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NewsMay 14, 2017

KIRKERSVILLE, Ohio -- Court records show the man authorities say gunned down an Ohio village police chief and two nursing-home employees had a history of violence, including against the nurse who was among the slain. The suspect, Thomas Hartless, 43, was found dead inside Pine Kirk Care Center...

Associated Press
Thomas Hartless
Thomas Hartless

KIRKERSVILLE, Ohio -- Court records show the man authorities say gunned down an Ohio village police chief and two nursing-home employees had a history of violence, including against the nurse who was among the slain.

The suspect, Thomas Hartless, 43, was found dead inside Pine Kirk Care Center.

Nurse Marlina Medrano, 46, nurse's aide Cindy Krantz, 48, and Kirkersville police chief Steven Eric Disario, 36, were killed in the attack Friday.

State and local authorities said Saturday the investigation was continuing and they had no new information to release on the deaths in the village of some 500 residents, about 25 miles east of Columbus.

Spokeswoman Jill Del Greco of the Ohio Attorney General's Office said investigators had more interviews planned, and learning more about the connection between Hartless and Medrano is part of their efforts. Authorities have said they had been in a relationship.

Records show Medrano had obtained civil-protection orders against Hartless. Hartless was released from jail in April after his latest domestic-violence case in March. State prison records show he served eight months in 2010 for the 2009 abduction of another woman.

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"I am afraid to be alone with him, that he will hurt me for good," Medrano wrote in her latest petition this month.

The Columbus Dispatch reported court officials said Friday that protection order still was in effect. Records show Medrano had reported injuries including a concussion and cuts requiring stitches.

The Dispatch reported that she had earlier told police he once showed her a hole he had dug and said he would put her in it if she didn't stay with him. She also told police Hartless "doesn't like police."

Hartless' neighbor, Connie Long, told reporters Medrano had taken shelter in Long's home March 6 after he attacked her. Long had posted a Facebook warning to the community that "a violent man" was loose after Hartless was released only weeks later.

Disario headed the Kirkersville Police Department for only about three weeks, Licking County Sheriff Randy Thorp said. He was the father of six children, with a seventh on the way, the sheriff said.

Authorities say the gunman had taken two passers-by as hostages in a wooded area behind the nursing home. Disario, responding to a report of a man with a gun, said in his last radio communication that he had the man in sight. The hostages escaped unharmed, as did all 23 residents of the nursing home.

Ohio Gov. John Kasich ordered that all flags be flown at half-staff at all public buildings and grounds throughout Licking County and at the Ohio Statehouse through sunset May 16 to honor the lives lost in "senseless acts of violence" in Kirkersville.

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