
R.I.P Dimebag. You'll be remembered.
Dime and my Brother |

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News article.
Dimebag Darrell, guitarist for Damageplan
and Pantera, was killed during a shooting spree at a Columbus, Ohio, nightclub Wednesday night. He was 38.
Darrell,
real name Darrell Abbott, was among the five people killed during the incident. Aldead
are the gunman, 25-year-old Nathan Gale of nearby Marysville, Ohio; Damageplan bodyguard Jeff Thompson, 40; fan Nathan Bray,
23; and Erin Halk, 29, who worked at the club. Gale also wounded three people.
Damageplan had just begun their first
song in front of approximately 250 people at Alrosa Villa when the gunman jumped onstage, made a comment about Pantera, and
began firing at close range into Darrell's body, shooting him several times before opening fire on the crowd A patrol officer
nearby, James Niggemeyer, heard the call of shots fired at 10:18 p.m. and by 10:20 p.m. had snuck inside the club through
a back door, according to public information officer Sergeant Brent Mull. After entering, Niggemeyer, who had no backup, confronted
the gunman onstage, where he observed one victim and Gale holding a hostage by the neck.
"The officer was able to strategically
gun this guy down before he was able to kill his hostage, and it appeared that he was about to kill his hostage," Mull said
at a press conference Thursday (December 9). "The suspect had the hostage in a headlock situation and had his firearm out
shooting, and it's believed he was about to take his gun to the hostage."
But the hostage wriggled out of the way slightly,
Mull said, and the officer was able to kill the shooter with a single shotgun blast as the hostage escaped uninjured. Police
said Gale, whose arrest record lists him as 6 feet 3 inches tall and 225 pounds, used a Beretta 9 mm semiautomatic handgun
and reloaded once during the shooting. Gale's prior arrests were all nonviolent, and included driving with a suspended license
and trespassing.
Police have not confirmed the names of the three wounded victims, but the club's manager told the
Dispatch that one of them was a security guard who had tried to wrestle the attacker's gun away. Damageplan reps say
the other two wounded were tour manager Chris Paluska, who is in critical but stable condition, and drum tech John "Kat" Brooks,
who was scheduled to be released from the hospital Friday.
"If the officer hadn't acted when he did and how he did,
we'd probably be looking at more dead, because this guy was actively shooting," Mull said. Following the incident, police
took more than 200 patrons onto three city-donated buses, where they were interviewed by some 60 police detectives.
"The
ones that were inside and witnessed this ran for their lives and were in fear for their lives," Mull said. "They are victims
too, and we want to take care of them."
In 911 tapes released Thursday, one caller tells the operator, "There's been
a shooting! Somebody's shooting! He's shooting the band, oh sh--, he's still shooting!" Another is heard frantically telling
the 911 operator, "We need to get out, we need to get out! I can't, I can't get out."
One concertgoer, his jeans torn
and soaked with blood, told CNN he jumped onstage and attempted to give Darrell CPR before paramedics arrived.
Police
have interviewed friends and relatives of the shooter, attempting to establish a motive for his actions. "We may never know
the motive for this," Mull said, "unless he left a note somewhere else."
One eyewitness, 37-year-old food vendor Medhat
Mokhtar, told MTV News that he saw Gale lingering outside the club prior to Damageplan's set. Gale paced near Mokhtar's food
cart and only entered the club when Damageplan's performance began. Shortly thereafter, Mokhtar noticed concertgoers fleeing
the club and screaming, and the vendor headed inside to see what the disturbance was. He said he then made his way to the
stage where a crowd had gathered around the wounded Darrell. "I tried to push them away, but people loved him too much. The
people were kissing his hands and his feet and trying to give him CPR," Mokhtar said.
Searching Gale's residence is
the next step of the investigation, as is analyzing amateur video footage taken of the incident, which homicide investigators
are looking at now, Mull said. The venue had no surveillance footage. Mull also said he had been told there was no metal detector
at the club, though he could not confirm that at press time and a club spokesperson could not be reached.

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He was one of the best metal guitarists around. |
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