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An off-duty fireman himself, Frederick killed his wife
and set fire to his house, then he opened fire on arriving police and
firefighters, killing three.
Was shot and wounded by police.
Frederick Williams was found not guilty by reason of
insanity and returned to a secure state mental hospital.
Ambush at burning
house leaves 4 dead in Memphis
March 9, 2000
Firefighters
responding to a house fire Wednesday were ambushed by an off-duty
Memphis firefighter who stepped out of the garage and began shooting,
authorities said. Two firefighters and a sheriff's deputy were killed,
and a woman was found dead in the garage.
The suspected gunman, Fred Williams,
was wounded and was undergoing surgery, Police Director Walter E. Crews
said. A bystander also was wounded, but not seriously.
Firefighters, Deputy
died in ambush shooting
The Columbian
March 9, 2000
MEMPHIS -- When the
firefighters came to the burning home, they believed they were
responding to a routine alarm. Instead, authorities said, a fellow
firefighter burst out the garage firing a shotgun and screaming "Get
away! Get away!"
Suspect's file shows
troubled work past
The Commercial Appeal
9 March 2000
The man suspected of
killing two firefighters, a deputy and his recent bride Wednesday had
been a Memphis firefighter for six years. Frederick Williams had enjoyed
his job until recent personal problems developed, his brother, Larry
Williams, said Wednesday evening. He would not elaborate. "The Williams
family expesses its condolences for all families involved in this
tragedy," said Larry Williams.
Call for help erupts
in carnage;
ambush kills deputy, 2 firemen
Wounded suspect also a
firefighter; wife found dead
The Commercial Appeal
9 March 2000
A Memphis firefighter
just back from an unspecified leave for "assistance" emerged from a
burning home Wednesday to ambush and kill two Fire Department colleagues
and a sheriff's deputy, authorities said. Inside the Southeast Memphis
home, authorities discovered a fourth body, that of the man's wife of
less than a month.
Williams home
unstable, ex-husband says
The Commercial Appeal
10 March 2000
She liked picnics in
the park, taking the kids to Chuck E Cheese's, and working the sound
board during church services. And there was that crazy smile of hers.
Those are some of the things Herman Harrison Jr. said he remembers about
his former wife, 32-year-old Stacey Williams. The mail carrier was one
of four people killed Wednesday by a man police say was her second
husband, Frederick Williams, at their Southeast Memphis home.
Friend says Williams
took poison recently
The Commercial Appeal
10 March 2000
Four months before he
became the sole suspect in a fiery and deadly Hickory Hill ambush,
Frederick Williams may have tried to end his own life. He was at his
family's South Memphis home around Thanksgiving, when he ingested rat
poison, according to his neighbor and longtime friend, 63-year-old
Freeman Nelson. "You know, any time someone takes rat poison, they've
got to have troubles in their mind," Nelson said Thursday.
Suspect in fiery
melee had already risked gun rights
The Commercial Appeal
10 March 2000
As a defendant in a
domestic violence case, Frederick Williams may have been about to lose
his right to own firearms when he allegedly went on a shooting rampage
Wednesday. A 1996 amendment to the federal Gun Control Act prohibits
misdemeanor offenders in domestic violence cases from possessing guns
and ammunition. People under restraining orders for domestic violence
also are forbidden firearms.
"It doesn't matter if they've had (the
gun) a day or 20 years. That ends their firearm-ownership."
Firefighter charged
in 4 killings, confesses, police say
The Commercial Appeal
March 11, 2000
Memphis firefighter
Frederick Williams was charged Friday with murdering his wife, two Fire
Department colleagues and a sheriff's deputy. In addition to the four
first-degree murder charges, the 41-year-old Williams faces one count of
attempted murder and one count of aggravated arson. Investigators said
Williams made a confession during an interview from his hospital bed but
did not answer the question everyone wants to know: Why?
'I knew I was shot' - Victim
recalls rampage that left 4 dead
On her way to the bank, Debra Gatewood saw the smoke
dissipating into the warm air. Maybe the gray brick house was on fire.
Maybe someone was just grilling on a sunny March afternoon.
She slowed to U-turn speed and swung northward on
Germantown Road South to take another peek. That's when she knew that
somehow she'd have to call the Fire Department to alert them that the
house at 4217 Germantown Road S., at Bay Hollow Cove, was afire.
A couple in a blue car slowed too, and Gatewood asked
if they had a cellular phone, pointing now to the smoke across the
street. Sure, they said, they'd be glad to call.
It was just after noon on Wednesday, March 8. Within
minutes, the house would be engulfed in flames. An occupant inside,
Stacey Williams, was already dead from a gunshot wound. A sheriff's
deputy, Rupert Peete, would be shot to death in his marked cruiser. Two
firefighters, William Blakemore and Javier Lerma, would be ambushed and
killed immediately upon the arrival of their fire engine.
And Gatewood would be clutching her bloody, broken
jaw and taking cover behind a brick wall from a man carrying a shotgun.
There was no way to know that at first, of course.
