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Orlando Shooting Victims Remembered in Vigils Around the World

Mourners across Orlando -- as well as the nation and world -- paused Sunday night to remember the 50 people killed and 53 injured in the Pulse nightclub shooting, the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history.

By Christal Hayes , Gal Tziperman Lotan , Elyssa Cherney , Naseem S. Miller , Steven Lemongello and Bethany Rodgers

Mourners across Orlando -- as well as the nation and world -- paused Sunday night to remember the 50 people killed and 53 injured in the Pulse nightclub shooting, the deadliest mass shooting in U.S. history.

So far, seven of the victims of gunman Omar Mateen's spree have been identifed: Edward Sotomayor Jr., 34 years old; Stanley Almodovar III,  23; Luis Omar Ocasio-Capo, 20; Juan Ramon Guerrero, 22; Eric Ivan Ortiz-Rivera, 36;  Peter O. Gonzalez-Cruz, 22; and Luis S. Vielma, 22.

At Ember in downtown Orlando, crowd members spontaneously broke out into clapping at the close of a twilight candlelight vigil.

"Love wins, y'all!" shouted Henry Ballesteros of Orlando, triggering a wave of cheers across the crowd.

The group gathered on the bar's outdoor patio, holding white, tapered candles above their heads in silence.

Ballesteros, 47, said by focusing on love and not hate, he hopes no attention goes to the gunman who carried out the attacks.

"I don't know want to know his name," he said.

Braden Cowell, 27, of Orlando, also came to Ember for the vigil, bringing rainbow banners in a gesture of defiance against terror.

"If we don't come out today and support our community, they win," he said.

At Jones High School, just a few miles from Pulse, a vigil organized by the Experience Christian Center brought together seven pastors, "all sharing in prayer, different denominations all coming together for a common cause," said Experience Senior Pastor Derrick McCrae.

"What prayer does is give direction," McCrae said. "People find inner strength through a conversation with God. We want to see no division, and only see unity. We want to be mindful of what could happen to us at any point in life, but also be confident in who is keeping us."

Speakers talked of the other vigils happening elsewhere at hospitals, in which family members wait on news of their loved ones.

"There are those who believe they have power over life and death," said Rabbi David Kay of Congregation Ohev Shalom. "But they do not. As long as we come together, no act of terror, no act of murder, no act of hate can extinguish the light that has kindled from what we all start here tonight."

Stephen A. Green, national director of the Youth Department of the NAACP, said, "We come against any bigotry, any sexism, any racism, any homophobia."

U.S. Rep. Corinne Brown told attendees, "Orlando is a big city, but we are family, and I had to be with my family."

"We cannot continue to let this happen in our country," Brown said."This is the beginning, and Orlando will lead the way."

Experience spokesman Dominic C. Clark said that the vigil was a way "to let them know the faith-based community is still here. What better place than close to downtown. We made a few calls this morning and it was like, 'absolutely.' ... We're simply praying for healing in Orlando."

Some attendees said they were worried about the future -- and hoped the response to the shootings can have a positive effect.

Dominique Belt of Orlando said before the vigil, "now it feels like we're no longer safe. I've been in Florida all my life, and we used to leave the window open and fell safe at night. Now, I'm scared to shop.

"I think that in coming together and praying, we can demand change," Salt said.

Tracking Mateen

Mateen of Fort Pierce has been identifed as the gunman and was among those killed early Saturday.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation three times interviewed Mateen for having alleged terrorist ties.  The FBI learned of Mateen in 2013 after he made inflammatory remarks to coworkers and alleged terrorist ties, said FBI Special Agent In Charge Ron Hopper.

The FBI investigated and interviewed witnesses and Mateen, but closed the investigation. He came to the FBI's attention again in 2014 for making contact with a suicide bomber. Their connection was considered minimal by the FBI, and closed the investigation.

U.S. Senator Bill Nelson, D-Florida, said the Islamic State claimed responsibility for a massacre.

Mateen -- the lone gunman -- called 911 moments before the attack and pledged his allegiance to Islamic State, a federal law enforcement official said, confirming earlier reports.

Federal investigators believe the selfie photos of Mateen taken from his MySpace page are of him, but said the investigation was still in its early stages.

Mateen, 29, of Port St. Lucie, was killed after a shootout with Orlando police. He was armed with a pistol and assault rifle.

President Barack Obama, in a news conference on Sunday, said the shooting is "a sobering reminder that attacks on any American -- regardless of race, ethnicity, religion or sexual orientation -- is an attack on all of us and on the fundamental values of equality and dignity that define us as a country."

"We know enough to say this was an act of terror and an act of hate," he said.

U.S. investigators are operating under a theory that the Orlando nightclub mass shooting was inspired by Islamic State, the top Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee said Sunday.

