DHS secretary says metro Atlanta shootings that killed government employee was "act of pure evil"
Department of Homeland Security Secretary Markwayne Mullin has responded to a series of shootings in metro Atlanta that killed a DHS employee and another woman and left a man in critical condition.
In a statement posted on X, Mullin described the shootings on Monday as "an act of pure evil" and said that the department has been "devastated" by the violence.
The first victim was found with multiple gunshot wounds near a Checkers restaurant on Wesley Chapel Road at around 1 a.m. Monday. She was taken to a hospital but died, DeKalb County Police Chief Gregory Padrick said at a news conference. Police have not publicly identified her.
Just before 7 a.m. and more than 10 miles away in the suburb of Panthersville, officers responding to a call found a woman with gunshot and stab wounds, Patrick said. The woman, identified as DHS employee Lauren Bullis, died at the scene. A third victim, described only as a 49-year-old homeless man, was critically injured after being shot in a Kroger parking lot in Brookhaven.
Investigators in Brookhaven say they determined that the three attacks were connected and believe that at least the male victim was targeted at random. Authorities are still looking into whether Bullis and the other woman were also picked randomly.
Using information about a silver Volkswagen Jetta that police say was seen leaving the first crime scene, officers took 26-year-old Adon Abel into custody during a traffic stop in Troup County. Abel is charged with two counts of malice murder, aggravated assault, and additional firearms counts.
Concerns over alleged past criminal history and citizenship
The Department of Homeland Security identified Abel as a native of the United Kingdom who was granted U.S. citizenship in 2022, when Democrat Joe Biden was president.
Mullin, who took over DHS last month after Kristi Noem was fired, said in his statement that Abel has a criminal record that includes a sexual battery conviction, battery against a police officer, and assault.
In his statement, Mullin noted that since President Donald Trump took office, U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, which DHS oversees, has worked to ensure that people with criminal histories don't attain citizenship, but the U.S. has long barred people convicted of most violent felonies from becoming citizens, and it wasn't immediately clear if Adon Abel had a criminal record that predated him becoming a citizen in 2022.
Mullin said that his prayers were with the families of the victims.
Abel remains in custody and waived his initial court appearance on Tuesday.
The Associated Press contributed to this report.