Oregon college shooting: Gunman killed himself as officers arrived
Earlier reports said Christopher Harper-Mercer died after a shootout with police
As a 26-year-old killer gunned down victims inside a college classroom, he spared one student and gave him a package to deliver to authorities, according to the grandmother of a student who witnessed the deadly rampage in Oregon.
Gunman Christopher Sean Harper-Mercer later killed himself as officers arrived, Douglas County Sheriff John Hanlin said Saturday.
Janet Willis said her granddaughter Anastasia Boylan was wounded in the Thursday attack and pretended to be dead as Harper-Mercer kept firing, killing eight students and a teacher.
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Willis said she visited her 18-year-old granddaughter in a hospital in Eugene, where the sobbing Boylan told her: "'Grandma, he killed my teacher! He killed my teacher! I saw it!"'
Boylan also said the shooter told one student in the writing class to stand in a corner, handed him a package and told him to deliver it to authorities, Willis said.
Authorities have not disclosed whether they have such a package, but a law enforcement official said Saturday a manifesto of several pages had been recovered.
The official did not reveal the contents of the document but described it as an effort to leave a message for law enforcement.
The official is familiar with the investigation but was not authorized to disclose information and spoke on the condition of anonymity.
The official said the document was left at the scene of Thursday's shooting but wouldn't specify how authorities obtained it.
Boylan, a freshman at Umpqua Community College, also told her grandmother the gunman asked students about their faith.
Conflicting reports on gunman's words
"If they said they were Christian, he shot them in the head," Willis said Friday night, citing the account given by her granddaughter.
However, conflicting reports emerged about Harper-Mercer's words as he shot his victims.
Stephanie Salas, the mother of Rand McGowan, another student who survived, said she was told by her son that the shooter asked victims whether they were religious but did not specifically target Christians.
Her son said the shooter had people stand up before asking. "'Do you have a God? Are you Christian? Do you have a religion?' It was more so saying, 'you're going to be meeting your maker. This won't hurt very long.' Then he would shoot him," Salas told AP.
Law enforcement officials have not given details about what happened in the classroom.
Harper-Mercer was enrolled in the class but officials have not disclosed a possible motive for the killings.
Harper-Mercer wore a flak jacket and brought at least six guns and five ammunition magazines when he went to the campus that morning.
Victims ranged in age from 18 to 67
The dead ranged in age from 18 to 67 and included several freshmen. They were sons and daughters, spouses and parents.
Lucas Eibel, 18, was active in the Future Farmers of America and loved to play soccer. Kim Saltmarsh Dietz was a 59-year-old whose daughter was enrolled in the same school but was not injured the shooting.
"We have been trying to figure out how to tell everyone how amazing Lucas was, but that would take 18 years," the family of Eibel said in a statement released through the Douglas County Sheriff's Office.
The family of 18-year-old Quinn Glen Cooper said he had just started college and loved dancing and voice acting.
"I don't know how we are going to move forward with our lives without Quinn," the Coopers said in a statement.
Nine other people were wounded in the attack in Roseburg, a rural timber town about 180 miles south of Portland.
Oregon's top federal prosecutor said the shooter used a handgun when he opened fire on classmates and had stashed a rifle in another room but did not fire it.
Several years ago, Harper-Mercer moved to Winchester, Ore., from Torrance, California, with his mother Laurel Harper, a nurse. His father, Ian Mercer, originally from the United Kingdom, told reporters outside his Tarzana, California, home, "I'm just as shocked as anybody at what happened."
Gunman's dad believes laws should change
At an apartment complex where Harper-Mercer and his mother lived in Southern California, neighbours remembered him as a quiet, odd young man who rode a red bike.
Reina Webb, 19, said Harper-Mercer's mother was friendly and often chatted with neighbours, but her son kept to himself. Webb said she occasionally heard him having temper tantrums in his apartment.
Meanwhile, the father of the gunman says he had no idea his son had guns, and believes gun laws should change.
Ian Mercer, who lives in California, told CNN on Saturday that he is struggling to understand how and why the shooting happened and that he was stunned to learn his son had accumulated so many guns.
Authorities say Harper-Mercer had 14 guns and took six to the campus.
Ian Mercer also told CNN his heart goes out to the grieving families.
The father said there is talk about gun control after shootings such as the one in Oregon, but nothing is done. He said the Oregon attack would not have happened if his son had not been able to get guns.
Harper-Mercer's social media profiles suggested he was fascinated by the Irish Republican Army and frustrated by traditional organized religion.
He also tracked other mass shootings. In one post, he appeared to urge readers to watch the online footage of Vester Flanagan shooting two former colleagues live on TV in August in Virginia, noting "the more people you kill, the more you're in the limelight."
The army said Harper-Mercer flunked out of basic training in 2008.
With files from CBC News