Security guard's heroism
"It was me, the gunman and God" Jeanne Assam, a member of New Life Church, says she got the guidance she needed to end the shooter's rampage. By Electa Draper The Denver Post Article Last Updated: 12/11/2007 01:59:28 AM MST
Jeanne Assam, the security guard who gunned down a gunman as he terrorized worshippers after the Sunday service at New Life Church, talks about the shooting at the church in Colorado Springs, Colo., during a news conference on Monday.
COLORADO SPRINGS — Amid deafening cracks of gunfire, smoke-spewing canisters and the flight of thousands of New Life Church members, Jeanne Assam said God was with her when she shot the gunman and helped her prevent more lives from being lost.
"I saw him, it seemed like the halls cleared out, and I saw him coming through the doors, and I took cover. And I waited for him to get closer. And I came out of cover. And I identified myself. And I engaged him and I took him down," the 42-year-old volunteer church security guard and former law officer said Monday at a news conference in the Colorado Springs police station. "I didn't think it was my sole responsibility. I didn't think about this. It was — it seemed like it was me, the gunman and God."
Assam, a member of New Life for only a few months, admitted she had been without sleep since Sunday's midday shootings at Colorado's largest church.
The episode ended the lives of two teen sisters and the gunman, 24-year- old Matthew J. Murray, and left two injured.
"I give the credit to God, and I mean that. I say that very humbly. God was with me, and the whole time I was behind cover — this has gotta be God — because of the firepower he had versus what I had was God," Assam said. "And I did not run away. I did not think for a minute to run away. I just knew that I was given the assignment to end this before it got too, too much worse. I just prayed for the Holy Spirit to guide me. I just said, 'Holy Spirit, be with me.' My hands weren't even shaking."
Police declined to confirm Monday whether Assam's weapon, which she reportedly emptied in the exchange, inflicted Murray's fatal wound or whether the wound was self-inflicted.
Police also wouldn't describe how close Assam had been to Murray or exactly where they were in New Life's long hallway.
The church's senior pastor, Brady Boyd, said Assam was a real hero to him and to the whole church. He said she acted as his personal bodyguard.
"We will be holding a funeral for two very precious young women who were shot and killed on our campus," Brady said. "Three people are needlessly dead, but many more lives could have been lost."
Church spokesman Rob Brendle called Assam's clear-eyed, swift action the "good news" of that horrible day.
"It was scary," Assam said at the news conference. "It was God. God was with me. And I asked him to be with me and he never left my side."
Assam said she had drawn her weapon countless times in her prior law enforcement career, but she had never shot anyone until Sunday.
"Honestly, I was very focused. And it was chaotic. It was so loud. I'll never forget. The gunshots were so loud. I was just focused. I just knew I was not going to wait for him to do any further damage. I just knew. I just knew what I was going to do," Assam said.
Assam, single and without children, has been working three months for an educational ministry called Messengers International, run by John and Lisa Bevere in Colorado Springs.
Assam said she had just ended a three-day fast Sunday. During the fasting she prayed and asked God to help her decide what to do with her future and whether she should work again in law enforcement.
"I was weak," she said. "And where I was weak, God made me strong. He filled me and he guided me and he protected me and many other people. And I'm honored that God chose me. I'm very honored."
She said she loves law enforcement, but she still doesn't have her answer about her future.
"I'm going to continue to pray about it," Assam said.
Sgt. Jess Garcia III, the public-information officer for the Minneapolis Police Department, said Assam left his department in the late 1990s.
He said that during her time there she worked in north Minneapolis, the busiest crime area of the city, as well as in downtown Minneapolis.
"Some of the training she received here apparently helped her," Garcia said. "She did a great job."
He said he knew her during her time in Minneapolis.
"I thought she had a great personality and always got along with everybody," Garcia said.
Staff writer Christopher N. Osher contributed to this report.
― dally, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:20 (seventeen years ago)
Oh please, the attack was at a CHURCH, you expected maybe for them not to mention The Lord Their God?
