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Re: StephanieVanbryce post# 223470

Saturday, 06/07/2014 4:28:05 PM

Saturday, June 07, 2014 4:28:05 PM

Post# of 479721
Georgia Courthouse Shooting Suspect Had Filed Complaint Against Sheriffs' Dept.


Police in Cumming, Georgia, say Dennis Marx, was armed with guns, explosives and other supplies when he shot and wounded a deputy outside a Georgia courthouse. He was equipped to take hostages once he got inside, officials said Friday.

By KATE BRUMBACK
Posted: 06/06/2014 5:08 pm EDT Updated: 06/06/2014 6:59 pm EDT

CUMMING, Ga. (AP) — A lawyer says the man accused of shooting and wounding a deputy outside a Georgia courthouse had reached a plea deal in a drug case and had been set to plead guilty the morning of his attack.

Dennis Marx had been due in court Friday morning on charges related to his arrest in August 2011. He had been charged with selling marijuana, firearm possession during a felony and other counts.

That same month, authorities filed court papers seeking to seize two dozen handguns and rifles, 71 gun magazines and $24,311 in cash from Marx. The attorney who represented Marx in the civil seizure case, Richard Grossman, says officers found the weapons cache after an undercover officer bought drugs from Marx.

Grossman says another attorney negotiated a "very favorable" plea deal for Marx.

© 2014 Associated Press

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/06/06/dennis-marx_n_5462287.html [with embedded video report; no comments yet]


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Authorities: Georgia courthouse attacker prepared to inflict mayhem

By Greg Botelho, Eliott C. McLaughlin and Jason Hanna, CNN
updated 11:28 PM EDT, Fri June 6, 2014

(CNN) -- Dennis Marx wore body armor and a gas mask. He brandished an assault rifle, an assortment of grenades, "all kinds of ammunition" and even used his silver Nissan SUV as a weapon of sorts, according to authorities. The 48-year-old man toted his own water supply and flexible handcuffs, presumably to corral hostages once he got inside the north Georgia courthouse.

As Forsyth County Sheriff Duane Piper said, "He came prepared to do this."

But Dennis Marx never even made it inside.

A nearly three-minute long gunfight Friday ended with Marx dead, after being confronted by a swarm of law enforcement officers.

They seemingly came from everywhere -- from the jail across the street, as part of a SWAT team that happened to be nearby and even inside the courthouse where they busted out windows in order to get more angles to target the attacked.

Piper singled out one officer in particular -- a veteran sheriff's deputy who first confronted Marx, who then tried to run the deputy over -- for his vital part in deterring the attacker. Shot twice in the leg, the deputy was the only person wounded despite what the sheriff called "a full frontal assault."

"It was very close to being a major catastrophe," Piper said. "The deputy that was shot ... averted what, I think, would have been a lot more deaths."

Swift, significant response to attack

Marx was supposed to be at the Forsyth County Courthouse in Cumming. Court documents show he faced 11 felony charges -- 10 of them related to the manufacture, possession and sale of illicit drugs, including marijuana, plus one count of having a firearm while in the commission of a felony -- dating back to August 2011.

According to the sheriff's office, he was expected to enter a plea Friday before Chief Superior Court Judge Jeffrey Bagley.

Needless to say, he never made it.

Instead, around 10 a.m. Friday, Marx drove up to the courthouse, threw out "homemade spike strips" to delay any police response, and tried to run over the deputy, Piper said.

The deputy -- a 30-year veteran whose duties include canvassing the scene outside the courthouse -- opened fire, and Marx returned fire through his windshield.

He didn't stop with bullets. According to the sheriff, Marx tossed tear gas grenades, smoke grenades and pepper spray grenades -- something he could do more easily with his gas mask strapped on.

Despite this barrage of weapons, the sheriff's deputy was able to distract Marx, to slow him. Even a little delay made a big difference, as officers armed with assault rifles came over from the jail across the street.

A SWAT team pulled up about 30 seconds into the firefight and engaged the attacker, according to Piper. The sheriff initially estimated the whole thing took 90 seconds but, after watching more video, he doubled that time.

However long it lasted, it ended with Marx dead of multiple gunshot wounds.

With eight officers opening fire at one point, authorities don't yet know which one of them fired the fatal shot.

'He was there to occupy the courthouse'

Afterward, the wounded deputy -- identified by local media as James Daniel Rush -- was transported to a local hospital.

There, the officer had surgery for fractures to his fibula and tibia in the lower right leg, injuries Piper said weren't life-threatening.

But his colleagues still had to work to do. They went to Marx's home in Cumming, a small city about 35 northeast of downtown Atlanta, with every expectation that it was booby trapped.

As Piper said: "Last time we were at the home, we were suspicious because it had been booby trapped before."

Once they finally made their way in and cleared the house, they found homemade explosives, according to a law enforcement source. It wasn't clear whether those were attempted booby traps.

A preliminary investigation found that Marx hadn't been in his Cumming home for about 10 days. Besides that, little is known about him beyond that he began working at the Transportation Security Administration in October 2002, according to a U.S. official, and left either the next year or in 2004.

The sheriff said Friday that he and others weren't ready yet to discuss Marx's motive or his thinking.

That said, Piper said it was evident that Marx "came prepared to stay a while."

"We don't know who he was coming to the courthouse for, but with the flex ties and the restraining devices he had with him," said the sheriff. "We have to assume that he was there to occupy the courthouse."

CNN's Pamela Brown, Aaron Cooper, Vivian Kuo, Marlena Baldacci, MaryLynn Ryan and Kevin Conlon contributed to this report.

© 2014 Cable News Network. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc.

http://www.cnn.com/2014/06/06/justice/georgia-courthouse-shooting/ [with multiple embedded video reports, and (over 23,000) comments]


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Dennis Ronald Marx: 5 Fast Facts You Need to Know

June 6, 2014
http://heavy.com/news/2014/06/dennis-ronald-marx-forsyth-county-georgia-courthouse-shooting/ [no comments yet]


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Entitled manchildren magazine



Jun 04, 2014

http://www.dailykos.com/story/2014/06/04/1303869/-Cartoon-Entitled-manchildren-magazine [with comments]


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Greensburg, KS - 5/4/07

"Eternal vigilance is the price of Liberty."
from John Philpot Curran, Speech
upon the Right of Election, 1790


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