggins in Columbus contributed to this report.

___

Kantele Franko can be reached at http://www.twitter.com/kantele10.

Source: http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/rss/crime/*http%3A//news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20120110/ap_on_re_us/us_hostage_standoff_shootings

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