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1999 Honolulu shootings

The 1999 Honolulu shootings or the Xerox murders were an incident of mass murder that occurred on November 2, 1999, in a Xerox Corporation building in Honolulu, Hawaii, United States. Service technician Byran Koji Uyesugi shot at eight people; wounding seven fatally (six co-workers and his supervisor). This was the worst mass shooting in the history of Hawaii.

1999 Honolulu shootings
Part of mass shootings in the United States
The Xerox building in the aftermath of the shootings
Location1200 N. Nimitz Highway
Honolulu, Hawaii 96817
United States
Coordinates21°19′12″N 157°52′35″W / 21.3200°N 157.8764°W / 21.3200; -157.8764Coordinates: 21°19′12″N 157°52′35″W / 21.3200°N 157.8764°W / 21.3200; -157.8764
DateNovember 2, 1999
8:00 a.m. (HST)
Attack type
Mass murder, Mass shooting
WeaponsGlock 17 handgun
Deaths7
Injured0
PerpetratorByran Uyesugi
MotiveRevenge
VerdictGuilty on all counts
ConvictionsJune 13, 2000
ChargesMurder, 1st Degree (1 count)
Attempted Murder, 2nd Degree (1 count)

Shooting

At 8:00 in the morning, Byran Koji Uyesugi, a service technician working at Xerox, opened fire inside the building with a semi-automatic pistol, killing his supervisor and six co-workers, and fired in the direction of another co-worker who fled the building. The eighth person escaped without injury.

After the shooting, Uyesugi fled in a company van, and by mid-morning, he was found sitting in the van near the Hawaii Nature Center in Makiki, above downtown Honolulu. He held a standoff with police that lasted for five hours, during which he brandished a pistol, read magazines and smoked cigarettes. Adding to the tension of the standoff, the Hawaii Nature Center was hosting thirty-five local school children, who were trapped inside without food or water. Uyesugi surrendered to police at approximately 3:00 p.m. HST.

Victims

  • Jason Balatico, 33
  • Ford Kanehira, 41
  • Ronald Kataoka, 50
  • Ronald Kawamae, 54
  • Melvin Lee, 58
  • Peter Mark, 46
  • John Sakamoto, 36[1][2]

Perpetrator

Born in Honolulu in 1959, Byran Koji Uyesugi grew up in the Nuuanu neighborhood. While attending Roosevelt High School, Uyesugi was a member of the school's Army JROTC chapter and the school's rifle team. Classmates remembered him as a quiet student who never got into trouble. According to his brother Dennis, Uyesugi crashed their father's car and hit his head on the windshield shortly after graduating high school in 1977; he was never the same afterwards.[3]

Uyesugi had been employed by Xerox as a technician since 1984. Among his hobbies was raising and breeding goldfish and koi, which he would sell to local pet stores. He had an extensive collection of firearms. At the time of the murders he had as many as 25 guns registered in his name, dating to 1982. Police also took eleven handguns, five rifles and two shotguns from Uyesugi's father.[4]

According to testimony from Uyesugi's father, Hiroyuki, Uyesugi was normal until he started working for Xerox in 1984. In 1988, Byran started to complain that he had a poking sensation in his head.[5][6][7]

After being transferred to another workgroup, Uyesugi began making unfounded accusations of harassment and product tampering against fellow repairmen. They had difficulty dealing with him. Former co-workers who knew him reported the other members of his team allegedly ostracized him, making him feel isolated and withdrawn. Uyesugi reportedly made threats against other co-workers' lives. In 1993, he was ordered to undergo psychiatric evaluation and anger management courses after he kicked in and damaged an elevator door. Uyesugi was arrested for third-degree criminal property damage.[4] Co-workers told Dr. Michael Welner, chairman of the Forensic Panel and the forensic psychiatrist who interviewed Uyesugi prior to trial, that as early as 1995, Uyesugi was openly talking of carrying out a mass shooting at the workplace were he to be fired.[4] He complained that his co-workers were engaged in patterns of harassment, backstabbing behavior, and spreading of rumors.[8]

