Urgent warning for Maine house owners as Lewiston shooting suspect Robert Card ‘may target specific style of home’

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THE fugitive allegedly behind Wednesday’s mass shooting could be hiding in an abandoned Maine cabin, an ex-FBI agent has warned.

A wild manhunt is underway for Robert Card, 40, after 18 people were killed and 13 more injured in the deadliest US mass shooting of 2023.

X/UNPIXSRobert Card, 40, is suspected to be the at-large shooter who killed 18 people and injured 13 more in a bowling alley and bar in Lewiston, Maine on Wednesday evening[/caption]

Ex-FBI special agent Bobby Chacon has speculated how he has managed to escape the high-profile search of police in an exclusive conversation with The U.S. SunBobby Chacon

GettyChacon warned Maine homeowners that Card could be hiding in a remote cabin that’s been locked up for the winter (file photo)[/caption]

EPAA tactical team searches a street for the at-large gunman[/caption]

Just before 7pm, a gunman stormed Lewiston’s Just-In-Time Recreation bowling alley and opened fire before making his way over to Schemengees Bar and Grille minutes later to do the same, Maine State Police said.

Haunting surveillance footage shows a man taking aim at women and children with an AR-15-style assault rifle that appeared to be fitted with a flashlight and scope.

Victims have started to be named, including a long-time bowling instructor Bob Violette who bravely died protecting children.

Multiple counties still face a shelter-in-place order as Card, a U.S. Army Reservist and certified firearms instructor, evades their massive search effort.

His abandoned vehicle was found on the Kennebec River where he may have escaped aboard his missing 15-foot boat, authorities told The Messenger.

The recent search developments have expanded the area of danger, and officials are starting to warn residents across the Northeast to keep an eye out and race for safety if Card is spotted.

He is considered armed and dangerous.

Speaking exclusively to The U.S. Sun, Bobby Chacon, a veteran FBI Special Agent well-versed in manhunts, warned Maine homeowners to be wary of any remote cabins that may be empty.

“It’s started to get cold up in New England, and people close up their cabins for their winter,” he said.

Chacon said that Card could break into an empty home and survive for weeks on canned food and drinks that he may have prepped before the alleged crime.

‘PROBLEMATIC’ SEARCH

The stretch of river where Card docked his boat is relatively small, as it’s blocked off on both ends.

But across the river is a densely wooded area which, if Card successfully enters, could complicate the search, according to Chacon.

“He could use the boat to get across,” he said.

“That’s even more problematic because once he’s in that wooded area, those very forested areas are much harder to search.

“You have to get teams on the ground… it’s very manpower intensive. You pretty much have to be shoulder to shoulder with people.”

Considering his access and abilities with firearms, Card said that search parties should exercise an abundance of caution when entering areas with limited visibility.

“This guy is a firearms instructor, probably a sharpshooter, probably a very good shot from a long distance,” Chacon, now a screenwriter with Criminal Minds, said.

“When you start to corner him and close in, you start wondering what other kind of weapons systems he has.”

Despite the danger, Chacon hopes officials can complete their job and bring Card in alive with no other injuries or casualties.

CHILLING RED FLAGS

This summer, Card had a stint in a mental health facility after he reported hearing voices in his head, Maine law enforcement officials said.

But his family, who is reportedly helping officials track down the suspect, said this was out of the ordinary and that he didn’t have a history of mental health issues.

“This is something that was an acute episode. This is not who he is,” his sister-in-law Katie O’Neill told CNN.

For Chacon, this brief hospital stay could be key to tracking Card down and ending the madness.

He said: “I would talk to somebody who was on his evaluation team to tell us if he indicated anything like this.

“He might have talked about running away and getting away somewhere, clearing his head.”

Chacon speculated that Card may have mentioned specific places where he went to find peace as killers often stay in familiar areas when they’re avoiding being caught.

He continued saying, “I would rely on the advice of and guidance of some mental health professionals when dealing with the physical search and the tactical decisions that have to be made by law enforcement.”

SHOOTING DEVASTATION

Lewiston is now considered one of the top ten deadliest mass shootings in the U.S., with the death toll landing right below the Uvalde, Texas, massacre.

On Thursday morning, Maine governor Janet Mills described the events as a”dark day” for her home state and added that she was in contact with President Joe Biden.

“This city did not deserve this terrible assault on its citizens, on its peace of mind, on its sense of security,” she said.

“No city does – no state, no people.”

Maine State Police Colonel William G. Ross said eight of the 18 victims have been identified.

Seven victims – one female and six males – were found at the bowling alley.

Another eight victims were found dead at Schemengees Bar and Grille – seven male victims inside the building and one male outside.

Three more people died at local hospitals, Ross said.

Lewiston is the second-largest city in Maine, but still only has a population of around 28,000 people.

The US Army‘s public affairs office at the Pentagon confirmed that Card was a sergeant first class in the Army Reserve and trained as a petroleum supply specialist, which involves shipping and storing fuel for military vehicles and aircraft.

He enlisted in December 2002 and has no combat deployments.

AlamyTerrifying surveillance footage captured the shooter storming a bowling alley and a nearby bar[/caption]

The shooter takes aim at women and children inside the alleyRex

Family PhotoBowling instructor Bob Violette died while valiantly trying to save children from getting shot[/caption]

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