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Oxford Eagle
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October 19, 1997
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Ed Pierce killed in Las
Vegas shootout
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"Box Killer" Ed Pierce shot dead by federal
agents in Las Vegas casino rooftop battle
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Chase McFadden
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STAFF WRITER
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- Las Vegas, Nev. - Police in the city of Las Vegas, who admit that
they are used to bizarre crimes and criminals from mobsters to pimps
to the growing drug trade, say that they are still stunned from the
shootout that took place on their busiest street this past Friday night.
The total tally: three deaths, the wounding of eleven police officers
of various rank, and close to six million dollars in property damage
to the state of Nevada and to the casino itself.
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- Authorities comment that they were compelled to treat the situation
as a terrorist attack from the outset, when the suspect opened fire
on them with a hail of bullets right as they pulled up to the front
walk of the casino.
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- "It was like a war," one officer said, "and I wasn't sure we'd win
it."
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- The shootout involved the infamous "box killer" Edward Pierce, who
was wanted nationwide for the murder of University of Mississippi student
Purity Knight. Knight was kidnapped and held against her will in a box
in a rural part of Yoknapatawpha County, then later murdered.
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- Pierce has been on the lam since his escape Sept. 20 from a Yoknapatawpha
County Sheriff's Department transport van as he and another prisoner
were being transferred to a more secure facility.
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- Pierce was reportedly traveling through Las Vegas to an undisclosed
location on the West Coast with Victoria Symons, a one-time waitress
and student at the University of Mississippi. Symons reportedly approached
police in Las Vegas around 3:30 on Friday afternoon and informed them
that Pierce was in the area. When police raided the location that Symons
had described, they found it empty.
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- Only thirty minutes later, they received a 911 call from downtown,
during which the caller, a store owner, described a man firing at security
personnel at the Horseshoe casino on the "Strip," the several-mile long
main drag of Las Vegas.
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- Federal agent Gary Stremcha said Pierce had attempted to cut through
the casino after Stremcha, in an unmarked patrol car, spotted Pierce
walking along the Strip and turned on the car's flashing lights. Upon
entering the casino, security personnel said Pierce set off hidden metal
detectors, which prompted several security officers to follow him as
he moved through the main gambling area. Upon being ordered to stop,
Pierce bolted for the exit and opened fire.
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- Both the Las Vegas SWAT team and the Las Vegas Office of the Nevada
State Police responded to the 911 call.
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- The caller, one Thomas Berry, described a "war" that was going on
outside the front doors of the casino between a man and several casino
security personnel. The caller also reported that the man was carrying
and firing at least three separate weapons, one of which he described
as a shotgun. (See our additional story on page 2).
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- Las Vegas authorities sped to the scene and were immediately fired
upon by the suspect, who took up a crouched position right inside the
open breezeway of the casino entrance, using a set of concrete pillars
as a shield.
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- Officers believed he fired more than two hundred rounds at them in
the space of ten minutes, resulting in the destruction of three police
cars and the wounding of four officers, who all are expected to recover.
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- Officials say that they could have moved in on Pierce quickly but
what started as a shoot-out escalated into a hostage situation when
Pierce ran inside, firing behind him for cover, and grabbed a woman
who had just stepped off the elevator by chance. He pushed her backwards
into the elevator and placed his gun on the elevator operator and forced
him to use the keys to take the elevator to the roof.
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- Once on the roof, police say, Pierce shut down the elevator and forced
his two captives onto the roof. Pierce walked the elevator operator
over to the roof edge and held him over the side of the balcony and
fired on police.
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- Police, who had received a report that Pierce was on the roof, opened
fire on the figure who they thought was Pierce. Bill Madsen, 54, a twenty-seven
year veteran of the Las Vegas casino business, was killed in the return
of gunfire, and Pierce subsequently threw his body from the roof, where
it crashed into a police car windshield.
