Tulsa clinic shooter targeted surgeon he blamed for his pain, police say
The gunman at the medical building on a Tulsa hospital campus is also dead after wounding multiple people, Oklahoma police say.
A gunman who killed his surgeon and three other people at a Tulsa medical office had blamed the doctor for his continuing pain after a recent back operation, and bought an AR-style rifle just hours before the rampage, police said Thursday.
The patient had called the clinic repeatedly complaining of pain, and specifically targeted the doctor who performed the surgery, then killed himself as police arrived, Tulsa Police Chief Wendell Franklin said.
That physician, Dr. Preston Phillips, 59, was killed Wednesday, along with Dr. Stephanie Husen, 48, receptionist Amanda Glenn, 40, and clinic visitor William Love, 73, police said. The attack occurred on the campus of Saint Francis Health System in Tulsa. The chief identified the shooter as Michael Louis, 45, of Muskogee, Okla.
It was the latest in a series of deadly mass shootings in United States, including last week’s school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, and an attack on a supermarket in Buffalo, N.Y., 10 days before that. The recent Memorial Day weekend saw multiple mass shootings nationwide, including at an outdoor festival in Taft, Okla., 45 miles from Tulsa, even as single-death incidents accounted for most gun fatalities.
President Biden plans to talk about the killings in an evening address and call on Congress to pass restrictions on guns.
Louis was carrying a letter that “made it clear that he came in with the intent to kill Dr. Phillips and anyone who got in his way,†Franklin said. â€He blamed Dr. Phillips for the ongoing pain following the surgery.â€
Franklin said Phillips performed the surgery on May 19 and Louis was released from the hospital on May 24.
The gunman at the medical building on a Tulsa hospital campus is also dead after wounding multiple people, Oklahoma police say.
He said that Louis had called the doctor’s office “several times over several days†reporting he was still in pain, and that he had seen Phillips on Tuesday for “additional treatment.†Louis called the office again Wednesday “complaining of back pain and wanting additional assistance,†he said.
A phone number listed for an address for a Michael Louis in Muskogee was not working Thursday.
Phillips was an orthopedic surgeon with an interest in spinal surgery and joint reconstruction, according to a profile on the clinic’s website. He once served as lead physician for Tulsa’s WNBA team before the franchise moved out of state, according to the Tulsa World.
Dr. Cliff Robertson, president and chief executive of Saint Francis Health System, called Phillips “the consummate gentleman†and “a man that we should all strive to emulate.†He said Phillips and the other two employees who were killed were “the three best people in the entire world†and that they “didn’t deserve to die this way.â€
Police have received reports that Love, the slain clinic visitor, had held a door shut in hopes of allowing others to flee from the gunman through another door, Franklin told reporters. Love also was a patient at the clinic but was just accompanying someone on Wednesday, police said.
In a statement released through police on Thursday, Love’s family said he “knew his wife would not be able to escape the building on her own. He sacrificed his life for her.â€
Police believe Louis bought his weapons legally, Franklin said. Louis bought an AR-style semiautomatic rifle on the afternoon of the shooting and a handgun on Sunday, Franklin said.
The police chief praised law enforcement officers, 911 operators and emergency crews for their “immediate response†to the attack Wednesday. Police responded to the call about three minutes after dispatchers received the report at 4:52 p.m. and made contact with the gunman at 5:01 p.m., authorities said Wednesday.
The review, at the request of Uvalde’s mayor, comes amid growing questions about the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School that killed 21.
Franklin said police believe Louis shot himself about 39 seconds after the first officers entered the building.
“Our training led us to take immediate action without hesitation,†he said. “That’s exactly what officers do, and that’s what they did in this instance.â€
The length of time it took police officers in Uvalde, Texas, to engage the gunman during last week’s deadly school shooting at Robb Elementary School has become a key focus of that investigation. Officers waited over an hour to breach the classroom where the 18-year-old gunman attacked with an AR-style semiautomatic rifle, killing 19 children and two teachers.
Democratic leaders have amplified their calls for greater restrictions on guns since the Uvalde shooting, while Republicans are emphasizing more security at schools. The divide mirrors a partisan split that has stymied action in Congress and many state capitols over how best to respond to a record-high number of gun-related deaths in the U.S.
Oklahoma House Democrats on Thursday called for a special session to consider gun safety legislation, but that’s unlikely to happen in a Republican-controlled Legislature that has been pushing for years to loosen firearms restrictions.
GOP Gov. Kevin Stitt, who is running for reelection, said last week after the Texas shooting that it was too soon to talk about firearms policy. A pro-firearms group, the Oklahoma 2nd Amendment Assn., is an influential force at the state Capitol, and the first bill Stitt signed into law after taking office in 2019 was a measure that allows most adults to openly carry firearms without the previously required background check or training.
Since January, there have been 12 shootings where four or more people have been killed, according to the Associated Press/USA Today/Northeastern University mass killing database. Those shootings have left 76 dead, including 31 adults and children in Buffalo and Texas, the database says. The death toll does not include the assailants in the shootings.
Murphy reported from Oklahoma City; Bleed from Little Rock, Ark.; and Foody from Chicago. AP researchers Jennifer Farrar and Randy Herschaft contributed from New York.
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