― Laurel, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:21 (seventeen years ago)
Of course. Isn't it wonderful how the same god who lets tens of thousands of kids die in tsunamis, typhoons, and hurricanes, guides her steady and righteous hand in the act of killing another?
― dally, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:26 (seventeen years ago)
you should write the dude a letter, dally
― gff, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:27 (seventeen years ago)
xp Whatevs, dude.
― Laurel, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:28 (seventeen years ago)
Pity God didn't just cut out the middle(wo)man and smite the shooter before he killed two children.
― Ned Trifle II, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:29 (seventeen years ago)
gff, it's a woman.
Laurel, what she's saying is fucked up.
― dally, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:32 (seventeen years ago)
What exactly have you got against God, dally?
― Tom D., Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:34 (seventeen years ago)
He's a cunt.
― ledge, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:35 (seventeen years ago)
God, that is.
― Hurting 2, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:36 (seventeen years ago)
Either way, God did it
― Tom D., Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:37 (seventeen years ago)
wow a traumatized woman said something fucked up! good call dally!!
― s1ocki, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:37 (seventeen years ago)
after every raging church gun battle i've been in, i try to tell people about bertrand russell a little bit. that's my thing, man
― gff, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:42 (seventeen years ago)
What the dally-o
― Dom Passantino, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:43 (seventeen years ago)
It's the Dally'S Daily Doo-lally Diatribe
― Tom D., Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:46 (seventeen years ago)
"it was me, the gunman, and Richard Dawkins' scientific rationalism"
― Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:46 (seventeen years ago)
Read the Book of Job if you don't think Xians know YWYH is a baaad motherfucker. God's been fucking shit up since day none.
― sexyDancer, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:47 (seventeen years ago)
Dally's Daily Deity Throwdown In Operation
― Tom D., Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:48 (seventeen years ago)
only ethan can start these threads
― Just got offed, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:49 (seventeen years ago)
I wandered into Safeway’s coffee shop an hour or so ago, joined the queue to order my first mug of coffee. While waiting I noticed something different about the place. On every one of the 19 tables was a small vase brimming with daffodils.
They might have been unable to toss their heads or do their sprightly dance but still they did the trick for me. Gave me some hint as to why life may be worth living.
During the past week I’ve been reading Damien Hirst and Gordon Burns’ cracking good book On The Way to Work. In it Hirst goes on about how devastatingly beautiful his spot paintings are and how he wished people didn’t buy them because they were ‘Damien Hirsts’ but because they were objects that brought beauty into their lives. And I thought ‘Yeah Damien, but they are no way as beautiful as a bunch of daffodils that you can buy for less than a quid.’ Not only is their beauty guaranteed every time, never a duff daffodil, you get them bursting out of their closed buds into their full golden glory and then fading and dying all in one week as well. Birth, life and death and all that.
So I sat down at my usual table with my mug of coffee, thought these thoughts and a few more and then got my book and pencil out and got on with the day’s work. On the third mug of coffee, the mobile rang.
‘Hallo.’
‘Good morning Bill, it’s Neal here. Neal Brown.’
Now I’m always pleased to get a call from Neal Brown. But there are times you can tell that he is searching for the most polite way of telling you that he is somewhat disappointed or even compromised by a piece of work you have done of late that in some way is connected to his own practice, but not this morning.
‘Bill, I’m organising an exhibition called ‘New Religious Art,’ at the Henry Peacock Gallery, and I’d be very pleased if you’d consider contributing a piece of your work for the show.’
‘Yes well …’
‘I have a very fixed idea of how I want the show to look. I’m unapologetic about it. I’m looking for artists who will allow their works to be highly arranged, in very close proximity – a bit like a sort of wall-based totem pole. Because of this I’m seeking works that are quite flat, without illusionistic depth, so that they won’t contradict each other too much. I was hoping that you might contribute some kind of text work – maybe something in your own handwriting, which we could enlarge photographically. Or maybe a Penkiln Burn pamphlet, beautifully framed.’