In the period leading up to the shootings, Xerox management had become increasingly committed to phasing out the type of photocopier that Uyesugi serviced. He resisted learning the replacement machine, fearing that he could not keep up with its technical demands. After working around his refusal to train on the new machine, Uyesugi's manager insisted on November 1, 1999, that he would begin training the next day. In his interview with Dr. Michael Welner, who examined Uyesugi when the defendant brought an insanity defense, Uyesugi said he had believed that if he refused to take the training, management would fire him. He told Dr. Welner, "I decided to give them a reason to fire me."[8]

Trial and incarceration

Forty-year-old Byran Uyesugi's month-long trial began on May 15, 2000. He was charged with one count of murder in the first degree (count 1), seven counts of murder in the second degree (counts 2–8), and one count of attempted murder in the second degree (count 9).[1] Prior to the close of the trial, counts 2-8 were merged into count 1.

The Prosecuting Attorney of Honolulu Peter Carlisle and Deputy Prosecuting Attorneys Christopher Van Marter and Kevin Takata represented the State of Hawaii. Criminal Defense Attorneys Jerel Fonseca and Rodney Ching of the law firm Fonseca & Ching represented Uyesugi.

Uyesugi pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity and claimed that he felt like an outcast at work and that he feared his colleagues were conspiring to have him fired. Dr. Park Dietz and Dr. Daryl Matthews testified for the defense that he was insane, citing the delusions about how others were tampering with his fish. Lead prosecution expert witness Dr. Harold Hall testified that the Defendant fulfilled the criteria for a diagnosis of schizophrenia, but he did not meet the criteria for either insanity or extreme emotion or mental disturbance (EMED). Dr. Michael Welner testified for the prosecution that although Uyesugi had, in his opinion, schizophrenia, he carried out the shooting because he was angry that he would be fired for insubordination, and that his own account of conceallment before the crime demonstrated that he knew what he had done was wrong.[9]

On June 13, 2000, the jury rejected the insanity defense, finding Uyesugi guilty on count 1 for the seven murders and count 9 for the attempted murder. On August 8, 2000, Judge Marie N. Milks sentenced Uyesugi to life without the possibility of parole for count 1 and life with the possibility of parole on count 9, with the sentences to run consecutively. The court also ordered Uyesugi to pay $500 in restitution and $70,000 to the crime victim compensation fund.[10] Hawaii does not have the death penalty.[10] The parole board later ordered Uyesugi to serve a minimum term of 235 years in prison, the longest ever ordered for a Hawaii inmate.[11]

Uyesugi appealed his convictions.[10] In 2002, the State of Hawaii Supreme Court upheld Uyesugi's conviction.[12][13] In 2004, Uyesugi was considering fighting his conviction based on Rule 40, inadequate representation by his lawyers in his first trial.[14]

In 2005, Xerox and the hospital that examined Uyesugi settled a civil lawsuit brought by the families of the shooting victims. They believed that both parties had failed to take preventive action based on what they said were clear signs of Uyesugi's mental instability.[15]

As of October 10, 2017, Uyesugi was incarcerated at the Saguaro Correctional Center in Eloy, Arizona.[16]

Aftermath

Xerox vacated the premises at 1200 N. Nimitz Highway after the shooting. This facility was vacant until 2004, when the producers of the TV show Lost built a sound stage there to film indoor scenes.[17] Dal-Tile currently leases the property from the Weinberg Foundation for its tile and natural stone showroom.[18][19]