Similarities with the November attack on the Bataclan nightclub in Paris, and that the shooter appeared to target a gay dance club during the Muslim month of Ramadan, "indicates an ISIS-inspired act of terrorism," Rep. Adam Schiff, D-Burbank, said in a statement.

Intelligence officers are combing through terrorism databases to see if there are any known links between the alleged shooter and a terrorist group, Schiff said. Multiple outlets, including CNN, reported Mateen made a 911 call before the attack, pledging allegiance to ISIS.

There haven't been signs so far that Islamic State leaders helped orchestrate the plot, he said. "Whether this attack was ISIS-directed remains to be determined," he said.

Christopher Hansen, who was inside the Pulse nightclub during the attack, said he dropped to the floor when he heard about 40 gunshots. People ran from the bar as police officers screamed for everyone to leave.

"I just fell down and crawled out," said Hansen, 23.

"I helped someone who was on the ground. I wasn't sure if he was dead or alive," he said.

As people fled the club, Pulse Orlando posted a note to its own page that said, "Everyone get out of pulse and keep running."

Police Chief John Mina said Mateen fired the first shot at about 2:02 a.m. at an Orlando police officer and then ran into the club, which held more than 200 people. Details about exactly what happened inside the club were unclear, but police handled it as a hostage situation.

By 5 a.m., the police department's SWAT team opened fire. They distracted Mateen with an explosive device and plowed into the building with a vehicle. When officers went inside, they discovered 50 dead, including Mateen, and 53 injured.

Mina said nine officers were involved in the shooting. One sustained an injury to his eye and was saved by his helmet.

Mina credited his officers with rescuing 30 hostages from Pulse Orlando at 1912 S. Orange Ave., which is just south of Downtown Orlando and near Orlando Regional Medical Center.

Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer declared the city in "a state of emergency," and Gov. Rick Scott, who was at the scene, extended it to all of Orange County.

"Tonight our community witnessed or experienced a very horrific crime," Dyer said.

In an attempt to shift family members away from ORMC, where many of the injured were taken, authorities set up an information center at a nearby Hampton Inn & Suites at 43 Columbia St., and urged relatives to call 407-246-4357.

U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson, D-Orlando, called the attack a "hate crime" because the shooting happened at a gay club.

"It's no coincidence the attack took place where it did and when it did," he said.

Authorities said there is no indication of impending attacks in Florida or across the nation. The FBI is leading the investigation.

Mina said the situation is not related to a separate shooting Friday inside The Plaza Live theater in Orlando, where a man opened fire, killing former NBC's "The Voice" contestant Christina Grimmie and himself.

'I saw fire coming out of his gun'

It was Latin night at the club.

Mina said some people trapped inside the club hid in the bathrooms and called 911.

Rosie Feba was there with her girlfriend for the first time.

"She told me someone was shooting. Everyone was getting on the floor," Feba said. "I told her I didn't think it was real, I thought it was just part of the music, until I saw fire coming out of his gun."

Feba and her girlfriend ran out of the club. On the way out, they saw a man who had been shot.

Feba grabbed him. Others around her called 911. Some of the man's blood stained the sleeve of her striped T-shirt.

Both Feba and her girlfriend were unharmed, but shaken. They waited in a CVS parking lot for more information.

Victims experiencing emotional trauma related to the shooting can dial 2-1-1 for support, said Ashley Blasewitz of the Heart of Florida United Way.

Looking for family

Many of the victims were taken to ORMC, where family members gathered, hoping to get information.

Florida Hospital wouldn't comment on whether it was treating any of the injured, but said they can check on names for families.

Mina called the mass shooting "absolutely terrible. ... one of the worst tragedies we've seen."

He said the immediate priority is to identify the dead and injured and notify their next of kin, something that he said would require people to be patient.

"Unfortunately this tragedy and the amount of bodies that are in there, the amount of victims, is going to take some time," Mina said.

Carlos Muniz went to OPD headquarters after the shooting to give an interview.

"It was massacre, basically," said Muniz, who was in the club at the time of the shooting.  "And one of our friends is missing."

Muniz initially thought the shots were part of the music.

Meanwhile, authorities scoured the area for explosive devices, using robotic devices and K-9 dogs. In addition to carrying the weapons, Mina said Mateen was possibly wearing an explosive device.

Imam Muhammad Musri, president of the Islamic Society of Central Florida, urged people to pray on what he called "a heart-breaking morning."

"It's a horrible tragedy. We are mourning,  we are sad. We are heartbroken," he said.

A mass shooting, he added, "is the worst nightmare, and we are sorry to know that it happened to us."

U.S. Sen. Bill Nelson said Senate intelligence committee staff "do believe there is some connection to ISIS."

"There appears to be some connection to Islamic radicalism," he said at a news conference at the command center in Orlando.

Washington Bureau reporter Brian Bennett contributed to this report.

(c)2016 The Orlando Sentinel (Orlando, Fla.)

Caroline Cournoyer is GOVERNING's senior web editor.
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