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John Merlin TAYLOR
Classification: Murderer
Characteristics:
Parricide
- Postal killings
Number of victims: 3
Date of murder:
August 10,
1989
Date of birth: 1937
Victims profile: Elizabeth Taylor (his
wife) and Richard Berni, 38, and Ron
Williams, 56 (postal
co-workers)
Method of murder:
Shooting
Location: Escondido, California, USA
Status: Committed suicide
by shooting himself the same day
Shot his wife to death, then drove to work at a branch
post office where he opened fire and killed two co-workers before
shooting himself in the head.
Died the next day soon after relatives gave permission to discontinue
life support.
Shooting spree kills 3
Man opens fire in Escondido
San Jose Mercury News
10 August 1989
A postal employee
apparently shot his wife to death today, then drove to work at a branch
post office where he opened fire and killed two co-workers before
shooting himself in the head, police said.
The gunman, identified as John
Merlin Taylor, 52, had discussed just such a shooting spree two days
earlier, a friend said. The man carried a large stash of ammunition,
police said, and was apparently prepared for a siege.
Three slain in rampage by 'model'
mail carrier
San Jose Mercury News
11 August 1989
A career postal
worker described as an "exceptional employee" and model mail carrier
apparently shot his wife to death Thursday morning, then drove to a post
office and opened fire on his co-workers, killing two of them before
turning the gun on himself.
The gunman, John Merlin Taylor, 52,
was listed as brain dead late Thursday and was being sustained on life-support
systems, police in this northern San Diego County town said.
Gunman kills wife, co-workers, then
shoots self
Beacon Journal
11 August 1989
A letter carrier
armed with enough ammunition for an extended siege shot his wife to
death, then drove to a post office and killed two co-workers before
ending the spree with a gun blast to his head, police said.
John Merlin Taylor was brain-dead at
a hospital after the shootings at the Postal Service's Orange Glen
substation in downtown Escondido, Calif., officials said.
`He fired well over a dozen rounds
and there are expended cases all over the floor there,' said police.
Mailman kills wife, 2 co-workers,
self
Discussed '86 massacre earlier
Philadelphia Daily News
11 August 1989
A mailman who went on
a shooting spree at his post office, killing two co- workers before
shooting himself in the head, two days earlier had discussed a similar
1986 massacre that had taken place in Oklahoma.
Mail delivery was scheduled to
resume today for some 17,000 households served by the substation in
Orange Glen, where John Merlin Taylor opened fire yesterday. Several of
his co-workers say they're leery of returning.
Post Office shooting survivors are
aided
Gunman's motive remains mistery to
investigators
San Jose Mercury News
12 August 1989
Flags at San Diego
County post offices were lowered to half- staff and dozens of postal
workers rallied to help co- workers Friday, a day after a veteran mail
carrier went on a deadly shooting rampage.
John Merlin Taylor, 52, killed his
wife at the couple's home, then drove to work and opened fire on co-workers,
killing two and wounding two others, police said. The shooting barrage
ended when he shot and critically wounded himself, authorities said.
Mailman dies after killing 3 others
Philadelphia Inquirer
13 August 1989
The letter carrier
who killed his wife and two co-workers before ending the shooting spree
with a bullet to his head has died.
John Merlin Taylor, 52, died Friday
night at Palomar Medical Center, soon after relatives gave permission to
discontinue life support, hospital spokesman Alain Jourdier said.
Mail carrier who killed 3 grew up
with abusive dad
The Miami Herald
13 August 1989
A mail carrier who
killed himself after a shooting rampage last week that left his wife and
two co-workers dead grew up with an abusive father, a man shot dead in
the 1950s.
Postal worker in spree had roots on
Missouri, murder
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
14 August 1989
MOKANE, Mo. - For the
family here of John M. Taylor, the California postal worker who shot and
killed his wife and two others before killing himself Thursday, violence
and tragedy are all too familiar.
Taylor's shooting spree came 31
years after his sister Jo Ann, then 17, shot and killed her father,
saying he had abused her and her mother and had threatened the family
with death.
Toxicology tests
San Jose Mercury News
15 August 1989
Toxicology tests were
performed Monday in San Diego on the body of a postal carrier who
fatally shot himself after killing his wife and two co-workers in a
rampage that has left authorities still searching for a motive. An
autopsy on the body of John Merlin Taylor revealed that he died of a
single gunshot wound to the head, said Deputy Coroner Cal Vine.
Suicide note
San Jose Mercury News
24 August 1989
A possible suicide
note apparently written by a postal carrier before he fatally shot his
wife and two co-workers is undergoing handwriting and fingerprint
analysis, Escondido police say. The undated note, addressed to John
Merlin Taylor's two adult sons from his first marriage, talks about "hurting"
and "being ready to go," a newspaper reported today. The handwritten
note, which was signed only "your old Dad," also suggests that
unidentified persons "have given me a reason" for the Aug. 10 shooting
spree.
