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New Roundy s Oconomowoc shooting documents give insight on Cornelius

While a motive for the March shooting at the Roundy s Distribution Center in Oconomowoc has not been found, new documents obtained from law enforcement agencies detail the actions of the shooter before he killed two coworkers. On March 16, Fraron Cornelius, 41, of Wauwatosa shot and killed Kevin Kloth, 51, of Germantown and Kevin Schneider, 39, of West Allis. Cornelius died by suicide from a self-inflicted gunshot wound after a subsequent police chase in Milwaukee County.  Documents released Thursday by the Oconomowoc Police Department and Waukesha County Sheriff s Department show that Cornelius was believed to have clashed with the two victims over his work ethic for years leading up to the shooting. 

Roundy s Warehouse Shooting: Photos, 911 calls released

Roundy s Warehouse Shooting: Photos, 911 calls released Investigators released haunting new photos and 911 calls related to the Oconomowoc Roundy s Distribution Center shooting. OCONOMOWOC, Wis. - Roundy s employees, in their own words, described the March warehouse shooting in Oconomowoc. Three people, including the gunman, were killed. Detectives announced on May 4 that the case was closed after not being able to determine a motive. Now, days later, investigators released haunting new photos and 911 calls. Hundreds of pages of employee interviews and photos were released – giving new insight into a night of terror. There s blood everywhere, a 911 caller said. After Kevin Schneider and Kevin Kloth were shot and killed by their long-time coworker, Fraron Cornelius, approximately 150 Roundy s employees were bused to the Oconomowoc Police Station to give statements. Few employees inside knew what was going on.

How Wisconsin Ranks For Gun-Related Hospitalizations

How Wisconsin Ranks For Gun-Related Hospitalizations Patch 1 day ago Karen Pilarski © Shutterstock The Rand Corp. recently released a database that tracks hospitalizations due to firearm injuries by state. See how our state measured up. WISCONSIN Wisconsin ranks among states with the least residents who have been hospitalized with firearm injuries over a 16-year period, according to a recently released report. 7 in every 100,000 Wisconsin residents were hospitalized with firearm injuries between 2000 and 2016, a new database developed by The Rand Corp. shows. Nationwide, nearly 548,000 people were hospitalized with similar injuries during that period. The report, released last week by the nonprofit nonpartisan think tank, hopes to fill a gap in state-level firearm injury data.

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