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RANCHO TEHAMA, Calif. — A gunman choosing targets at random opened fire in a rural Northern California town Tuesday, killing four people at several sites and wounding others at an elementary school before police shot him dead, authorities said. CBS affiliate KHSL-TV reports the suspect had a semi-automatic rifle and two handguns, and no motive has been declared.

“This is a very tragic event for all of us. There are children involved. It’s an emotional thing,”  Tehama Co. Assistant Sheriff Phil Johnston said at a Tuesday evening press conference.

The gunfire began around 8 a.m. in the community of Rancho Tehama Reserve, about 130 miles north of Sacramento. Three local hospitals have confirmed to CBS News they have received a total of 10 patients from the incident. It is not clear if patients were brought to other hospitals. Jeanine Quist, an administrative assistant with the Corning Union Elementary School District, says no one was killed at the Rancho Tehama Elementary School Monday morning but a “number” of students were shot and wounded.

Although police offered no immediate word on the assailant’s motive, but a sheriff’s official said the shooter’s neighbors had reported a domestic violence incident. About 100 law enforcement personnel are currently working at least seven crime scenes in the area, police said.

“It was very clear at the onset that we had an individual that was randomly picking targets,” Tehama County Assistant Sheriff Phil Johnston said.

Johnston, who according to KHSL-TV addressed reporters near one of the scenes, said deputies were first alerted to a shooting in Rancho Tehama Reserve before “multiple victims and multiple shots” were reported at Rancho Tehama Elementary School. Witnesses reported hearing gunshots and children screaming at the school, about five miles down a road from where the shooting is believed to have started.

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Rancho Tehama Elementary School

Google Maps

“I know that we have Medivaced a number of students,” Johnston said, referring to the use of helicopters for the emergency transport of victims to hospitals.

At least one student was wounded at the school. Another child was shot while driving with a woman, who also was wounded, Johnston said.

Johnston said the school had been cleared by 10 a.m. and all other students have been brought to a safe location.

Salvador Tello said the gunman fired at a truck in front of him as he was dropping off his three children. Tello said he was about three blocks from the school when bullets made “big holes” in the truck in front of him.

He said he forced his children to duck down and slammed his truck into reverse and headed to the children’s grandmother’s house.

“I put my kids down and put my truck in reverse and went out,” he said. “I don’t believe it because I wake up, take my kids, feed them cereal and put them in the truck and says ‘Let’s go to school like a normal day.'”

On the way, he said, he saw an apparent gunshot victim and police at another scene.

Johnston said the gunman had a semi-automatic rifle and two handguns.

“It’s a really sad day for us in Tehama County, really,” Johnston said, choking up as he finished addressing reporters.

Details were still sketchy hours after the shootings, and authorities did not have a firm count of the wounded due to the number of places the gunman attacked, Johnston said.

Five people, at least three of whom are children, were transported to Enloe Medical Center, in Chico, California. It’s not clear whether all three children were students at the elementary school.

St. Elizabeth Community Hospital in Red Bluff, California, received two victims. One is continuing to receive treatment at the hospital and the other was stabilized and transferred to another facility, according to Amanda Harter, the communications manager for Dignity Health North State. The company also operates Mercy Medical Center, which received three patients, one who was stabilized and transferred, and two others who are still undergoing treatment. It is not clear if any of the patients at St. Elizabeth or Mercy are children.

Brian Flint told KHSL-TV that his roommate is among the victims and that his neighbor was the gunman. He said his neighbor, whom he knows only as Kevin, also stole his truck.

He said he and his roommate told authorities that their neighbor was acting “crazy” and threatening them.

Flint said the neighbor had been shooting “hundreds of rounds” from large magazines.

The FBI confirmed to CBS News they are sending agents from Sacramento, Redding, and Chico to assist with the investigation.

California Gov. Jerry Brown issued a statement about the shootings late Tuesday morning.

“Anne and I are saddened to hear about today’s violence in Tehama County, which shockingly involved schoolchildren,” Brown said. “We offer our condolences to the families who lost loved ones and unite with all Californians in grief.”