‘Yes but …’
‘And if you wanted, the actual pamphlets could be made available at the gallery desk, for people to buy them.’
‘Neal, Neal, can you stop a moment?’
‘Yes Bill.’
‘Can you tell me a bit more about your idea behind the exhibition. I mean what is this new religious art stuff?’
So Neal tells me his ideas. Some of these I’ve heard him express before, ideas that I was pleased to share and identify with even though it all sounds a bit like Songs of Praise meets New Neurotic Realism. Ideas that he has probably expressed in whatever texts he may provide as press release or catalogue essay, using his dry wit and steely prose.
Then somewhere in all the explaining of his ideas and what the gallery was like where he hoped to mount this exhibition and who the other artists may be, he let slip one of his working titles for the show, ‘God is Not a Cunt’. As soon as I heard that, my mind was off, racing down streets, across playing fields, over the canal bridge and up the embankment and on to the M6 heading north and I’m screaming, ‘God is not a cunt, God is not a cunt, God is not a fuckin’ cunt. Course he fuckin’ isn’t.’ Not when there are daffodils on the table in front of me. Not when the first of the blackthorn blossom is already out in the hedgerows and the tatty wee blue tit was on our bird table this morning, struggling against the wind and holding down a peanut with one foot while he pecked at it. Not when spring is about to be sprung.
My mind takes a breather from this to follow some other thoughts. These are they. My emotions about God are almost Sunday School simple. God is good. God is responsible for all the things I like, the speckles on a brown trout; the sound of Angus Young’s guitar; the nape of my girlfriend’s neck; the song of the black cap when he returns in spring. I never blame God for all the shit, for the baby Rwandan slaughtered in a casual genocide, the ever-present wars, religious hatred and bigotry and, of course, the bitterness and disappointment, drudgery and misery that fills most of our lives. It’s our job to sort that lot out in payment for the daisies and rainbows. God a cunt? You must be fuckin’ joking. And I can’t suppress the urge to want to thank him constantly.
Yes, all laughably naive, even the fact I think of Him as a him. It’s nothing to do with rational thought or trying to be a better person or anything to make me feel guilty or the idea that there is one true path. No, nothing fully formed or worked out, just an impulse I respond to like the one I have to put my cock up my girlfriend’s cunt and the one I have to write these words down for you to read.
But maybe some people do think God is a cunt. Maybe they should have their say. Maybe it’s my job to provide a bit of room for democracy in all of this telling the people that God is not a cunt.
On Saturday night it was the final of the first-ever Pop Idol thing on TV. Will versus Gareth. Now you understand this is not my kinda thing but on behalf of my two younger daughters who wanted Gareth to win, I tried to phone the given numbers to register their votes. I didn’t get through. All the lines were jammed and Will won and my daughters were disappointed.
My mind starts racing again on up the M6, over the M62, down the M1 and on to the M25. It comes to a halt under a motorway flyover. I’m standing there staring at this big wall of virgin-grey concrete. In one hand I have a large pot of black paint, in the other a brush. I get to work. I daub on the wall, in letters as big as I can manage, for all the passing motorists to read, ‘Is God a Cunt?’ Underneath I then paint in a smaller and more controlled hand, ‘To Vote Yes Phone 0870 240 4174 and To Vote No Phone 0870 240 4175.’ I stand back, admire my craft, pull out a camera and take a snap of my handiwork.
Then my mind races all the way back here to Safeway’s coffee shop and the telephone conversation I was having with Neal Brown.
‘Yeah Neal, I think your plan for a show sounds great. I’ve already got an idea - your thing about God not being a cunt has sparked something off in me.’
‘That’s great Bill. But I ought to warn you that my use of that title is only provisional. I think when it comes down to it I might have problems with it – it is possible it may give people the wrong impression.’
‘Yeah well, I’ll see you soon then?’
‘OK. Goodbye, and thank you again for considering the invitation.’
