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Gabriella Borter

Manhunt for US mass shooting suspect enters second day

Residents in Maine are being told to shelter in place as the manhunt for a mass shooter continues. (AP PHOTO)

Police in Maine have extended their round-the-clock search for a mass shooter suspected of killing 18 people and wounding 13 more in Lewiston as the United States Army reservist eludes a manhunt.

As officials urged people to stay indoors for their safety, part of the search played out on live television on Thursday night as officials executed several search warrants in the neighbouring town of Bowdoin where suspected mass shooter Robert R Card lived.

Law enforcement surrounded the rural home for more than two hours, with an FBI agent issuing orders over a bullhorn to "come out with your hands up" but apparently nobody was inside.

Law enforcement officers stand near armored and tactical vehicles
Police surrounded a home in Bowdoin, in Maine, where suspected mass shooter Robert R Card lived.

Police did not know if Card was inside when the operation began and the amplified messages were "standard search warrant announcements", a Maine Department of Public Safety spokesperson said, adding that officials were "doing their due diligence" in tracking down leads.

The town of Lewiston, a former textile hub of 38,000 people, and neighbouring communities were largely shut down on Thursday to enable hundreds of officers to conduct their search.

The city on the banks of the Androscoggin River went quiet, with almost no cars on the roads, and many downtown businesses closed. 

Rifle-toting security agents in bulletproof vests guarded the hospital where many of the shooting victims were taken.

Card, 40, is a sergeant at a nearby US Army reserve base who law enforcement officials said recently had been temporarily committed to a mental health facility.

Police circulated photographs of a bearded man in a brown hooded sweatshirt and jeans at one of the crime scenes armed with what appeared to be a semi-automatic rifle.

a photo of the mass shooting suspect at a bowling alley in Lewiston.
Police in Maine posted a photo of the mass shooting suspect at a bowling alley in Lewiston.

On the night of the shootings, Card's trail led to Lisbon, about 11km to the southeast, where Maine State Police found a white SUV they believe Card used to get away and parked at a boat launch on the river. 

Public records showed he has three watercraft registrations.

The bloodshed rattled towns throughout Androscoggin County that were under shelter-in-place orders as they joined the growing list of US communities to suffer from a gun massacre.

"It's a small town," said Ken Spalding of Lisbon. 

"You get to know everybody.

"But I had told my wife a couple of years ago, 'it's not if, my dear - it's when'.'"

The 18 fatalities are close to the annual number of homicides that normally occur in Maine, which has fluctuated between 16 and 29 since 2012, according to Maine State Police.

Hearts on a tree
The 18 shooting deaths are close to the annual number of homicides that normally occur in Maine.

The victims included Bill Young and his 14-year-old son Aaron who were shot and killed at the Just-In-Time Recreation bowling alley, Bill's brother Rob Young told Reuters.

Also among the dead was Bryan MacFarlane, 40, who was part of a group in the deaf community participating in a cornhole tournament at Schemengees Bar and Grille when he was killed, his sister Keri Brooks told CNN.

Guns are lightly regulated in Maine, where about half of all adults live in a household with a gun, according to a 2020 study by RAND Corporation. 

Maine does not require a permit to buy or carry a gun, and it does not have so-called "red flag" laws seen in some other states that allow law enforcement to temporarily disarm people deemed to be dangerous.

US Representative Jared Golden, a Democrat from Lewiston, told reporters he has reversed his opposition to an assault weapons ban as a result of the tragedy.

"I now call on the United States Congress to ban assault rifles, like the one used by the perpetrator of this mass killing my hometown," Golden told a news conference.

But Congress has been mostly unable to pass gun control, even after previous tragedies such as the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School where 20 children and six adults were gunned down.

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