Joseph Jesse Aldridge Missouri shooting
Gunman kills 7 in town of 50
02:13 - Source: CNN

Story highlights

NEW: Coroner says mother off suspect was found dead of lung cancer

In all, nine of a small town's 50 residents were found dead or killed overnight

Joseph Jesse Aldridge allegedly killed himself after slaying 7 people, injuring another in Tyrone, Missouri

CNN  — 

A small Missouri town’s discovery that a gunmant killed seven people and injured another Thursday night began when a girl managed to flee a residence where she heard gunfire.

She ran to a neighbor’s house and called police, say investigators in Tyrone, Missouri.

Authorities then found a trail of death that was so staggering, a state trooper lost count at a news conference.

Seven people, all gunshot victims, were found dead in four residences in the small town of 50 people. One person managed to survive, and she was found wounded in one of the homes.

The gunman also was found dead Friday morning in a GMC pickup after going to another county more than 15 miles away, where he apparently shot himself. He was identified Friday as Joseph Jesse Aldridge, 36, who was believed to be a cousin to four of the seven slain victims, the Missouri State Highway Patrol said.

Joseph Jesse Aldridge

And, in a twist to their probe, investigators happened upon another body – that of an elderly woman – in a fifth home, though she died of natural causes.

That person was the gunman’s mother, Alice L. Aldridge, 74. She died of metastatic lung cancer, said Tom Whittaker, the coroner for Texas County, Missouri.

It was unclear Friday whether her death was connected to the case, Missouri State Highway Patrol Sgt. Jeff Kinder said.

The gunman’s finding his mother dead could be a motive, “but it would speculation for us to say that is the case,” Kinder told CNN. “We’re examining of a lot of different avenues now.”

The gunman “had been (living) with her for quite some time,” said Texas County Sheriff James Sigman.

The shooter didn’t leave a note, so investigators are asking family and neighbors about a possible motive, the sheriff said.

In all, nine of the town’s approximate 50 residents were found dead or killed overnight, nearly decimating the town twice over, according to authorities.

Map: Tyrone, Missouri

There were a total of six police scenes: Three had two bodies each. Two had one body each. And then there was the site where the suspect apparently committed suicide.

“Everybody is in disbelief now,” Kinder said. “They’re shocked. They will all just have to take care of each other. But it has just shocked this community to its core, and we will just have to work our way through it.”

The victims

Among the seven slain gunshot victims were two married couples, who were described as cousins of the gunman, authorities said.

They were Garold Dee Aldridge, 52, and wife Julie Ann Aldridge, 47, and Harold Wayne Aldridge, 50, and wife Janell Arlisa Aldridge, 48.

All victims lived within a three-mile radius of each other, authorities said.

The other three victims weren’t identified pending notification of their relatives. They weren’t from the same family, the sheriff said.

Everyone surely knew each other, the sheriff said.

“It is a small community out there. Everybody knows everybody, but as far as what their personal relationship is … I couldn’t tell you,” the sheriff said. “Crime like this in any community is pretty major.”

Investigators spoke to the surviving victim, a woman, but weren’t disclosing details, Sigman said.

“We obtained part of our information from her,” Sheriff Sigman said. “As far as I know, she’s expected to be okay.”

Suspect Joseph Jesse Aldridge, who used a .45-caliber handgun, had “a minor criminal history” with local authorities, Sigman added.

Losing count

In summarizing the crime, Kinder momentarily lost track of the death toll at a news conference.

“There are … isn’t that terrible? Lose count. There is actually nine total victims here in this case,” he told reporters.

The carnage was overwhelming, he added.

“In our job, we see a lot of bad stuff, and this is bad,” Kinder said. “This is also hard on the police officers who are working out there. It’s not natural to see that sort of thing.”

The juvenile girl whose police call exposed the mass deaths had been in a residence where two bodies were later found, Kinder said.

Authorities also don’t yet know the relationship between the girl and those two deceased victims, Kinder said.

“I don’t have any information that would confirm any of that other than she was at the residence at the time it started,” he said.

Senseless horror

Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon said the state was ensuring that mental health counselors and crisis intervention services would be provided to students in the area and other residents.

“This is a horrific tragedy, and our hearts go out to the victims of these senseless acts and their families,” he said.

The shootings happened in Texas County, home to about 26,000 people.

After police found two bodies in the first residence, investigators found five more bodies and an injured person in three other Tyrone homes, according to Kinder.

The elderly woman who’s believed to have died of natural causes was found in a fifth residence after “investigators were somehow led to that residence after this was all placed in motion,” he said.

The suspect’s body was found in a vehicle in neighboring Shannon County, Kinder said.

Tyrone is about 135 miles (217 kilometers) southwest of St. Louis.

It wasn’t immediately clear if any of the victims were of school age, but news of the deaths has shaken the community, the superintendent of the area’s schools said Friday.

“There is a lot of speculation right now, and we just don’t have the information. The area is within the school district; these are my families,” said Scott Dill, superintendent of the Houston R-1 School District. “We run buses out there daily.”

Classes for the district’s 1,000 students are in session Friday, in part to give them a sense of normalcy, he said.

“We do have counselors available, and other offers from other districts to help out. As a small town, we all cry together. My principals are all assessing the situation now, and we will make a determination on what to do next,” Dill said.

CNN’s Amanda Watts and Camille Cava contributed to this report.