Authorities Name 12 People Killed In Virginia Beach Shooting

“There is no way to describe an incident such as this,” Virginia Beach Police Chief James Cervera said of Friday’s deadly shooting.

Kaitlin McKeown/The Virginian-Pilot

Updated at 9:05 a.m. ET Saturday

City officials have named the 12 victims who were killed in a shooting Friday at the municipal center in Virginia Beach, Va.

They are:

Laquita C. Brown of Chesapeake, Va.

Tara Welch Gallagher of Virginia Beach

Mary Louise Gayle of Virginia Beach

Alexander Mikhail Gusev of Virginia Beach

Katherine A. Nixon of Virginia Beach

Richard H. Nettleton of Norfolk, Va.

Christopher Kelly Rapp of Powhatan, Va.

Ryan Keith Cox of Virginia Beach

Joshua Hardy of Virginia Beach

Michelle “Missy” Langer of Virginia Beach

Robert “Bobby” Williams of Chesapeake

Herbert “Bert” Snelling of Virginia Beach

“They leave a void that we will never be able to fill,” City Manager Dave Hansen said Saturday morning.

All but Snelling were city employees with length of service ranging from 11 months to 41 years. Snelling was a contractor.

Hansen called Friday’s shooting a “senseless incomprehensible act of violence.”

Officials named the shooter as DeWayne Craddock, a 15-year public utilities engineer, who was a current employee at the time of the shooting. He died after what Virginia Beach Police Chief James Cervera called a “long-term large gunfight” with police officers.

Cervera said he couldn’t comment on a motive at this time.

Four people who were seriously injured are being treated at Virginia Beach and Norfolk hospitals.

Police said initially on Friday that shortly after 4 p.m. ET, the suspect entered Building Two of the city government complex.

“He immediately began to indiscriminately fire upon all the victims,” Cervera said Friday. He said the suspect and four police officers who quickly entered the building engaged in “a long gun battle.”

Cervera said exchanges of fire involving police officers typically include minimal rounds fired. “This was well beyond that,” he said, with “shots fired from various places down the hallway at officers.”

He said after the suspect had been subdued, officers gave him first aid, but he succumbed to his wounds.

The suspect was armed with a .45-caliber handgun and a sound suppressor, the police chief said, along with extended magazines that the suspect reloaded as he proceeded.

Virginia Beach Police are working with federal law enforcement agencies to process the scene and investigate. Cervera deferred an answer on whether the suspect had acquired the handgun legally, saying the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives is working on that question.

One of the people injured was a police officer who was saved by his bulletproof vest, according to Cervera.

In addition to those who were shot inside the municipal facility, the police chief said one victim was outside in a car.

“There is no way to describe an incident such as this,” said an emotional Cervera. “No chief of police anywhere in the country, no mayor, no city manager … ever wants to get up and give information such as this.”

Cervera and other state and local officials said the families and coworkers of the victims will need help over the long term. Cervera included the officers who are processing the scene, which he described as a war zone, among those whose “lives are going to be changed.”

This is a developing story. Some facts reported by the media may later turn out to be wrong. We will focus on reports from police officials and other authorities, credible news outlets and reporters who are at the scene. We will update as the situation develops.