‘Yeah goodbye.’
And that was that. I went up to the counter, got myself another mug of coffee, returned to the table, thanked God for the daffodils in front of me and then wrote this story. And this afternoon I’ll phone BT, book a couple of phone lines for the job in hand.
― Catsupppppppppppppp dude 茄蕃, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:49 (seventeen years ago)
cunt.
― ledge, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:52 (seventeen years ago)
http://www.penkiln-burn.com/images/job45/posters/big/50.jpg
― sexyDancer, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:54 (seventeen years ago)
Dingdong Dally's Daylong Theological T(h)rollathon pt. Thirty-three
― dan m, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:56 (seventeen years ago)
disagreeing with mainstream ILX opinion=trolling...
she should give herself some credit, don't you think?
― dally, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:58 (seventeen years ago)
For "the act of killing another"?
― Tom D., Tuesday, 11 December 2007 16:59 (seventeen years ago)
Let the Big Man take the responsibility, His shoulders are broad enough
― Tom D., Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:00 (seventeen years ago)
starting the same basic 'lol relijuns r dumb' thread repeatedly=trolling...
― dan m, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:00 (seventeen years ago)
God chose dally to start this thread.
― Hurting 2, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:01 (seventeen years ago)
there are plenty of atheists here dally, you are not bucking the "hivemind" or whatever you think you are doing
― Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:01 (seventeen years ago)
Yeah I know we're all just saying this over and over here, but geez, GOD forbid a woman who just faced a horrifying traumatic life-and-death experience IN A CHURCH and was put in the position of having to kill another human being might take a little comfort in the notion that there was something in the universe to guide, protect, or console her.
This is especially bullshitty since I imagine any random member of said church would say the same about god, and stuff much more worth picking on about god, after any given service -- let alone the woman who did a hard and awful thing and for once has every reason to need the comforts of faith.
P.S. If I am ever forced to face off against a gunman I promise I will be saying stuff afterward that is a million times more insane than "god protected me," and you can check with the nurses at the psych ward to verify
― nabisco, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:02 (seventeen years ago)
e.g. "dally is next, dally is next, I'm Napoleon"
― nabisco, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:03 (seventeen years ago)
"ILX protected me"
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:03 (seventeen years ago)
"Sometimes you just gotta Controversial Moderator Edit on someone's ass"
― Just got offed, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:05 (seventeen years ago)
when we did the religion/atheism poll, didn't it turn out that like 80% of ILX didn't believe in God at all?
― milo z, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:05 (seventeen years ago)
yeah
― Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:05 (seventeen years ago)
dally believes in God less than any of us
― dan m, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:06 (seventeen years ago)
He thumbs his nose at Him daily, dally does
― Tom D., Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:07 (seventeen years ago)
"It was me, the gunman, and Luna in the Raggettstacks"
― nabisco, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:08 (seventeen years ago)
"It was me, the Hoover, and the OAPs"
― sexyDancer, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:11 (seventeen years ago)
"It was me, Colonel Mustard and the lead pipe."
― Ned Raggett, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:15 (seventeen years ago)
"It was me, Colonel Mustard and the crack pipe."
― Tom D., Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:16 (seventeen years ago)
"It was me, in praise of MUSTARD and the crack pipe."
― DJ Mencap, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 17:25 (seventeen years ago)
gosh I guess atheists can be violent crazed mass murderers too
― Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 19:44 (seventeen years ago)
also lolz I guess God can't shoot too straight, cuz shooter apparently did himself in with own gun
― Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 19:45 (seventeen years ago)
Ever heard of that book "She Said Yes?" Same syndrome going on here.
― dally, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 22:13 (seventeen years ago)
um, not really - since that woman WAS actually present at the scene and DID actually fire and has not written a book to capitalize on it (at least, not yet)
― Shakey Mo Collier, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 22:15 (seventeen years ago)
pipecock.jpg
― John Justen, Tuesday, 11 December 2007 22:25 (seventeen years ago)