JOPLIN, Mo. -- A random shooting injured five people Saturday, including three members of a Joplin church who were starting a trip to St. Louis, police said.
Thomas S. Mourning II, 26, was taken into custody and was being held but has not been formally charged, The Joplin Globe reported.
"This came out of the blue, and all of a sudden people were shot and going to the hospital," said Jason Glaskey, director of Christian education at Immanuel Lutheran Church, where three of the injured people take part in the church's Comfort Dog ministry. Glaskey said two dogs were in the van and injured, but that no one else in the van was injured.
Police Capt. Bob Higginbotham told AP Radio there was no apparent motive for the shootings, which began after the suspect's father called police to report the suspect was firing rounds at their home.
Officers went to the home, and then began pursuing a suspect vehicle. Police said the driver of that vehicle fired shots at the church van, which was stopped at a traffic light. Two people in the van were taken to a hospital, with one in critical condition and the other in serious but stable condition. One was released.
Also, two comfort dogs, which provide assistance to people, were injured, Glaskey told the newspaper. One was released, and one was still getting medical care Saturday afternoon.
Police said the suspect then shot at a pickup truck, injuring two adults. The driver is hospitalized, and the passenger was released, according to police.
"As rounds were being fired, they (police) continued to stay with that suspect, continued to pursue that suspect even though they knew the suspect was actively firing his weapon," police chief Matt Stewart said at a news conference.
The man surrendered and was arrested at 5:22 a.m., police said.
"We are very grateful that these victims do not appear to have life-threatening wounds because of this act," Mayor Mike Seibert said.
Glaskey said he did not think anyone at the church knew the suspect, adding: "It was random."
Church member Vicki Eby was in the van with her husband, Kenneth, who was driving. She told KOAM-TV they heard "three pops go off."
"It was so dark, we didn't know what was happening," she said.
One of the bullets hit her husband's lung, she said, adding he's in critical condition.
"If they hadn't of gotten him to the hospital when they did, he wouldn't be here," she said. "They said that his chances were very, very slim. I was in shock. I just asked if they were going to fix him."
Information from: The Joplin (Mo.) Globe, http://www.joplinglobe.com
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