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  • 12
    Apr
    2012
    5:13am, EDT

    Alleged Oakland Christian campus shooter One Goh says he is 'deeply sorry'

    Reuters

    One Goh is seen in this handout booking photo from the Alameda County Sheriffs Department released to Reuters April 3.

    By Alastair Jamieson, msnbc.com

    One Goh, the man charged with killing seven people at the Oikos University Christian college in Oakland, California, has said he is “deeply sorry” for the families of his victims, in an interview from jail.

    “Families are so angry with me,” he told CBS San Francisco at the Santa Rita Jail, Calif. “(But) if I tell them sorry, it doesn’t bring anybody back.”

    Follow @alastairjam


    Goh, 43, a native of South Korea and former student at the school, has been charged with seven counts of murder and three counts of attempted murder at the Oikos University – the deadliest U.S. campus attack since the shooting at Virginia Tech in 2007. He has not yet entered a plea.

    Police have said Goh was targeting an administrator who had been involved in his financial dispute with the school.

    When he learned she wasn't there, police say, he began shooting in classrooms. Police are also investigating whether Goh might have been seeking multiple targets.

    CBS San Francisco reporter Julie Goodrich said that as they spoke, Goh kept his head down. His eyes were bloodshot and at one point he started to cry, she said.

    She added that he spoke English clearly, despite accounts in the aftermath of the shootings that he had struggled with the language and was teased because of his lack of fluency.

    “I was studying to be a nurse … but it didn’t happen. It is complicated to explain,” he told her.

    Meanwhile, the director of the nursing program at Oikos college, said her students don't want to return to the classroom building where the shootings took place.

    Ellen Cervellon said Wednesday that nursing students at Oikos are still traumatized by the April 2 shooting and are looking for a new space off campus to hold classes. Instructors say they are not sure when classes will resume.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    62 comments

    I was studying to be a nurse … but it didn’t happen. It is complicated to explain,” he told her I'm sure the "christianity" part is a little murky too.

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    Explore related topics: college, korea, oakland, california, shoot, featured, oikos, one-goh
  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    4:23am, EDT

    Report: Oikos University shootings suspect 'can't deal with women'

    Reuters

    One Goh is seen in this handout booking photo from the Alameda County Sheriff's Department released to Reuters April 3, 2012. Goh, 43-years-old and a former student at Oikos University, is accused of killing seven people and wounding three in a shooting rampage at the small Christian college in Oakland on Monday.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    One Goh, the former student accused of shooting dead seven people at a small Christian college in Oakland, Calif., was consumed by an inability to get along with women, according to a report.

    The 43-year-old Korean-American, who had been expelled from Oikos University for "anger management" issues, had been cooperative since being taken into custody after Monday's shootings but was "not particularly remorseful," Oakland Police Chief Howard Jordan said Tuesday.


    He is expected to face charges from prosecutors Wednesday.

    About 1,000 people, including relatives and friends of the victims, gathered for a memorial service on Tuesday evening at the Allen Temple Baptist Church, where the congregation consists mainly of African-American and Korean-American worshippers. The service was conducted in both English and Korean.

    Many of the assembled wept quietly with hands clasped and heads bowed. Flowers were laid at the podium, where clergy from different faiths offered prayers. Some mourners swayed and waved their hands in the air and wiped tears from their eyes while hymns were sung.

    One of the speakers, Mayor Jean Quan, said the gun violence that shook Oakland this week could occur anywhere in America.

    "This is America, where you can find a gun easier than mental health services," she said.

    PhotoBlog: Tears, prayers at memorial service for victims of shooting

    Oikos, founded by a pastor from South Korea, serves about 100 students in a single building and has close links to the Korean-American Christian community.

    Oikos University shooting school catered to Koreans

    Goh's former nursing instructor, Romie Delariman, was quoted in the San Francisco Chronicle saying the student didn't fit in at a college where women make up the majority of the nursing faculty and student body.

    Behavioral problems
    Delariman described Goh as a good and eager student, but added, "He just can't deal with women. ... I always advised him, 'You go to school to learn, not to make friends.'"

    The teacher disputed accounts that Goh had been picked on due to his imperfect English, characterizing his problems as behavioral.

    In the deadliest campus shooting in five years, a former student opened fire at Oikos University in Oakland, Calif., Monday, killing at least seven people. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    "He can't get along with people," Delariman was quoted by the newspaper as saying. "If you say, 'How are you?' he'll say, 'Why? Don't I look OK? Did I do something to you?' "

    Oikos University shootings: Gunman targeted administrator

    Police on Tuesday said Goh’s intended target – a female administrator – escaped the shooting spree and remains alive.