The state legislature passed a law[when?] that requires doctors to reveal information about the mental state of persons applying to buy guns.[20]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b Barayuga, Debra (November 9, 1999). "Grand jury indicts Uyesugi for first-degree murder". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  2. ^ Jaymes K. Song (November 2, 1999). "7 dead in Nimitz Hwy. Xerox shooting". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  3. ^ Donnelly, Christine (November 9, 1999). "'77 crash changed Uyesugi says defense attorney". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  4. ^ a b c Katherine Ramsland. "Psychiatry, the Law, and Depravity: Profile of Michael Welner, M.D. Chairman, The Forensic Panel". TruTV Crime Laboratory. Turner Broadcasting. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  5. ^ Barayuga, Debra; Tswei, Suzanne (May 26, 2000). "Uyesugi's father, brother tell of torment in his head", Honolulu Star-Bulletin.
  6. ^ Cole, William (January 17, 2001). "Uyesugi defends himself in lawsuit", Honolulu Advertiser.
  7. ^ Flowers, R. Barri (November 26, 2012). The Dynamics of Murder: Kill or Be Killed, CRC Press, pp. 258 - 261. ISBN 978-1439879733 Google Books. Retrieved February 4, 2014.
  8. ^ a b Welner, Michael (May 30, 2000). . Archived from the original on September 27, 2007. Retrieved January 26, 2013.
  9. ^ Suzanne Tswei (June 2, 2000). "Judge's leave to delay trial for one week". Honolulu Star-Bulletin. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  10. ^ a b c Tanya Bricking (July 1, 2001). "Uyesugi appeal likely to fail". Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  11. ^ Debra Barayuga (February 20, 2005). "Burglar gets life plus 120 years". Honolulu Star Bulletin. Retrieved October 10, 2017.
  12. ^ David Waite (December 27, 2002). "2 murder convictions upheld". Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  13. ^ "State v. Uyesugi, 100 Hawai'i 442, P.3d 843 (2002)". Retrieved October 10, 2017.
  14. ^ Ken Kobayashi (August 21, 2004). "Xerox killer Uyesugi may fight conviction". Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved May 4, 2009.
  15. ^ Ken Kobayashi (January 28, 2005). "Families of Uyesugi victims in confidential settlement of lawsuit". Honolulu Advertiser. Retrieved October 10, 2017.
  16. ^ "Hawaii SAVIN". Retrieved October 10, 2017.
  17. ^ Veitch, Kristin (October 16, 2004). . E! Online. Archived from the original on October 22, 2004.
  18. ^ "Tesla opening new location in former Xerox building in Honolulu". Pacific Business News. December 20, 2016. Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  19. ^ "Daltile Sales Service Center, Honolulu, HI". Retrieved June 20, 2018.
  20. ^ Takase, Cathy L. (February 1, 2007). "OIP Op. Ltr. No. 07-01" (PDF). Honolulu, HI, USA: Office of Information Practices, State of Hawaii. (PDF) from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved January 26, 2013.

