A mass shooting at an Army installation in Georgia left the military community rocked and the nation with questions about the suspect’s motives and how he brought an outside gun onto the base, with officials expected to provide more information on Aug. 7.
The shooting at Fort Stewart unfolded late morning on Aug. 6 when Army officials said a sergeant opened fire on his own team, using a personal handgun to shoot and injure five fellow soldiers before being tackled and subdued by other soldiers. All five were expected to recover, Army Brig. Gen. John Lubas told reporters.
The suspect, 28-year-old Sgt. Quornelius Radford, was taken into custody. The automated logistics noncommissioned officer was stationed at Fort Stewart and had a recent arrest for driving under the influence.
The shooting drew reactions from lawmakers across the political spectrum who offered prayers to the soldiers, family members and first responders at Fort Stewart.
President Donald Trump told reporters at the White House the “entire nation is praying for the victims and their families,” calling the suspect “horrible.”
“Today, a cowardly shooting at Fort Stewart left five brave Soldiers wounded,” Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said. “Swift justice will be brought to the perpetrator and anyone else found to be involved.”
Here’s what we know:
What happened at Fort Stewart?
The shooting broke out just before 11 a.m. on Aug. 6 in an area of the south Georgia installation associated with the 3rd Infantry Division’s 2nd Armored Brigade Combat Team, a tank unit that returned from a deployment in Europe in the summer of 2024, Lubas said.
Radford was apprehended at about 11:35 a.m. Fellow soldiers who witnessed the shooting tackled him to the ground and subdued him until authorities arrived and took him into custody.
“These soldiers, without a doubt, prevented further casualties,” Lubas said.
The base was placed on lockdown, which was lifted around midday and declared all-clear just before 2 p.m.
Two of the injured soldiers were transported to a trauma center and three were treated at the Winn Army Community Hospital on the base. One underwent surgery.
Lubas said Radford used a personal gun, not a military firearm, to carry out the attack. It wasn’t clear how he got the outside gun through security and onto the base, he said.
Who is the suspect?
Radford worked as an automated logistics officer. Soldiers in that field manage maintenance or warehouse operations by placing orders and tracking work in Army computer systems. He had been stationed at Fort Stewart since 2022 and was never deployed to combat.
The shooting suspect also had a recent arrest for driving under the influence, Lubas said. The arrest was “unknown to his chain of command until the (shooting) occurred,” Lubas said.
Court records show the arrest happened in May in Liberty County, where Fort Stewart is located. He was driving a 2021 Nissan Altima with Florida plates at the time of the arrest, the records showed. He was also charged with running a red light.
Shooting sent loved ones scrambling for safety
Sadie Mohrbacher was at the theater watching the new Fantastic Four movie when she received a terrifying text message from her sister Wednesday morning: “Active shooter on base. We are on lockdown.”
Mohrbacher, 25, rushed out of the theater and called her sister, Paige Siple, who lives on the Fort Stewart military base in Georgia with her husband. Siple said that she was home alone and had locked the doors, closed all the curtains, and taken refuge in an upstairs closet with her dog, Ranger.
Siple’s husband, an active duty soldier who was working on the base, was safe and able to return home from work after the lockdown was lifted for a portion of Fort Stewart.
“It was horrifying,” Mohrbacher told USA TODAY.
Fort Stewart, a sprawling military installation that covers an area larger than the size of New York City, houses thousands of people that include soldiers, family members and civilian employees.
-Christopher Cann
This wasn’t the first shooting at Fort Stewart. Military bases have history of attacks
Mass shootings occur in all manner of American settings, and military bases are no exception. The deadliest in U.S. history in a military base happened in 2009 at the Fort Hood Army Base in Texas, when a major shot unarmed soldiers in a medical facility, killing 13 and wounding dozens.
Other major shootings have happened at military bases in Texas, D.C. and Florida.
Also at Fort Stewart, in December 2022, a fellow soldier shot and killed Sgt. Nathan Hillman at the unit’s building complex.
Contributing: Davis Winkie, Christopher Cann, Ansley Franco, Michael Loria and Thao Nguyen, USA TODAY; Reuters
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: Why did Army sergeant open fire at Fort Stewart? Updates on a motive.