WEBSTER, N.Y. (AP) - The ex-con turned sniper who killed two firefighters
wanted to make sure his goodbye note was legible, typing out his desire
to "do what I like doing best, killing people" before setting the house
where he lived with his sister ablaze, police said.
Police Chief Gerald Pickering
said Tuesday that the 62-year-old loner, William Spengler, brought
plenty of ammunition with him for three weapons including a
military-style assault rifle as he set out on a quest to burn down his
neighborhood just before sunrise on Christmas Eve.
And when firefighters arrived to
stop him, he unleashed a torrent of bullets, shattering the windshield
of the fire truck that volunteer firefighter and police Lt. Michael
Chiapperini, 43, drove to the scene. Fellow firefighter Tomasz Kaczowka,
19, who worked as a 911 dispatcher, was killed as well.
Two other firefighters were
struck by bullets, one in the pelvis and the other in the chest and
knee. They remained hospitalized in stable condition and were expected
to survive.
On Tuesday, investigators found a
body in the Spengler home, presumably that of the sister a neighbor
said Spengler hated: 67-year-old Cheryl Spengler. Spengler's penchant
for death had surfaced before. He served 17 years in prison for
manslaughter in the 1980 hammer slaying of his grandmother.
But his intent was unmistakable
when he left his flaming home carrying a pump-action shotgun, a
.38-caliber revolver and a .223-caliber semiautomatic Bushmaster rifle
with flash suppression, the same make and caliber weapon used in the
elementary school massacre in Newtown, Conn., that killed 26.
"He was equipped to go to war,
kill innocent people," the chief said of a felon who wasn't allowed to
possess weapons because of his criminal past. It was not clear how he
got them.
The assault rifle was believed to
be the weapon that struck down the firefighters. He then killed himself
as seven houses burned on a sliver of land along Lake Ontario. His body
was not found on a nearby beach until hours afterward.
Residents of the suburban
Rochester neighborhood who left their homes during the fire were allowed
to return Tuesday. Police SWAT team members had used an armored vehicle
to evacuate more than 30 residents.
Spengler's motive was left
unclear, Pickering said, even as authorities began analyzing a two- to
three-page typewritten rambling note Spengler left behind.
He declined to reveal the note's
full content or say where it was found. He read only one chilling line:
"I still have to get ready to see how much of the neighborhood I can
burn down, and do what I like doing best, killing people."
Pickering added: "There was some rambling in there and some intelligence we need to follow up on."
It remained unknown what set
Spengler off but a next-door neighbor, Roger Vercruysse, noted that he
loved his mother, Arline, who died in October after living in the house
in a neighborhood of seasonal and year-round homes across the road from a
lakeshore popular with recreational boaters.
Pickering said it was unclear whether the person believed to be Spengler's sister died before or during the fire.
"It was a raging inferno in there," Pickering said.
As Pickering described it and as
emergency radio communications on the scene showed, the heavily armed
Spengler took a position behind a small hill by the house as four
firefighters arrived after 5:30 a.m. to extinguish the fire: two on a
fire truck; two in their own vehicles.
Several firefighters went beneath
the truck to shield themselves as an off-duty police officer who came
to the scene pulled his vehicle alongside the truck to try to shield
them, authorities said.
The first police officer who arrived chased and exchanged shots with Spengler, recounting it later over his police radio.
"I could see the muzzle blasts comin' at me. ... I fired four shots at him. I thought he went down," the officer said.
At another point, he said: "I
don't know if I hit him or not. He's by a tree. ... He was movin'
eastbound on the berm when I was firing shots." Pickering portrayed the
officer as a hero who saved many lives.
The audio posted on the website
RadioReference.com also has someone reporting "firefighters are down"
and saying "got to be rifle or shotgun — high-powered ... semi or fully
auto."
Spengler had been charged with
murder in his grandmother's death but pleaded guilty to a reduced charge
of manslaughter, apparently to spare his family a trial. After he was
freed from prison, Spengler had lived a quiet life on Lake Road on a
narrow peninsula where Irondequoit Bay meets Lake Ontario.
That ended when he left his burning home Monday morning, armed with his weapons, a lot of ammunition and a measure of hate.
"I'm not sure we'll ever know what was going through his mind," Pickering said.
Services were set for the two
Rochester-area volunteer firefighters. Calling hours will be held at
Webster Schroeder High School on Friday and Saturday. A funeral service
for Chiapperini was scheduled for noon Sunday at the high school, with
burial in West Webster Cemetery.
A funeral Mass for Kaczowka will
be held at 10 a.m. Monday at St. Stanislaus Church in Rochester. Burial
will be at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Rochester.