External links

1999, honolulu, shootings, xerox, murders, were, incident, mass, murder, that, occurred, november, 1999, xerox, corporation, building, honolulu, hawaii, united, states, service, technician, byran, koji, uyesugi, shot, eight, people, wounding, seven, fatally, w. The 1999 Honolulu shootings or the Xerox murders were an incident of mass murder that occurred on November 2 1999 in a Xerox Corporation building in Honolulu Hawaii United States Service technician Byran Koji Uyesugi shot at eight people wounding seven fatally six co workers and his supervisor This was the worst mass shooting in the history of Hawaii 1999 Honolulu shootingsPart of mass shootings in the United StatesThe Xerox building in the aftermath of the shootingsLocation1200 N Nimitz Highway Honolulu Hawaii 96817 United StatesCoordinates21 19 12 N 157 52 35 W 21 3200 N 157 8764 W 21 3200 157 8764 Coordinates 21 19 12 N 157 52 35 W 21 3200 N 157 8764 W 21 3200 157 8764DateNovember 2 1999 8 00 a m HST Attack typeMass murder Mass shootingWeaponsGlock 17 handgunDeaths7Injured0PerpetratorByran UyesugiMotiveRevengeVerdictGuilty on all countsConvictionsJune 13 2000ChargesMurder 1st Degree 1 count Attempted Murder 2nd Degree 1 count Contents 1 Shooting 1 1 Victims 2 Perpetrator 3 Trial and incarceration 4 Aftermath 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksShooting EditAt 8 00 in the morning Byran Koji Uyesugi a service technician working at Xerox opened fire inside the building with a semi automatic pistol killing his supervisor and six co workers and fired in the direction of another co worker who fled the building The eighth person escaped without injury After the shooting Uyesugi fled in a company van and by mid morning he was found sitting in the van near the Hawaii Nature Center in Makiki above downtown Honolulu He held a standoff with police that lasted for five hours during which he brandished a pistol read magazines and smoked cigarettes Adding to the tension of the standoff the Hawaii Nature Center was hosting thirty five local school children who were trapped inside without food or water Uyesugi surrendered to police at approximately 3 00 p m HST Victims Edit Jason Balatico 33 Ford Kanehira 41 Ronald Kataoka 50 Ronald Kawamae 54 Melvin Lee 58 Peter Mark 46 John Sakamoto 36 1 2 Perpetrator EditBorn in Honolulu in 1959 Byran Koji Uyesugi grew up in the Nuuanu neighborhood While attending Roosevelt High School Uyesugi was a member of the school s Army JROTC chapter and the school s rifle team Classmates remembered him as a quiet student who never got into trouble According to his brother Dennis Uyesugi crashed their father s car and hit his head on the windshield shortly after graduating high school in 1977 he was never the same afterwards 3 Uyesugi had been employed by Xerox as a technician since 1984 Among his hobbies was raising and breeding goldfish and koi which he would sell to local pet stores He had an extensive collection of firearms At the time of the murders he had as many as 25 guns registered in his name dating to 1982 Police also took eleven handguns five rifles and two shotguns from Uyesugi s father 4 According to testimony from Uyesugi s father Hiroyuki Uyesugi was normal until he started working for Xerox in 1984 In 1988 Byran started to complain that he had a poking sensation in his head 5 6 7 After being transferred to another workgroup Uyesugi began making unfounded accusations of harassment and product tampering against fellow repairmen They had difficulty dealing with him Former co workers who knew him reported the other members of his team allegedly ostracized him making him feel isolated and withdrawn Uyesugi reportedly made threats against other co workers lives In 1993 he was ordered to undergo psychiatric evaluation and anger management courses after he kicked in and damaged an elevator door Uyesugi was arrested for third degree criminal property damage 4 Co workers told Dr Michael Welner chairman of the Forensic Panel and the forensic psychiatrist who interviewed Uyesugi prior to trial that as early as 1995 Uyesugi was openly talking of carrying out a mass shooting at the workplace were he to be fired 4 He complained that his co workers were engaged in patterns of harassment backstabbing behavior and spreading of rumors 8 In the period leading up to the shootings Xerox management had become increasingly committed to phasing out the type of photocopier that Uyesugi serviced He resisted learning the replacement machine fearing that he could not keep up with its technical demands After working around his refusal to train on the new machine Uyesugi s manager insisted on November 1 1999 that he would begin training the next day In his interview with Dr Michael Welner who examined Uyesugi when the defendant brought an insanity defense Uyesugi said he had believed that if he refused to take the training management would fire him He told Dr Welner I decided to give them a reason to fire me 8 Trial and incarceration EditForty year old Byran Uyesugi s month long trial began on May 15 2000 He was charged with one count of murder in the first degree count 1 seven counts of murder in the second degree counts 2 8 and one count of attempted murder in the second degree count 9 1 Prior to the close of the trial counts 2 8 were merged into count 1 The Prosecuting Attorney of Honolulu Peter Carlisle and Deputy Prosecuting Attorneys Christopher Van Marter and Kevin Takata represented the State of Hawaii Criminal Defense Attorneys Jerel Fonseca and Rodney Ching of the law firm Fonseca amp Ching represented