City shooting 'stupid'
By Mark LaFlamme
,
Staff Writer
Thursday, September 27, 2007
LEWISTON - Pastor Paul McLaughlin was greeted
Wednesday morning by a sight he never expected to see: bullet holes in a
van used by the homeless shelter he operates at Lincoln and Cedar
streets.
Police say the shots came from a pair of teenagers they caught firing a
.22-caliber rifle the night before. Both of those men remained jailed
Wednesday on charges of aggravated reckless conduct with a firearm.
For McLaughlin, beholding the sight of his bullet-riddled van brought
about chills. In addition to three glaring holes in the body of the
vehicle, a side window had been shot out.
"That's the window where my granddaughter sits," the pastor said. "I
kind of take it personally. They shot out the window, and then they put
more into it."
Police believe it is unlikely that the shots that struck the Hope Haven
van were the result of errant bullets. The precision of the shooting,
they said, led them to believe the vehicle was int! entionally targeted
by the men accused of opening fire in the heavily traveled area around
Cedar and Lincoln streets.
"It was obviously a reckless and stupid thing to do," said police
department Deputy Chief Michael Bussiere. "Someone could have been
killed because of it."
There was no immediate indication that McLaughlin or the shelter were
targeted specifically, although police were unsure why the two men fired
shots. Investigators were attempting to determine Wednesday how many
shots had been fired.
Samuel Warner and Daniel Chamberland, both 18 and living in Lewiston,
were arrested by police who searched the area for a half-hour before the
pair were captured.
Police who arrested the men said they are familiar with Warner but they
could not discuss previous dealings with him because he was a juvenile
at the time.

After all available police officers responded Tuesday night, gunshots
were still heard from the wooded area behind the Country! Kitchen
buildings on Canal Street.
"It's all kind of crazy," M cLaughlin said.
Nobody was struck by gunfire Tuesday night, but a
homeless man who had been sleeping when the shots rang out was
hospitalized for heart problems. He was treated at Central Maine Medical
Center and later released.
Warner was being held at the Androscoggin County Jail on Wednesday night
on $2,500 cash bail. Chamberland was jailed on $1,000 bail. Both men are
expected to make initial court appearances Thursday.
Meanwhile, McLaughlin's van was in a body shop having bullet holes
removed from the body and the window replaced. The pastor was driving a
rental and reflecting on how it could have been worse.
"Nobody got hurt, and the guys who did it were caught," he said. "It's a
good day." |