
Kris Johns is a community member in Burton, Michigan, and he’s also running for Burton City Council. It was while he was canvassing for his campaign, a week prior to the shooting, that he met Thomas Sanford, who is accused of killing four people and wounding several others in a Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints meetinghouse in Grand Blanc, Michigan.
According to police, Sanford drove through the front doors of the meetinghouse right before services began Sunday morning. He fired an assault rifle at the hundreds of churchgoers inside, and then deliberately set the building on fire. Sanford was later shot and killed by police.
“When you knock on a lot of doors, you end up knowing who’s nice and who’s not, and he was definitely someone who was nice,” Johns explained. He said that the interaction was initially very positive, but quickly, Sanford brought up the church.
“We spoke about our children. He also spoke about just his background, but then very quickly, his question was, you know, what are your thoughts on Mormons?” Johns said. Johns has personal connections with LDS members, “so I have a very positive opinion of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. This person did not.”
According to Johns, each question Sanford asked became more specific about the church and more negative. He was asking about historical church leaders and practices in the church, and it struck Johns as odd.
“I don’t get questions about religion very often, and let alone the Church of Latter-day Saints,” Johns said. Johns told ABC4 that he is not LDS, so he couldn’t speak specifically about those questions, and their conversation ended.
“The last thing he said was that Mormons are the antichrist, and he said that several times,” Johns said.
According to Ruben Coleman, a special agent in charge for the FBI, the FBI is considering the shooting an “act of targeted violence.” The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) say that it is still an active investigation, and that the motive is still not clear at this time.
Sanford was a former Marine, and he went to high school in a town neighboring Grand Blanc. Prior to the shooting, he lived in Burton, Michigan, but in 2011, he received unemployment benefits in Salt Lake County.
“He was very angry at the church,” Johns said. “He was angry, but he was– it was very calm. It was very collected. It wasn’t an active anger that he was with, and so for him to do what he did, it just… It’s a shock. I mean, it’s surreal to talk with this gentleman a week ago, and then for this to happen several days later.”
Amelia Hobson, MJ Jewkes, and The Associated Press contributed to this story.
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