2008 Skagit County shooting spree

On September 2, 2008, 28-year-old Isaac Zamora killed six people (including one sheriff's deputy) and wounded two more on a shooting rampage in Skagit County, Washington. The incident began when Skagit County Sheriff's Deputy Anne Jackson responded to a call at Zamora's home in Alger, Washington. Zamora shot Jackson and then left the residence. He shot seven additional people and led authorities on a high-speed chase along Interstate 5 before surrendering at the Skagit County Sheriff's Office in Mount Vernon, Washington.[1][2]

2008 Skagit County shooting spree
LocationSkagit County, Washington, U.S.
DateSeptember 2, 2008
2:15 p.m.–4:30 p.m.
Attack type
Mass shooting, mass murder, shootout
Weapons
  • Winchester Lever-action rifle
  • Handgun
Deaths6
Injured2
PerpetratorIsaac Zamora
MotiveMental Illness

At his 2009 trial, Zamora pled guilty to several felony charges, including four counts of aggravated murder, in the shootings, and not guilty by reason of insanity to two additional counts of aggravated murder. Zamora received four life sentences and was subsequently committed to Western State Hospital.[3] In 2012, Zamora was moved to the Monroe Correctional Complex due to concerns that his presence posed a threat to hospital staff and other patients. In 2019 Zamora is appealing for a new trial.[4]

Victims

  • Chester Rose
  • Anne Jackson
  • Julie Binschus
  • David Radcliffe
  • Greg Gillum
  • Leroy Lange

[5]

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gollark: Or you can just add more CPU cores by... having swappable CPUs, and skip a ton of extremely difficult and problematic stuff.
gollark: If you have CPU, GPU and RAM in some monolithic device, you cannot really swap out each bit.
gollark: You get expandability out of having discrete stuff, because you can actually swap it out individually.
gollark: Moore's law stopped being accurate a few years ago.

See also

References


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