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Suspect arrested in swimmer killings

  • Story Highlights
  • NEW: Scott J. Johnson's arrest ends dragnet of 100 officers in northern Wisconsin
  • Three killed, one wounded near Wisconsin-Michigan state line
  • Man in camouflage came out of woods with assault rifle as they gathered to swim
  • No motive known. The sheriff said gunman did not communicate with victims
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NIAGARA, Wisconsin (AP) -- A dragnet ended Friday with the arrest of a man accused of emerging from woods in camouflage and opening fire with an assault rifle on a group of young swimmers who had gathered at a river. Three were killed and another wounded.

Help arrives after swimmers were shot to death Thursday at the Wisconsin-Michigan state line.

Scott Johnson dropped his weapon and surrendered to police.

Scott J. Johnson, 38, was in camouflage as he walked out of some woods near the scene of the shooting and dropped his weapon as officers approached, said Jerry Sauve, chief's sheriff's deputy in Marinette County.

Johnson had not been formally charged and it was not immediately known whether he had an attorney.

"We believe he was in the woods and near our officers who were also in the woods all night," Sauve said at a news conference. Video Watch the chief deputy: "We have the suspect we've been searching for all night" »

The motive remained unclear, Sauve said. Johnson was taken to the county jail to await an initial court appearance that has yet to be scheduled.

More than 100 law enforcement officers from at least 10 agencies were called in to hunt for the gunman in Thursday's attack. Authorities had set up roadblocks and evacuated some homes in the northern Wisconsin area just across the state line from Michigan's Upper Peninsula.

Marinette County Sheriff Jim Kanikula said there was no communication between the gunman and his victims. The shooter was only 7 to 10 feet away from one victim when he fired on the group of nine young people who had gathered near a railroad bridge on the Menominee River, he said.

"There's a saying up here that this is a great place to raise kids," said Randy Van Gasse, the school superintendent in nearby Norway, Michigan, where 17-year-old victim Tiffany Pohlson would have been a senior in the fall.

"That's been violated and we don't know why," he said. "This is obviously a shock to everybody."

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The other dead were identified as Anthony Spigarelli, 18; and Bryan Mort, 19. A fourth victim, 20-year-old Daniel Louis Gordon, was wounded. All were also from Michigan.

Niagara is about 210 miles north of Milwaukee.

Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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