Nation/World

Houston shooter wore Nazi emblems, drove a Porsche, carried 2,600 rounds of ammo, police say

A man who injured nine people in a shooting rampage in Houston on Monday was wearing military clothes and Nazi emblems during the attack, and was carrying nearly 2,600 rounds of ammunition inside a Porsche convertible parked at the scene, authorities said.

The gunman, identified by local media as Nathan DeSai, 46, was shot and killed by police after he opened fire on morning commuters near a strip mall in a mostly residential neighborhood west of downtown. Police did not publicly name DeSai as the shooter, but the Houston Chronicle and KTRK reported that they had confirmed his identity with officials.

The shooter was carrying a .45-caliber handgun and wearing "military-style apparel" during the shooting, with vintage Nazi emblems on his clothes and "on his personal effects," police said in a news briefing Monday afternoon. A search of his apartment, which is several blocks from the scene, turned up similar military memorabilia going back to the Civil War, police said.

A bomb squad that searched his black Porsche convertible uncovered a Thompson submachine gun – commonly known as a Tommy gun – and nearly 2,600 rounds of live ammunition, according to police, who said he purchased both of his firearms legally. Police also found a sheathed knife, a notebook with a Nazi symbol and 75 spent shell casings on the scene.

Authorities said they did not know what motivated the attack and would not speculate about what role, if any, his military items played.

"A this point, we're very open-minded in terms of the motive," Acting Houston Police Chief Martha Montalvo said. Police added that the shooting did not appear to be an act of terrorism.

Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, who was on a trade mission to Cuba when the shooting occurred, said DeSai may have carried out the attack because he was upset about troubles at his law practice.

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"The motivation appears to be a lawyer whose relationship with his law firm just went bad," Turner told reporters. In a separate interview with KTRK, he said DeSai was "either fired or had a bad relationship with this law firm."

DeSai graduated from the University of Tulsa law school in 1998 and ran a small firm where he practiced business, criminal and family law, according to his state bar association page.

His law partner, Kenneth McDaniel, said the two of them worked together for 12 years before parting ways in February. He disputed claims that DeSai was "disgruntled" with the firm or that he was fired from his job.

"That's the farthest thing from the truth," McDaniel told the Chronicle. "It was simply a matter of economics. We couldn't afford to operate as a partnership anymore."

DeSai's father, Prakash DeSai, told KTRK that the disbanding of the law firm weighed heavily on his son, who he last saw the night before the shooting.

"He's upset about the law practice not going well – financial reasons," Prakash DeSai told the station.

John Elmore, the property manager for The Oaks at West University, where DeSai lived, told KTRK that he had been behaving erratically in the months leading up to the shooting. He said he believed DeSai was doing law work out of his apartment and said he had been acting as if someone was "out to get him."

In August, Elmore said, DeSai pulled a gun on a construction crew working on the complex's roof, apparently mistaking them for burglars.

"They were scared for their life," Elmore said. "They felt like they were going to get shot."

DeSai began his rampage around 6:30 a.m. on Monday, unloading his semiautomatic handgun at morning commuters on the four-lane road outside the strip mall.

More than a dozen officers from three agencies responded to calls for an active shooter and found the man "shooting randomly at passersby, as well as anybody he could put his sights on," Houston Police Capt. Dwayne Ready said. Officers engaged in a standoff, as the shooter took cover behind his car and a tree while he exchanged fire with police. After about 20 minutes, officers shot and killed him. Police did not say how many times he was struck.

Nine people were injured during the shooting, some by shattered glass, and the gunman's bullets hit numerous vehicles, according to police. Six people were transported to the hospital, police said, with one in critical, one in serious and one in good condition as of Monday afternoon. Three others were discharged Monday, and another three were treated on the scene.

Eduardo Andrade said he was on his way to the gym Monday morning when two of the shooter's bullets struck his Audi A3, one of them lodging in between his dashboard and windshield.

"It is so random," he told the Chronicle. "If I were going a little faster or a little slower, the bullet would have had a different trajectory."

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