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Wilson added that when Lancer moved into the mobile park about a year ago, “The guy was very unstable,” and that both Wilsons and the Dobrzykowskis had recently experienced confrontations with the man who several neighbors described as “one of those doomsday preparation guys.” “My house took 11 bullets,” Lyle Wilson said, noting that he and his son both called 911 when the shooting broke out. Melissa Dobrzykowski said that on Friday, Lancer told her husband “… he thought there were helicopters overhead and people were watching.” The girl turned a light on, then with her father peeked through the blinds when a bullet tore through the screen, the window and the blinds – right between the heads of the father and the girl. Melissa Dobrzykowski, who lives at Lot 87 with her husband Kalyn Dobrrzykowski and four kids, said the sound of gunfire drew her daughter Alexis Heller, 13, to the window where she saw “flashes” of gunfire. Next door, a comet-shaped hole over the address number “75” was visible from where a bullet pierced the metal siding next to an open window.Īcross the street, the home on Lot 87 took six bullets to the exterior. Usually the walls go in and there’s nothing left standing.” “This one,” he added, “burnt very slow… and the shell’s still up. “The odd thing about that,” said Walsh, pulling from his experience as a former fire investigator, “is that the old style mobile homes, they go up in flames and they’re done, burnt to the ground. Two rifle shell casings that appeared to have exploded in the fire were picked up from the ground near a mobile home next door. A plywood wall left standing among the burned-out rubble was riddled with bullet holes, evidence of shots fired through the walls from inside the home. Sunday morning after the smoke had cleared from the fire with the odor of charred remains wafting in the air and a burnt motorcycle still sitting on the porch, neighbors milled around checking their own mobile homes for bullet holes. “If he comes out, I was going to shoot him.” “I had my gun drawn on (Lancer's) house,” Lyle Wilson said. I had no doubt what I was seeing.”īoth Wilson and his son said they grabbed their own guns in anticipation of the gunman emerging from his trailer. “We actually saw him firing at us, saw the bullets coming through a window. “He was just shooting wild,” Lyle Wilson said. Terry Walsh, a retired firefighter and fire inspector who lives across the roadway from the scene, said he thought he heard as many as “3,000 rounds exploding in the fire… I was sitting in my chair watching TV, and I thought I heard fireworks going off,” Walsh said.īut Lyle Wilson, who lives with his son Kyle two doors from Walsh, looked out his front door and saw the gunman firing at his mobile home through the living room window of Lancer’s trailer.
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“Handguns, rifles, all kinds of guns,” Lyle Wilson said. Kyle Wilson’s father, Lyle Wilson, added that police also pulled “three bags of guns” from the trailer. “He also had a cat,” neighbor Kyle Wilson said, adding that “Biggles” may have disappeared last week before the fatal fire Saturday night.
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Neighbors said the body of the man’s dog, an Akita called “Sammy,” was also removed from the charred rubble of the mobile home.