Rampage at school said to be deliberate

A gunman's attack on an elementary school during a deadly rampage in Northern California last week was not a random act as authorities initially thought, prosecutors said.

The Tehama County sheriff's office initially said Kevin Janson Neal's actions were "random," but District Attorney Gregg Cohen said Friday that does not appear to be the case. Neal had an ongoing feud with his neighbors and had threatened them and a young relative who was a student at the school in the months leading up to Tuesday's shooting, he said.

"Mr. Cohen stated that his opinion/belief was that Neal didn't pick the school randomly based on his belief that Neal knew that one of his neighbor victim's grandsons attended the elementary school and also some hearsay that Neal was upset at someone who worked at the school," Cohen's office said in an email.

Neal's attack on the school failed because an employee placed the campus on lockdown after hearing Neal's gunshots down the street.

Neal's visit to the school was near the conclusion of a crosstown massacre that started the night before when he killed his wife and hid her body under the floor. On Tuesday morning, Neal fatally shot three of his neighbors before heading to the school.

Neal killed one more person after he left the school and was then fatally shot by sheriff's deputies.

The boy was uninjured, but his father and grandmother were killed.

A Section on 11/19/2017

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