Police in the United States say they have shot down a serial killer terrorized the city in South Carolina.
Patrick Tracy Burris, 41, was killed during an attempted burglary of 30 miles (48 kilometers) of Gaffney, South Carolina.
Bullets in his gun with the reports of murders, in which five persons residing in Gaffney turned in a few days of each other.
Burris said police had a criminal record and was released on parole after eight years in April.
"Look at this," State Law Enforcement Division (SLED) Chief Reggie Lloyd told a press conference, brandishing a copy of Burris' criminal record.
"It's like 25 pages. At a certain point the criminal justice system is to explain why the suspect was on the road. "
Previous Burris also against theft, forgery and burglary in several states in the southern United States.
The police, they do not yet know the motive for the killings.
"It is unpredictable. It was scary. It was strange," the deputy director of the sled, Neil Dolan, was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.
"We have him. It is our serial killers," said Dolan.
The killings all over six days, within 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the other in Cherokee County, a rural community about 50 miles west of Charlotte, North Carolina.
Patrick Tracy Burris, 41, was killed during an attempted burglary of 30 miles (48 kilometers) of Gaffney, South Carolina.
Bullets in his gun with the reports of murders, in which five persons residing in Gaffney turned in a few days of each other.
Burris said police had a criminal record and was released on parole after eight years in April.
"Look at this," State Law Enforcement Division (SLED) Chief Reggie Lloyd told a press conference, brandishing a copy of Burris' criminal record.
"It's like 25 pages. At a certain point the criminal justice system is to explain why the suspect was on the road. "
Previous Burris also against theft, forgery and burglary in several states in the southern United States.
The police, they do not yet know the motive for the killings.
"It is unpredictable. It was scary. It was strange," the deputy director of the sled, Neil Dolan, was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.
"We have him. It is our serial killers," said Dolan.
The killings all over six days, within 10 miles (16 kilometers) from the other in Cherokee County, a rural community about 50 miles west of Charlotte, North Carolina.
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