Two men chased Texan church gunman

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Two men are being hailed as heroes for pursuing the gunman suspected of killing at least 26 people at a Texas church.
Johnnie Langendorff told local media he had chased the gunman after seeing "two men exchanging gunfire".
fled in his vehicle, the other gentleman came and said we need to pursue him," he said.
The attack happened at the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, a small town in Wilson County.
At least 26 people, aged from five to 72, were killed and 20 others were wounded when the gunman opened fire during Sunday service.
Among the shooting victims were 12 to 14 children, according to Wilson County Sheriff Joe Tackitt.
Speaking to local TV station Ksat.
com, Mr Langendorff said: "I pulled up to the intersection where the shooting happened.
I saw two men exchanging gunfire, the other being [a] citizen of the community.
"He came to my vehicle in distress with his weapon.
He explained very quickly what happened.
He got into the truck and I knew that it was time to go.
" He said the pair had driven at speeds of up to 95mph (153km/h) until the gunman lost control of his car and crashed.
"We led police to him," he said.
"Everybody else was headed to the church.
" The suspected gunman was later found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound inside his vehicle, police said.
The car contained several weapons.
No details have emerged about the man who pursued the gunman along with Mr Langendorff.
Mr Langendorff`s Facebook page has been inundated with messagesof support since the shooting.
One says: "God bless you, Johnnie.
You are a true American hero".
Officials confirmed the identity of the gunman on Monday as Devin Patrick Kelley, 26, of New Braunfels, TX.
The suspected attacker`s in-law relatives occasionally worshipped at the church, Sheriff Tackitt said, but were not there at the time.
Kelley is reported to have been discharged from the US air force in 2014 following a court martial for assaulting his wife and child.
The motive for the killings is not yet clear.
`Small community` Owen Amos, BBC News, Sutherland Springs, Texas At 1.
30, Chris Speer was still sitting on his porch in Sutherland Springs, sucking his cigarette in the dark.
Fourteen hours earlier he was in the same place, with his 11-month-old son, when he heard "close to 30 shots".
"Your first instinct, you`re out in the country, you think someone is shooting, practising," he says.
"But it was too close.
I knew something wasn`t right.
" He took his son inside.
"If I could have got my gun, I would have," he says.
"But when you`ve got a kid in your hands, I`m not risking it.
He wouldn`t let go.
" Chris didn`t know the attacker but he knew "a lot" of the victims.
"We`re a small community.
We band together.
But what doesn`t kill us makes us stronger.
" Texas Department of Public Safety regional director Freeman Martin said the attacker, dressed all in black and wearing a bulletproof vest, opened fire with a Ruger assault rifle outside the church at around 11:30 local time (17:30 GMT) and then went inside.
Mr Martin added: "We have multiple crime scenes.
We have the church, outside the church.
We have where the suspect`s vehicle was located.
" Governor Greg Abbott, who attended a candlelit vigil for the victims, said it was the worst mass shooting in the history of Texas.
"This will be a long, suffering mourning for those in pain," he said at a news conference on Sunday.
Meanwhile, President Donald Trump, on a tour of Asia, said guns were not to blame for the shooting.
"We have a lot of mental health problems in our country, but this isn`t a guns situation," he said.
The First Baptist Church`s pastor, Frank Pomeroy, told ABC News that his 14-year-old daughter, Annabelle, was among those killed.
Mr Pomeroy, who was in Oklahoma at the time of the attack, described her as "one very beautiful, special child" in a phone call to the television outlet.
At least 10 victims, including four children, were being treated at the University Health System in nearby San Antonio, the hospital said in a tweet.
Sheriff Joe Tackitt said authorities could not confirm the names of any victims yet as they continued to work through the crime scene.
Officials said 23 people were found dead inside the church while two people were fatally shot outside.
Another died in hospital, authorities said.
Sutherland Springs, which has a population of about 400, lies about 30 miles (50km) south-east of the city of San Antonio.
The shooting comes just a month after a gunman in Las Vegas opened fire on an outdoor music festival, killing 58 people and wounding hundreds in the deadliest mass shooting in recent US history.
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