    Three people wounded by Goh were released from an Oakland hospital by mid-morning on Tuesday.

    Goh surrendered at a Safeway grocery store several miles away.

    Reuters and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

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    1052 comments

    His traget a female administrator, but he shoots students instead. The actions of mad men never make any sense.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: shooting, california, campus, featured, crime-courts, oikos, one-goh
  • 3
    Apr
    2012
    4:41pm, EDT

    Oikos University shooting: Private Christian school catered to Koreans

    According to investigators, 43-year-old shooting suspect One Goh was upset with students at the because of the way he says he was treated when he enrolled at Oikos University two months ago. NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    By James Eng, NBC News

    Oikos University, the private college in Oakland, Calif., where authorities say an expelled student methodically gunned down seven people, caters to a fast-growing target market: Korean-American Christians.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    One L. Goh, 43, a South Korean national, had been a nursing student at Oikos. Oakland police do not have a precise motive yet, but they say the alleged gunman was upset with his former school, where he apparently had been teased over his poor English. He went hunting for a female administrator at the school on Monday and then opened fire on others when he couldn’t find her, according to police.

    Oikos, a one-building evangelical Christian college in an industrial park near Oakland’s airport, was founded in 2004 by the Rev. Jongin Kim of San Leandro, who remains the school’s president.

    According to its website, its mission is to “educate men and women to be the leaders to serve the church, local communities, and the world by using their learned skills and professions in the areas of biblical studies, music performance, Asian medicine and practical vocational nursing.”


    Oikos awards degrees in nursing, biblical studies, music, ministry, divinity and Asian medicine. It attracts mostly Korean Americans from the Bay Area as well as Koreans from abroad. Tuition runs between $2,200 and $3,100 per semester for most bachelor’s programs and students are required to attend church services.

    The school is one of about 1,400 institutions licensed by the California Bureau for Private Postsecondary Education, established in January 2010 within the Department of Consumer Affairs to oversee private postsecondary schools operating in California.

    Police: Oikos shooter targeted female administrator

    Bureau spokesman Russ Heimerich says the state has not received any merited complaints about Oikos. But he says the school’s nursing program, separately accredited by the Board of Vocational Nursing and Psychiatric Technicians, could be in hot water because its pass rate for the nursing exam is well below the state average of 75 percent. (Oikos’ nursing pass rate was 58 percent and 41 percent, respectively, for 2010 and 2011, Heimerich said.)

    “They are in jeopardy of having their accreditation altered in some way or withdrawn” if the school doesn’t bring up its pass rates, Heimerich told msnbc.com.

    NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports.

    It was not immediately clear how many students attend Oikos. The school's website lists about 50 instructors.

    Boyung Lee, associate professor of educational ministries at the Pacific School of Religion in Berkeley, says Oikos is among a number of theology-related schools catering to Korean-Americans that have sprung up in Los Angeles, Atlanta, northern New Jersey-New York and other places around the U.S. with sizable Korean-American populations.

    In South Korea, Christianity is the dominant religion; about 35 percent of the population are either Protestant or Catholic, Lee says.

    “In Korea getting into college is extremely competitive so a lot of parents send their kids abroad. We have this term called 'goose family,' where the father stays in Korea and makes money while the children and mom are abroad  for education,” Lee says.

    “Every parent wants their children to be fluent in English. Some parents may feel safe if their children are attending a school like Oikos because of its exclusive fundamentalist Christian environment.”

    Pyong Gap Min, a sociology professor at Queens College in New York, said about 60 percent of Korean immigrants in the U.S. are Protestant. "Korean immigrants have drawn largely from the Protestant segment of the population in Korea and many non-churchgoers in Korea attend Korean churches here," Min told msnbc.com by email. "But Korean protestantism is very interesting because they are heavily evangelically oriented.  They have sent  about 15,000 missionaries to all over the world.  This number is the second largest group in the world next to the U.S."

    Andrew Sung Park, a professor of theology and ethics at United Theological Seminary in Ohio, told CNN that most of 1.3 million Korean Americans are Christian and they generally subscribe to evangelical Protestantism.

    Jeff Chiu / AP

    An Oakland police officer walks outside of Oikos University in Oakland, Calif., Tuesday, a day after a deadly shooting.

    "There is a saying that when Koreans get together in the United States, they establish churches first," Park, who is Korean-American, told CNN. "Some other Asians are more concerned with businesses or finances, but Koreans care about religion and about Christianity."