Three slain in rampage by 'model' mail carrier
A career postal worker described as an "exceptional
employee" and model mail carrier apparently shot his wife to death
Thursday morning, then drove to a post office and opened fire on his co-workers,
killing two of them before turning the gun on himself.
The gunman, John Merlin Taylor, 52, was listed as
brain dead late Thursday and was being sustained on life-support systems,
police in this northern San Diego County town said.
There was no apparent motive for the rampage, which
also left two employees injured and happened as postal workers were
readying for the day's business around 7:30 a.m.
''We believe he fired indiscriminately and randomly,"
said Police Chief Vincent Jimno, adding that 15 to 20 shots from a .22-caliber
automatic were fired in the post office as workers dived for cover.
Only two days earlier, Taylor had joked with co-worker
Johnny Sims about a 1986 shooting spree in a post office in Edmond, Okla.,
where a disgruntled employee killed 14 fellow workers and injured six
others.
''You gotta watch for those postal carriers," Sims
said Taylor told him. "You never know when they are going to go crazy
and shoot you."
Investigators could not determine Thursday whether
Taylor's comments indicated he was preparing a similar assault. "We do
not know if it had any meaning in this particular case," Chief Jimno
said.
The two people killed in the attack were among
Taylor's closest friends: postal workers Richard Berni, 38, and Ron
Williams, 56. They died at a picnic table outside the Orange Glen Post
Office where Taylor often joined them for coffee and cigarettes before
the morning mail rounds.
Taylor's wife, Elizabeth, was found in her bed at the
nearby Taylor home by police who went to investigate a motive for the
shootings.
Taylor's wife, who was in her early 50s, was shot
twice in the head at close range and apparently did not struggle,
investigators said.
Police said that Taylor drove his 1974 Plymouth
Duster to the post office. Dressed in his postal blues, he opened fire
on Williams, a 20-year postal service veteran, and shot him in the head,
police said. Berni, a father of three young children and a Little League
baseball coach, was hit in the upper chest, detectives said.
Taylor -- described as a "merry mailman" who was
beloved on his postal route -- then jumped onto the loading deck and
entered the post office with his revolver drawn, witnesses said.
''Don't go out there; he's got a gun," an employee
reportedly yelled as postmaster Bob Henley came out of his office after
hearing gunshots.
Shot in shoulder
By then, postal clerk Paul DeRisi had been confronted
by Taylor and was holding his shoulder after being shot.
''I was stunned," DeRisi said later at his home. "He
missed on his first shot and I didn't realize I was hit by the second
until I saw the blood. I took off for outside."
Taylor then turned and headed toward Henley's office,
the postmaster said.
''Mr. Taylor pointed in my direction and shot,"
Henley said. "At the time he said, 'I'm not going to shoot you.' I don't
know if he was talking to me."
Henley rushed into his office, locked the door, and
called police. Meanwhile, the 10 employees in the building ran for cover,
witnesses said. One female worker suffered a broken nose after falling
down a flight of stairs while fleeing, police said.
After shooting at the walls and ceilings, Taylor then
shot himself in the head in front of a drinking fountain, police said.
An employee felt for a pulse, and when he saw that Taylor was still
alive, he took the gun from Taylor, police said.
Two near-empty ammunition magazines were found near
Taylor.
Trying to find a reason
Postal workers huddled and hugged one another outside
the post office Thursday and tried to find a reason why Taylor would
have fired upon his family and friends.
Taylor was recently a candidate for an award -- the
postal worker of the quarter. He had received numerous commendations for
his work and was never any trouble, postal officials said.
''If all my employees were as good as him, I'd be
postmaster general by now," Henley said, shaking his head in disbelief.
"He was an exceptional employee." ''I sat outside near a store and
wondered why would Taylor do this," DeRisi said later, nursing his
shoulder wound. "I just couldn't figure it out. He was a model carrier."
Neighbors described the Taylor's as a quiet couple
who loved dancing. The Taylor's had lived in their ranch-style house for
more than a decade, neighbors said. Taylor had five children by a
previous marriage and one stepson, neighbors said.
Demeanor had changed
Taylor enjoyed tinkering with his lawn and was
usually pleasant, neighbors said. But neighbors told police that
recently Taylor's easy-going demeanor had changed.
''There was increased paranoia on his part, but very
moderate," Chief Jimno said. "He seemed a little on the grouchy side."
A decision on how long Taylor will remain on life-support
will be made by doctors, Jimno said. Meanwhile, police plan to continue
their investigation and hope to determine what drove Taylor mad.
''It's real uncomfortable for us because we do not
have a rationale for the shooting," Jimno said. "We are at a loss to
explain why."