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Heading home or on a new job: Fresno victims shot at random

FRESNO, Calif. (AP) - One man had just started a new job with the gas company and was riding in a utility truck. Another was carrying a bag of groceries after stopping at a charity center. The third was at a bus stop with a friend, waiting for a ride home.

All three were randomly shot dead by a black gunman, Kori Ali Muhammad, who wanted to kill as many white people as possible and was proud of what he had done, laughing as he explained his actions in interviews with police, authorities said Wednesday.

"That's what he set out to do that day. He said he did not like white men and said white people were responsible for keeping black people down," Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer said.

The men were at the wrong place at the wrong time Tuesday.

Zackary Randalls was the first to die when Muhammad, 39, walked up to a Pacific Gas & Electric truck and fired into the passenger seat. Randalls, 34, had just started work as a customer-service representative and was doing a ride-along, something he was excited about, friend Eddie Valencia said. He described the father of two preschoolers as an open-minded person with a sharp wit and big heart.

"He wouldn't want people to be divided by this," Valencia said. "There were no boundaries with race, religions, beliefs, with anything. If you were a good person and basically could have a good conversation, he would call you a friend. He was a stand-up guy."

Muhammad also shot Mark Gassett, 37, of Fresno, who had just picked up groceries at a Catholic Charities building. The gunman pumped two more rounds into Gassett as he lay on the ground, police said.

Gassett's ex-wife Lisa Gassett told The Fresno Bee that he had faced hard times but had been working to improve his life. The couple has two children.

"He would give his shirt off his back for anybody," she told the newspaper. "That is the kind of guy he was."

Next, Muhammad shot toward a bus stop where he had spotted three white men, police said. They scattered, and Muhammad picked the one who was older and appeared heavier: David Jackson, 58, of Fresno.

Jackson's roommate said they were waiting for a bus home after going to the bank and then stopping to use the bathroom at Catholic Charities.

Mark Greer, 62, said Jackson tripped over a curb in the parking lot, falling down when he was shot. Greer was able to get away.

"I was too fast for him, but David couldn't run that good," he said.

Muhammad was arrested shortly after the rampage. He was expected to be charged with four counts of murder and arraigned Friday.

Police say the shooter was candid in explaining the crimes that began Thursday night, when he killed another white man, a motel security guard, and culminated Tuesday, when he fired 16 rounds in less than two minutes and killed the three men on the same block.

Francine Williams, mother of security guard Carl Williams, 25, described her son as a kind and giving person who had recently gotten engaged.

Williams was a supervisor for Toys "R'' Us who was at his second job at a Motel 6 when Muhammad shot him multiple times after an argument, police and the mother said. Muhammad told investigators he felt disrespected.

Francine Williams said Wednesday that she was in shock but also at peace because she got to tell her son how much she loved him and how proud he made her a few days before his death. He told her loved her, too.

"So, I'm very, very, very grateful that I was able to say goodbye, maybe not at that moment, but prior to that," she said.

Muhammad had a long criminal history and filled his social media feeds with posts about black separatism, reparations and "white devils." He told his family there was a war going on between blacks and whites in America.

He claimed insanity after being charged with possessing cocaine with intent to distribute in 2005, and his attorney requested a psychiatric examination, saying Muhammad "appeared eccentric with some bizarre beliefs."

He had at least two prior mental health hospitalizations, and his attorney said in court papers that Muhammad thought the justice system his own lawyer were conspiring against him.

Muhammad told investigators he is Muslim but prays to seven different gods and has not been to a mosque in 25 years. Police said he hid out in a ravine after the motel shooting and practiced voodoo rituals.

When he learned he was wanted in the security guard killing, Muhammad decided to take out as many other white men as possible before he was caught, Dyer said. The suspect showed no remorse, police said.

Muhammad "is not a terrorist but he is a racist," Dyer said.

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Associated Press writers Kristin J. Bender, Janie Har and Olga R. Rodriguez in San Francisco and Mike Balsamo in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

Mark Greer is shown at his home Wednesday, April 19, 2017, in Fresno, Calif. He lived there with his best friend and roommate, David Jackson, who was gunned down in a series of random shootings that left a few people dead. (AP Photo/Scott Smith) The Associated Press
Francine Williams and Randy Hicks, mother and stepfather of slain security guard Carl Williams, sit in front of their home in Fresno, Calif., Wednesday, April 19, 2017. Police suspect that the man responsible for three shooting deaths in Fresno on Tuesday, April 18, is also responsible for Carl Williams death, who was shot last week while working as a security guard at a Fresno motel. (AP Photo/Terry Chea) The Associated Press
This 2017 photo provided by Eddie Valencia shows Zackary Randalls with one of his children. A close friend of a man who was shot during a deadly rampage in Fresno, Calif., says the victim was Randalls, a father of two young children. Randalls was in a training program for Pacific Gas & Electric and doing a ride-along Tuesday, April 18, 2017, when he was gunned down. (Eddie Valencia via AP) The Associated Press
This undated photo provided by the Fresno Police Department shows Kori Ali Muhammad a suspect in the Fresno, Calif., shooting on Tuesday, April 18, 2017. Muhammad was arrested on Tuesday shortly after the deadly morning rampage that left several dead according to police. (Fresno Police Department via AP) The Associated Press
A memorial of candles and flowers honors victims of Tuesday's shooting outside Catholic Charities Wednesday, April 19, 2017 in Fresno, Calif. Mark Gassett, 37, of Fresno, had just picked up groceries at a Catholic Charities building when he was gunned down. David Jackson, 58, of Fresno, was gunned down in the parking lot of the charity's building. (Carmen George/The Fresno Bee via AP) The Associated Press
Vickie Farr places a candle for Tuesday's shooting victims at a memorial of candles and flowers outside Catholic Charities on Wednesday, April 19, 2017 in Fresno, Calif. (Carmen George/The Fresno Bee via AP) The Associated Press
Fresno Police Chief Jerry Dyer holds a news conference to go over details of Tuesday's triple homicide shooting in Fresno, Calif., at the Fresno Police Department on Wednesday, April 19, 2017. The black gunman suspected of killing three white men in a racially motivated attack in Fresno was proud of what he had done and laughed many times as he explained his actions in interviews with police, authorities said Wednesday. (Craig Kohlruss/The Fresno Bee via AP) The Associated Press
A memorial of candles and flowers grows at the scene of Tuesday's triple homicide shooting near Catholic Charities in downtown Fresno, Calif., on Wednesday, April 19, 2017. (Craig Kohlruss /The Fresno Bee via AP) The Associated Press
Francine Williams and Randy Hicks, mother and stepfather of slain security guard Carl Williams, pose in front of their home in Fresno, Calif., Wednesday, April 19, 2017. Police suspect that the man responsible for three shooting deaths in Fresno on Tuesday, April 18, is also responsible for the slaying of Carl Williams, who was shot last week while working as a security guard at a Fresno motel. (AP Photo/Terry Chea) The Associated Press
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