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A gunman carrying a semi-automatic weapon and two handguns opened fire at multiple locations across a small Northern California community on 14 November, killing four people before he was slain by police.
At least 10 other people were wounded, including two children at an elementary school near the small town of Corning, about 100 miles (160 km) north of Sacramento, where the suspect was slain, according to police and local media.
“Shots were fired at Rancho Tehama Elementary school where some people were injured there but no students or staff members died,” Corning Union Elementary School District administrative assistant Jeanine Quist said.
Tehama County Assistant Sheriff Phil Johnston said at a news conference that the shooter, who he did not name, had been armed with a semi-automatic rifle and two handguns.
Johnston did not give a motive for the shooting rampage. The local Redding Record Searchlight newspaper reported that it began when the gunman opened fire at a home and some six other locations shortly after 8 am PST (1600 GMT).
A parent, Coy Ferreira, said he was dropping off his daughter at the elementary school when he heard gunfire.
Ferreira said he heard gunfire for over 20 minutes and that a student in the room was struck.
Enloe Medical Center in Chico, some 40 miles away, received five patients, three of whom were treated and released, hospital spokeswoman Natali Munoz-Moore said.
St Elizabeth Community Hospital in the community of Red Bluff received two patients, including one who was stabilised and transferred to another facility, spokesperson Amanda Harter said.
Mercy Medical Center in Redding received three patients, including one who also was transferred elsewhere, Harter said.
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