    Kim, the school’s president, didn’t return media calls Tuesday, and Oakland police said the school is closed indefinitely. According to the Oakland Tribune, Kim is affiliated with the Praise God Korean Church in Oakland and is listed as the president of California Ezra Bible Academy in Sunnyvale.

    The term "oikos" is ancient Greek for household or family. In a statement on Oikos University's website Kim says the school’s main goal is “to foster spiritual Christian leaders who abide by God’s intentions and to expand God’s nation through them.”

    The statement adds:

    “To accomplish our mission, we actively seek out, educate and train students, ministers, teachers and church leaders to become more qualified leaders. Oikos University has rapidly grown in its quality and size to become an institution that contributes to and positively changes their surrounding environment--and the world in general.”

    The school’s “Doctrinal Statement” lists 11 fundamental beliefs, including the Bible, the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit. Number 11 on the list is Satan:

    "We believe the existence of a personal, malevolent being called Satan who acts as tempter and accuser, for whom the place of eternal punishment was prepared, where all who die outside of Christ shall be confined in conscious torment for eternity. He can be resisted by the believer through faith and reliance on the power of the Holy Spirit."

    “I was taken aback by how fundamentalist and conservative these systems are. I assume that those beliefs, doctrines were taught to students,” Lee said.  “I wonder whether such a system creates liberation among students.”

    Msnbc.com's James Eng contributed to this report.

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    105 comments

    Accreditation issues aside, if the gunman was belittled and expelled for poor English, it would seem the memo about Christian tolerance and forgiveness didn't make it all the way through the faculty and student body. Not that it excuses his actions, but ...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: religion, crime, korean, christianity, oikos
  • 3
    Apr
    2012
    6:14am, EDT

    Police: College shooter targeted female administrator

    NBC's Kristen Dahlgren reports on the deadliest campus shooting in five years

    By NBC News, msnbc.com staff and news services

    Updated at 12 p.m. ET: One Goh, the former Oikos University student accused of killing seven people at the college's campus in Oakland, Calif., told authorities he was upset with being expelled and had sought out a female college official who was not present, the city's police chief said Tuesday.


    Follow @msnbc_us

    Goh "then went through the entire building systematically and randomly shooting victims," Oakland Police Chief Howard Jordan said at a news conference.

    "We do know that he was upset at administrators at the school. We do know that he was upset with several students here because of the way he was treated when he was enrolled here two months ago," Jordan said.

    He said Goh, 43, had been teased. The South Korean national had been expelled, possibly for behavioral problems, according to Jordan.

    "They disrespected him, laughed at him. They made fun of his lack of English speaking skills. It made him feel isolated compared to the other students," Jordan said.

    Goh tried to find the female administrator and began shooting when he learned she wasn't there, Jordan said. The victims, who range in age from 21 to 40, were from various countries, including Nigeria, Nepal and the Philippines.


    Other reports indicated that Goh, who reportedly had been a nursing student, recently lost two family members and had debts.

    In Monday's rampage -- the deadliest U.S. campus shooting since the 2007 Virginia Tech killings -- one witness said Goh told students: "Get in line and I'm going to kill you all."

    Jordan said Goh first took a receptionist hostage and then went looking for a particular female administrator. He then took the receptionist into a classroom and, on realizing the administrator was not there, he shot the receptionist and lined students up against a wall.

    Goh surrendered Monday afternoon at a grocery store several miles away from the scene.

    Gunman kills 7 at small California university

    Three others were injured but suffered non-life-threatening injuries, police told NBC Bay Area.

    The station said at least one of the injured, a 19-year-old woman, was released from the hospital late Monday after suffering a gun shot wound to her arm.

    The San Francisco Chronicle said Goh's brother, U.S. Army Sgt. Su Wan Ko, died in March 2011 in a car crash in Virginia while on special forces training.

    It also reported that his mother, Oak Chul Kim, died a year ago in Seoul, where she moved after leaving Oakland, according to her former neighbors in Oakland.

    Rent owed
    The Chronicle said Goh used to live in Virginia, where records show a string of judgments against him, including an eviction from apartments in Hayes where he owed $1,300 back rent at the time he left.

    Records show federal tax demands were issued in 2006 and 2009 for a total of $23,000, although the newspaper said he had managed to repay some of the money.

    NBCSanDiego reported that Goh's parents lived in two different apartments in Chula Vista between 1998 and 2000, though exact details on the street locations of those homes remain unknown.

    Paul Singh, whose 19-year-old sister Devinder Kaur was shot in the arm during Monday's rampage, told Reuters that according to his sister, Goh was a former student who showed up to class for the first time in four months.

