custom ad
NewsOctober 20, 2017

WILMINGTON, Del. -- The widow of a man killed in a workplace shooting in Maryland said Thursday her husband was so concerned about the gunman's explosive temper he brought it up in church prayer sessions. Bayarsaikhan Tudev was one of three people shot and killed Wednesday at a granite manufacturer in Edgewood, Maryland...

By JULIET LINDERMAN and MATTHEW BARAKAT ~ Associated Press

WILMINGTON, Del. -- The widow of a man killed in a workplace shooting in Maryland said Thursday her husband was so concerned about the gunman's explosive temper he brought it up in church prayer sessions.

Bayarsaikhan Tudev was one of three people shot and killed Wednesday at a granite manufacturer in Edgewood, Maryland.

Police said Radee Prince walked into work at Advanced Granite Solutions and shot five co-workers. Two remained in critical condition Thursday.

Tudev's widow, Gerelmaa Dolgorsuren, said her husband had described Prince's volatile temper several times.

"He was always angry," she said her husband told her.

Tudev, 53, was a native of Mongolia who came to the U.S. in 2005. He and his wife settled in Arlington, Virginia, which has a large Mongolian-American community.

Dolgorsuren said her husband liked his job so much he endured a regular commute of more than two hours. She said he always felt he was living the American dream.

Prince was captured late Wednesday after a 10-hour manhunt during which he also shot and wounded an acquaintance in Wilmington. He was ordered held on $2.1 million cash bond on attempted murder charges in that shooting during his arraignment in a Delaware court early Thursday.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

Wilmington police chief Robert Tracy said his department is coordinating with Maryland law-enforcement officials to transfer Prince back to Maryland to face charges in the workplace shooting.

Tracy said at a news conference Wednesday night police and federal agents arrested Prince after they spotted him in the Glasgow neighborhood. He'd left his SUV near a high school, and a civilian notified authorities. Officers found him nearby, and he ran about 75 feet and threw away a gun before being arrested. No one was hurt in the capture.

"I even get chills talking about it because I know what it's like when we do hunt individuals that are desperate," Tracy said.

In addition to Tudev, the Harford County Sheriff's Office identified the slain victims as Jose Hidalgo Romero, 34, of Aberdeen, Maryland; and Enis Mrvoljak, 48, of Dundalk, Maryland.

Less than two hours after his first attack, Prince drove to a used car lot about 55 miles away in Wilmington, and opened fire on a man with whom Tracy said Prince had "beefs" in the past. The man was wounded but survived and identified Prince to police.

The search for Prince clogged the Interstate 95 corridor from Maryland to Philadelphia with cruisers patrolling the highways. Overhead highway signs flashed Prince's Delaware license plate number and the make and model of his vehicle. Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said helicopters were circling the airspace searching for any sign of the black 2008 GMC Acadia.

Although police have not disclosed a motive for Prince's shootings, his legal record painted a portrait of a man with an alleged history of workplace violence, gun charges, traffic violations and problems with his probation.

He was a felon with 42 arrests in Delaware, court records show.

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!