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- By this time, a Las Vegas police helicopter was on the scene, and
coming under a hail of fire from Pierce, were forced to back away. During
the entire attack, Pierce held Barbara Ragsdale, 34, a hotel guest on
vacation from Minneapolis, in front of him, almost daring the helicopter
to fire on him. On another occasion, he threatened to throw Mrs. Ragsdale
from the roof unless they backed off.
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- Authorities on the ground tried to force Pierce back into the elevator
by firing multiple tear gas canisters onto the roof. Pierce responded
by throwing them back off the roof, creating more confusion on the "Strip."
Downtown Las Vegas was awash in green and white smoke for the better
part of four hours.
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- The Las Vegas SWAT team commandeered a separate elevator and began
to ride up to the roof. When Pierce realized what was happening, he
dragged his hostage over to the elevator shaft and threw a tear gas
canister down the shaft, causing the team to retreat back down to ground
level.
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- By this time, the entire casino and adjoining hotel had been evacuated
and several news cameramen and reporters had arrived. A helicopter from
the main Las Vegas television station was also hovering about two hundred
yards away from the roof, and filmed the latter part of the siege. That
tape is now the property of the Las Vegas Police Department. A crowd
numbering in the hundreds had collected on the ground below and were
coughing from the tear gas.
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- The Las Vegas Police commandeered floor plans of the building from
the casino security office and found that a set of stairs on the floor
below the roof led outside and onto the roof. Apparently the stairs
are used by casino personnel for access to the air conditioning control
panel, which is enclosed inside a short hallway on the roof itself,
in a back corner. The hallway has one access door which leads to the
roof and the entrance to the roof is barred by a mesh gate.
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- Using this stairwell, members of the Las Vegas SWAT team were able
to open the door quietly and cut round hole through the mesh. Their
finest sniper, Lieutenant Paul Dickerson, took up a position where he
could have a clear shot at Pierce, who was standing some one hundred
yards away with his back turned, holding Mrs. Ragsdale in front of him
with a gun to her head.
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- Dickerson, a U.S. Army Ranger in Vietnam with twenty-seven confirmed
kills as a sniper, drew a bead on Pierce's head and waited for the signal
from his commanding officer, who was next to him and watching Pierce's
movements through a pair of binoculars.
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- The Las Vegas Police helicopter approached the roof once more. Pierce
began to yell that he would throw Mrs. Ragsdale off the roof and edged
over towards it with her in tow. Pierce reportedly turned his head to
the side for a moment to fire over the roof at the police below and
at this point Dickerson received the go-ahead from his commander and
shot Pierce in the back of the head.
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- Pierce's forward momentum as he was shot knocked Mrs. Ragsdale out
of his arms and from the roof, where she was caught by a firefighter's
net which had been erected during the standoff. Ragsdale reportedly
suffered a broken collarbone from the fall.
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- After cutting through the remaining mesh on the screen door, the SWAT
team edged out and made sure that Pierce was dead. On his person were
a sawed-off double barreled shotgun, a semi-automatic rifle, a .38 pistol,
ammunition, and a hunting knife with a ten-inch blade. A .357 Magnum
matching the description of the gun stolen off the corpse of Yoknapatawpha
County Sheriff's Deputy Vernon Schiff, who was killed in the Sept. 20
van crash, was also in Pierce's possession.
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- In Pierce's trouser pocket police found a small pill bottle of methamphetamines,
which authorities say could account for his seemingly superhuman energy
and endurance during the four-hour standoff.
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- Symons is being held in Las Vegas pending extradition back to Yoknapatawpha
County, where she will face felony charges that include aiding and abetting
the escape of Pierce and concealment of a felony charged suspect.
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- Symons has been questioned about the disappearance of Macy Lamar,
the daughter of Yoknapatawpha County Sheriff Charles Lamar. Pierce was
reportedly the prime suspect in her disappearance but authorities are
releasing no further details at this time.
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