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Utah mall reopens after teen’s deadly rampage

In bid to ‘let the healing begin,’ shops resume business after 5 slain

Douglas C. Pizac / AP
A worker paints a sheet of plywood as a temporary repair to a plate glass window that was shot out as a store employee restocks a gift store in Trolley Square mall on Wednesday.
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Off-duty hero
Feb. 14: Utah police Officer Ken Hammond and his wife, Sarita, talk with TODAY's Matt Lauer about confronting an 18-year-old mall shooter.

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updated 5:57 p.m. ET Feb. 14, 2007

SALT LAKE CITY - On Wednesday, less than 48 hours after a deadly shooting rampage at a shopping mall, police tape was removed from the parking lot as the mall reopened, although it was up to each shop owner whether to resume business.

“We’re opening the mall, not in the sense of business as usual but to let the healing begin,” said Tom Bard, an executive at Scanlan Kemper Bard Cos. of Portland, Ore.

A worker was repairing pillars damaged by shotgun blasts outside Pottery Barn Kids and a card shop called Cabin Fever, where employees also were replacing products on shelves.

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John and Amanda Redford of Ogden, in town to celebrate their second wedding anniversary, walked around the mall.

“Just curious,” John Redford said. “It’s pretty weird to know that it just happened a couple of days ago.”

Investigators were still trying to figure out why Sulejmen Talovic, an 18-year-old Bosnian immigrant, opened fire Monday on shoppers, killing five and injuring four others.

Officer credited for quick response
An off-duty police officer being credited with helping stop the shooting rampage said his experience helped him react quickly to confront the gunman.

Kenneth K. Hammond, who was at the mall for an early Valentine’s Day dinner with his wife, said he first thought the sound of gunfire was construction noise but drew his gun and told his wife to call 911 when he realized what was happening.

“I’ve been in situations before where I’ve had to chase a guy who was pointing a gun at me,” Hammond, 33, said Tuesday from the Ogden police headquarters where he works.

Hammond, who fired on Talovic, is being credited with drawing the gunman’s attention until other officers could reach the scene. Talovic was killed, although it was unclear which officer fired the fatal shot, police said.

“I feel like I was there and did what I had to do,” Hammond said.

Image: Utah policeman Ken Hammond and his wife, Sarita
Douglas C. Pizac/AP
Ogden, Utah, police Officer Ken Hammond and his wife, Sarita, address the media on Tuesday. On Monday, his day off, Hammond confronted an 18-year-old who opened fire in a Salt Lake City mall, killing 4.

Gunman came fully armed
Talovic had a backpack full of ammunition, a shotgun and a .38-caliber pistol, police said. Investigators knew little about him, except that he lived in Salt Lake City with his mother, Salt Lake City Police Chief Chris Burbank said.

He was enrolled in numerous city schools before withdrawing in 2004, the school district said.

Talovic’s aunt, Ajka Onerovic, emerged briefly from the family’s house to say relatives had no idea why the young man attacked so many strangers. She said the family moved to Utah from Bosnia.

“He was a such a good boy. I don’t know what happened,” she told Salt Lake City television station KSL.

Talovic drove to the Trolley Square shopping center — a century-old former trolley barn with winding hallways, brick floors and wrought-iron balconies, and immediately killed two people, then a third as he came through a door, Burbank said. Five other people were then shot in a gift shop, he said.

Four people who were wounded remained hospitalized Wednesday, two in critical condition, two in serious.

One of the wounded shoppers, Shawn Munns, 34, was alone outside the mall after a meal with his wife and two stepchildren when Talovic blasted him with a shotgun, according to sister-in-law Jodie Sparrow.

‘Everything happened for a reason’
With dozens of pellets embedded in his side, Munns staggered into a restaurant and warned diners about the gunman, Sparrow said.

Outside the mall, candles and flowers were left as memorials to those killed, who were identified as Jeffrey Walker, 52, Vanessa Quinn, 29, Kirsten Hinkley, 15, Teresa Ellis, 29, and Brad Frantz, 24.

The state Senate wants to honor Hammond, said his boss, Ogden Police Chief Jon Greiner, who is also a state senator. Ogden is 31 miles north of Salt Lake City.

Hammond said Tuesday he didn’t feel like a hero.

“We were there for a reason. I had my gun on me for a reason. We decided to eat dessert, which we never do, for a reason,” Hammond said. “Everything happened for a reason.”

© 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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