    "'Get in line and I'm going to kill you all,' is what he said this morning, my sister told me. They thought he was joking at first,'" Singh said.

    Tashi Wangchuk, whose wife attended the school and witnessed the shooting, said he was told by police that the gunman first shot a woman at the front desk, then continued shooting randomly in classrooms.

    Wangchuk said his wife was in her vocational nursing class when she heard gunshots. She locked the door and turned off the lights.

    The gunman "banged on the door several times and started shooting outside and left," he said. Wangchuk said no one was hurt inside his wife's classroom, but that the gunman shot out the glass in the door. He said she did not know the man.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    841 comments

    If you have problems in YOUR life, the answer is never to kill or hurt other people. I'm offended that the police would even mention that as a motive. He was just CRAZY!!

    Show more
    Explore related topics: army, shootings, oakland, california, campus, featured, oikos, one-goh
  • 2
    Apr
    2012
    4:58pm, EDT

    Gunman kills 7 at small California university

    KNTV

    A victim in the shootings at Oikos University in Oakland, Calif., is taken to an ambulance.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

     

    Updated at 9:45 p.m. ET: Officials on Monday evening identified the suspect arrested in the shootings at a small Christian college in California that killed seven and wounded three others earlier in the day as a 43-year-old Oakland resident.

    At a press briefing with Mayor Jean Quan and others, Police Chief Howard Jordan said suspect One L. Goh was in the custody of Oakland police in connection with Monday's shooting spree, an event that he described as "shocking" and "senseless."

    He said the police had not identified a motive, nor did the suspect have any known criminal history. He said Goh is a Korean national.
    “It's going to take us a few days to put the pieces together," Jordan said.


    Witnesses who were in the classroom at Oikos University where the shootings took place said the shooter first ordered students to line up against a wall and then pulled a handgun, the Oakland Tribune reported.

     

    "The people started running and he started shooting," said Gurpreet Sahota, who relayed an account to the Tribune from his sister-in-law, Dawinder Kaur, 19.

    Chief Jordan said the suspect apparently commandeered a victim's car and drove it to Alameda, where he turned himself in to police at a Safeway store, about five miles from the shootings.

    Soon after the shooting, heavily armed officers swarmed the school in a large industrial park near the Oakland airport and, for at least an hour, believed the gunman could still be inside.

    Art Richards said he was driving by the university on his way to pick up a friend when he spotted a woman hiding in the bushes and pulled over. When he approached her, she said, "I'm shot" and showed him her arm.

    "She had a piece of her arm hanging out," Richards said, noting that she was wounded near the elbow.

    As police arrived, Richards said he heard 10 gunshots coming from inside the building. The female victim told him that she saw the gunman shoot one person point-blank in the chest and one in the head.

    Tashi Wangchuk, whose wife attended the school and witnessed the shooting, said he was told by police that the gunman first shot a woman at the front desk, then continued shooting randomly in classrooms.

    Wangchuk said his wife, Dechen Wangzom, was in her vocational nursing class when she heard gunshots. She locked the door and turned off the lights, Wangchuk said he was told by his wife, who was still being questioned by police Monday afternoon.

    Jordan said that five of the victims were pronounced dead at the scene, and two others died after arriving at the hospital.

    Oakland, Calif. authorities provide the latest details of their investigation into a shooting at Oikos University.

    Jordan said that he understood that the three injured people were being treated for injuries that were not life-threatening.

    The suspect, identified by the school as an ex-nursing student at Oikos, had been absent for months before the shootings, according to students quoted by the Oakland Tribune. The school's director told the Tribune he was unsure if the man had been expelled or dropped out.

    A memorial service was planned for Tuesday afternoon at the Korean Methodist Church, according to Mayor Quan.

    Quan said grief counselors would be made available to the people affected by the shooting spree, but said that there was still a need for Korean-speaking counselors.

    On its web site, Oikos says it aims to provide "a Christian education based on solid Christian doctrine and ideology."

    The institution, established in 2008, does not appear on the U.S. Department of Education list of accredited post-secondary institutions and programs. It has California state accreditation to award degrees in theology, music, Asian medicine and nursing.

    Oikos' annual revenue hovers around $1 million a year, according to publicly-available 990 tax forms for non-profit organizations.

    The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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    1963 comments

    Five more victims of the second amendment. While advanced nations have a universal right to health care and strong restrictions on guns, the backward, United States has a universal right to own and use guns indiscriminately, while insurance company bureaucrats decide which Americans get treatment an …

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    Explore related topics: shooting, oakland, university, crime, korean, christian, oikos

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