Gatewood was simply a motorist who wanted to make sure that someone's
house didn't burn down. Other cars were stopping too, as she approached
the house and saw the front window panes crackling and shattering from
the heat. She warned people away:
"No! Don't get near the house, because it's liable to
explode! And you don't want to be there. Just back up! I've already
called the Fire Department," she recalled Monday during an interview
with The Commercial Appeal, her first public account of the shooting.
"About that time, I remember hearing these guys that
were in the cove, right there where the carport was, and they yelled, `There's
a guy in the carport! And he said he just wants to be left alone! Just
leave him alone!' "
The man who wanted to be left alone was Frederick
Williams, Stacey's husband, a firefighter who had called in sick two
days earlier.
Gatewood didn't see him at first. He was hiding in
the shadows of the carport, waiting for the fire trucks to arrive. Now
she sensed something far more ominous than a fire.
"I said if there's a guy in the carport, we need to
get away, just back off away from him. So we started across the street.
We had already gotten completely across the street when the police car
drove by," she said.
The police car was a green and white Shelby County
sheriff's cruiser driven by Peete. He had been on his way to a theft
call.
"And he stopped, and I knocked on his window. And he
rolled his window down. And I said, `There's a man in the carport, and
he says he just wants to be left alone.' I said, `Be careful.' "
Gatewood turned to hustle away from the burning house
and the mysterious man inside its garage. She headed toward the blue car
that belonged to the couple with the cell phone.
Then she was crashing into the asphalt.
The man with the cell phone - she never got his name
- yelled that the deputy had been shot. Gatewood felt her jaw and knew
that she'd been shot too. She remembers catching a glimpse of the man
with the long gun moving into shooting position.
"I'm holding my mouth. I knew I was shot. I knew that
all my teeth were out on this side. I didn't know the severity of it.
But I knew I could walk and move around and that kind of stuff. So the
guy that had the cell phone, he turned around and called 911 and he told
them that the police officer had just been shot, that we needed an
ambulance, that I'd been shot."
Gatewood and the couple in the blue car dashed across
the front yard of 4222 Germantown Road S., a neat brick home with a
carefully landscaped yard. They took cover in the small entryway,
beating on the front door. The man with the cell phone was relaying
everything he saw to the 911 operator.
By now, the occupant of the house had locked the door
while the gunfire was erupting across the street, so Gatewood and the
couple were pinned down. The man on the cell phone, peeking around the
corner of the brick wall, told her that the firefighters had been shot.
Then she remembers Williams started shooting from across the street -
toward her.
"He was coming toward us. And we were scared to death.
We thought he was coming."
Meantime, the normal daily traffic on this busy two-lane
suburban street continued to flow past, some slowing to look at the
smoke and the flames. People were screaming at the drivers to get out of
the way. A Memphis police car roared up. Within moments, Williams was
down, his body jerking on the unkempt lawn of the burning home. He'd
been felled by gunshots from law-enforcement officers.
Gatewood ran toward a parked truck and asked someone
to place a call for her, so she could tell her son she'd been shot.
Gatewood, a 46-year-old Home Depot employee, is still
at home recuperating, a mile from the shooting scene.
Williams has been recuperating too, in the prison
ward of the Regional Medical Center at Memphis, charged with four counts
of murder, one count of attempted murder and one count of aggravated
arson.
Gatewood's jaw will be wired shut for six weeks, and
she'll require plastic surgery to minimize the damage to her face.
She's matter of fact about the events of March 8. She
knows that she was inches from death. She's appreciative of the
abundance of prayers made in her behalf and the scores of phone calls
from friends.
She says her doctors aren't sure what's causing the
hot sweats across her back and the clammy feeling that creeps along her
arms.
"I just really want to go on, with whatever. And get
it past, behind me. There's not a whole lot more that I remember than I
did when I told the police officer the very first day.
"I feel sorry for the people that died in it. I feel
sorry for the woman across the street that got scared and wouldn't let
us in. I don't have anything against the guy who did this. Maybe I
should, but I don't. The man had to have had problems somehow. That's
just the way I am. I don't hold anything against that situation.
"I just want to go back, go on to work and try to
forget everything. And go on with my day."
Former Memphis Firefighter Found "Not Guilty
By Reason Of Insanity" for Killing Four
myeyewitnessnews.com
5/22/2006
A former Memphis firefighter accused of
murdering two firefighters, a Sheriff’s Deputy and his wife in March of
2000 is found "not guilty by reason of insanity" Monday afternoon in a
Memphis court. Fred Williams has said in the past to a judge that he is
the "son of God" and that a "New World Order" has implanted a microchip
in his body to spy on him.
Fred Williams has been
in a state mental hospital for three years, after being diagnosed as
depressed, psychotic and delusional. Stacey Williams [his wife],
firefighters Javier Lerma and William Blakemore and Deputy Rupert Peete,
Jr. were killed in March 2000 at Fred Williams’ home. Investigators say
he set the fire then started shooting people as they arrived to put out
the fire.