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South Carolina state senator Clementa Pinckney 'among victims' of deadly Charleston shooting

At least nine killed with shooter on the run following 'hate crime'

Justin Carissimo,Tim Walker
Thursday 18 June 2015 06:27 EDT
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The Charleston Police Department is searching for a white male suspect after the "hate crime" shooting of nine people at a South Carolina church.

Police are looking for a 21-year-old white male described as slim-built, clean-shaven, with sandy hair, wearing a grey hoodie, blue jeans and Timberland-style boots following the killings at Mother Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.

Eight of the victims are believed to have died inside the building, while another died shortly afterwards.

They have not yet been identified, but there are reports that South Carolina Senator and church pastor Clementa Pinckney, who was inside the church at the time of the shooting, may be among the dead.

City police chief Gregory Mullen told reporters the incident was being treated as a "hate crime".

He also confirmed that the shooting was reported hours after a bomb threat was called into the church.

“He is, obviously, extremely dangerous," Mr Mullen said.

The shooting took place at around 9pm, while a Bible study meeting was taking place inside the church, the Charleston Post and Courier reported. A white man carrying a camera and recording device was briefly detained at a gas station close to the scene but later released, and police are still searching for the gunman.

Charleston Mayor Joseph Riley said: "This is the most unspeakable and heartbreaking tragedy.

“People in prayer, coming together, praying and worshipping God, to have an awful person come in and shoot them is inexplicable, obviously the most intolerable and unbelievable act possible.”

South Carolina governor Nikki Haley said her family was praying “for the victims and families touched by tonight’s senseless tragedy... While we do not yet know all of the details, we do know that we’ll never understand what motivates anyone to enter one of our places of worship and take the life of another,” she said.

The church is the oldest and largest black church in the South. Denmark Vesey, the church’s founder, was executed for organising a major slave rebellion in 1822.

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