The following articles are copied from the website of www.religioustolerance.org.
1974-JUN: church killing in Atlanta, GA:
Mrs. Alberta Christine Williams King (1903-1974) was the daughter and mother of Christian ministers. She was also the wife of Martin Luther King Sr. Mrs. King was the musical director at Ebenezer Baptist Church in Atlanta, GA, from 1932 until her death. Marcus Chennault (1951-1995) of Dayton OH murdered her during a Sunday church service. He was described as a "young black man", 3 and a "deranged gunman." He "stood up from a pew inside the church as she played "The Lord's Prayer," and shot her. 4 Edward Boykin, a church deacon, was also killed; another man in the congregation was wounded. 3 The gunman's original goal was to kill Martin Luther King Sr. Chennault believed that black Christian ministers were deceiving African-Americans. He was convicted and sentenced to death. His sentence was later commuted to life in prison.
1980-JUN: church killing in Daingerfield, TX:
Alvin Lee King, was an apparently mentally unstable individual who was an Atheist, held a PhD in psychology, and appeared to be prone to committing criminal acts. In 1996, he accidentally killed his father with a shotgun. One week before going to trial on a charge of allegedly molesting his daughter, he tied his wife to the kitchen table, dressed in a military uniform, picked up rifles and pistols, went to the First Baptist Church, entered the church, and yelled "This is war." Within ten seconds, he had killed five parishioners (one child of 7, three men and one woman). 12 were wounded (some sources say 10 or 11). Some men in the congregation pushed King out of the sanctuary; some died while doing this. King ran to a fire station and shot himself in the head. This first attempt at suicide was unsuccessful. He was arrested. Two years later, he hung himself in jail. He never went to trial.
In an eerily strange coincidence, some young people at the church had organized a demonstration a few weeks before the tragedy. They dressed in military clothing and carried rifles into the church, pretending to be communists who were there to outlaw Christianity. They took people captive, removed them from the room and pretended to shoot them. When King broke into the service, some of the parishioners thought that the youth play was being repeated.
1999-MAR: church killing in Gonzales, LA:
Shon Miller Sr., 22, allegedly killed his mother-in-law, Mildred Vessel. He then went to his wife's church during the Wednesday night service. "He first shot two bullets straight up, then told everyone to get down as he headed deliberately to the front in search of his estranged wife. He found her on the fourth row." He killed his wife, Carla Vessel Miller and his son Shon Miller Jr. Finally he started shooting at random, killing another parishioner and wounding four others. He calmly stopped to reload in the middle of the killing spree. The suspect was later shot and wounded by police. He was paralyzed by one of the bullets. Church leaders said that they will never use the building again.
1999-JUL: church killing in Bloomington, IN:
On 1999-JUL-3/4, a senior member of the Creativity Movement (formerly called the World Church of the Creator W.C.O.T.C.), Benjamin Nathaniel Smith, went on a shooting rampage through the mid-west, killing one African-American and one Korean-American. Six orthodox Jews and three African-Americans were wounded. Smith then committed suicide. His church organization promotes a plan whereby whites would take over the world. Their slogan is RAHOWA (RAcial HOly WAr). They teach hatred of Jews, gays, lesbians, African-Americans and all other non-whites. But when one of their members murders or assaults a member of a racial minority, they claim that they do not promote violence, and thus are in no way responsible for the attacks. Matt Hale, head of the W.C.O.T.C, was asked what he had to say to Smith's surviving victims and the families of the people who died, he commented: "We really just don't have anything to say to them. And that's part of our church. We do not socialize with the other races."
The Korean-American murder victim was Won-Joon Yoon, age 26. He was shot on JUL-4 outside his church in Bloomington IN. He would have begun his doctorate in economics at Indiana University in the fall of 1999.
The mayor of Bloomington, John Fernandez, spoke at Won-Joon's funeral. He said, in part: "Mr. Yoon [Sr.] asks a very poignant question, and people have been contemplating for some time as to how America is being torn apart. I believe that an equally important question to ask is, 'What are we doing to hold it together?'...To keep our country from being torn apart by racial hatred, we must act, to continue to send the message of tolerance and peace in a nonviolent and dignified way."
The Anti-Defamation League had monitored Benjamin Smith for over a year prior to his rampage. Spokesperson Harlan Loeb, said: "His rhetoric was fairly inflammatory, but until this episode, it was substantially rhetoric. What it tells you is the consequences of words can be fairly significant, the consequences of hate and screed can be very, very destructive." 11
Won-Joon Yoon was killed by a stranger because of his race. It is possible that the murderer drove to the Korean Church in the hopes of targeting Korean-American individuals. There appears to have been no religious component to this murder. It could have happened at a Korean community center, or on any street that Won-Joon Yoon happened to be walking beside. This was a killing motivated by racism, not a religious hate crime.
1999-SEP: church killing in Ft. Worth, TX:
Since this was the worst church shooting in U.S. history, and the most recent, we are covering it in greater detail.
What happened at the church: On 1999-SEP-15, Larry Gene Ashbrook, walked into the Wedgwood Baptist Church in southwest Fort Worth TX. An evening youth rally and concert was in progress. It was intended to be a follow-up event for students who had taken part in the See You at the Pole public school prayer event that morning. About 150 young people from throughout the Fort Worth area were in attendance. A Christian rock group was playing.
Ashbrook was carrying two guns. He opened fire with one, killing 6 and wounding 8 persons. He then set off a pipe bomb. Some media accounts state that the bottom fell off the bomb and it did not detonate. Actually, the pipe did explode, but the shrapnel landed harmlessly in the balcony. Hearing the approaching police sirens, he sat down in a pew and killed himself. One of the wounded victims, a teenager, later died in hospital. The victims were: Kristi Beckel, 14; Shawn Brown, 23; Sydney Browning, 36; Joseph Ennis, 14; Cassandra Griffin, 14; Susan 'Kim' Jones, 23; and Justin Ray, 17. 13 Justin Laird was one of the wounded; he was permanently paralyzed below the waist by the killer.
Witnesses have stated that the shooter was angrily spouting anti-Baptist rhetoric during the rampage.
2003-MAR: church killing in Rochester Hills, MI:
One man shot another man, causing his death and minor injuries to seven other people who were hurt trying to flee the building. Apparently the alleged murderer and his victim had had a long standing dispute. The Rev. Anton Kqira said that the incident was "the result of a dispute between individuals." 15