Uyesugi Uyesugi pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity and claimed that he felt like an outcast at work and that he feared his colleagues were conspiring to have him fired Dr Park Dietz and Dr Daryl Matthews testified for the defense that he was insane citing the delusions about how others were tampering with his fish Lead prosecution expert witness Dr Harold Hall testified that the Defendant fulfilled the criteria for a diagnosis of schizophrenia but he did not meet the criteria for either insanity or extreme emotion or mental disturbance EMED Dr Michael Welner testified for the prosecution that although Uyesugi had in his opinion schizophrenia he carried out the shooting because he was angry that he would be fired for insubordination and that his own account of conceallment before the crime demonstrated that he knew what he had done was wrong 9 On June 13 2000 the jury rejected the insanity defense finding Uyesugi guilty on count 1 for the seven murders and count 9 for the attempted murder On August 8 2000 Judge Marie N Milks sentenced Uyesugi to life without the possibility of parole for count 1 and life with the possibility of parole on count 9 with the sentences to run consecutively The court also ordered Uyesugi to pay 500 in restitution and 70 000 to the crime victim compensation fund 10 Hawaii does not have the death penalty 10 The parole board later ordered Uyesugi to serve a minimum term of 235 years in prison the longest ever ordered for a Hawaii inmate 11 Uyesugi appealed his convictions 10 In 2002 the State of Hawaii Supreme Court upheld Uyesugi s conviction 12 13 In 2004 Uyesugi was considering fighting his conviction based on Rule 40 inadequate representation by his lawyers in his first trial 14 In 2005 Xerox and the hospital that examined Uyesugi settled a civil lawsuit brought by the families of the shooting victims They believed that both parties had failed to take preventive action based on what they said were clear signs of Uyesugi s mental instability 15 As of October 10 2017 update Uyesugi was incarcerated at the Saguaro Correctional Center in Eloy Arizona 16 Aftermath EditXerox vacated the premises at 1200 N Nimitz Highway after the shooting This facility was vacant until 2004 when the producers of the TV show Lost built a sound stage there to film indoor scenes 17 Dal Tile currently leases the property from the Weinberg Foundation for its tile and natural stone showroom 18 19 The state legislature passed a law when that requires doctors to reveal information about the mental state of persons applying to buy guns 20 See also Edit 1990s portal1996 Honolulu hostage crisisReferences Edit a b Barayuga Debra November 9 1999 Grand jury indicts Uyesugi for first degree murder Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved May 4 2009 Jaymes K Song November 2 1999 7 dead in Nimitz Hwy Xerox shooting Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved May 4 2009 Donnelly Christine November 9 1999 77 crash changed Uyesugi says defense attorney Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved May 4 2009 a b c Katherine Ramsland Psychiatry the Law and Depravity Profile of Michael Welner M D Chairman The Forensic Panel TruTV Crime Laboratory Turner Broadcasting Retrieved May 4 2009 Barayuga Debra Tswei Suzanne May 26 2000 Uyesugi s father brother tell of torment in his head Honolulu Star Bulletin Cole William January 17 2001 Uyesugi defends himself in lawsuit Honolulu Advertiser Flowers R Barri November 26 2012 The Dynamics of Murder Kill or Be Killed CRC Press pp 258 261 ISBN 978 1439879733 Google Books Retrieved February 4 2014 a b Welner Michael May 30 2000 Courtroom Summary Archived from the original on September 27 2007 Retrieved January 26 2013 Suzanne Tswei June 2 2000 Judge s leave to delay trial for one week Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved May 4 2009 a b c Tanya Bricking July 1 2001 Uyesugi appeal likely to fail Honolulu Advertiser Retrieved May 4 2009 Debra Barayuga February 20 2005 Burglar gets life plus 120 years Honolulu Star Bulletin Retrieved October 10 2017 David Waite December 27 2002 2 murder convictions upheld Honolulu Advertiser Retrieved May 4 2009 State v Uyesugi 100 Hawai i 442 P 3d 843 2002 Retrieved October 10 2017 Ken Kobayashi August 21 2004 Xerox killer Uyesugi may fight conviction Honolulu Advertiser Retrieved May 4 2009 Ken Kobayashi January 28 2005 Families of Uyesugi victims in confidential settlement of lawsuit Honolulu Advertiser Retrieved October 10 2017 Hawaii SAVIN Retrieved October 10 2017 Veitch Kristin October 16 2004 Lost Secrets Found E Online Archived from the original on October 22 2004 Tesla opening new location in former Xerox building in Honolulu Pacific Business News December 20 2016 Retrieved June 20 2018 Daltile Sales Service Center Honolulu HI Retrieved June 20 2018 Takase Cathy L February 1 2007 OIP Op Ltr No 07 01 PDF Honolulu HI USA Office of Information Practices State of Hawaii Archived PDF from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved January 26 2013 External links EditZilberman Ronen May 16 2000 XEROX SHOOTINGS Honolulu Star Bulletin Kobayashi Ken November 1 2004 No closure yet for families suing Uyesugi Honolulu Advertiser Moon C J Levinson Nakayama J J Acoba J Ramil J December 26 2002 State of Hawaii vs Byran Uyesugi NO 23805 Supreme Court of Hawaii Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1999 Honolulu shootings amp oldid 1140167951, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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