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Inside the Bible study massacre: A mom âlaid in her sonâs bloodâ
In this image from the video uplink from the detention center to the courtroom, Dylann Roof appears at a bond hearing June 19, 2015, in South Carolina. Roof is charged with nine counts of murder and firearms charges in the shooting deaths at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church in Charleston, South Carolina on June 17.
Grace Beahm-Pool/Getty Images
Dylann Roof, the 21-year-old charged with murdering nine people in a church shooting on Wednesday, June 17, is escorted by police in Shelby, North Carolina, on Thursday, June 18.
Chuck Burton/AP
Law enforcement officers in Charleston, South Carolina, stand guard near the scene of the shooting at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.
David Goldman/AP
A police officer directs a police vehicle in front of the church on June 18.
BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images
Two law enforcement officials said Roof confessed. Roof said he wanted to start a race war, one of the officials said.
Charleston County Sheriff
Police in Charleston close off a section of Calhoun Street early on June 18, after the shooting. The steeple of the church is visible in the background.
David Goldman/AP
Charleston police officers search for the shooting suspect outside the church on Wednesday, June 17.
Matthew Fortner/The Post And Courier via AP
People in Charleston pray following the shooting on June 17.
David Goldman/AP
A woman joins a prayer circle on June 17.
David Goldman/AP
A man kneels across the street from where police gathered outside the church on June 17.
Wade Spees/The Post And Courier/AP
Police gather at the scene of the shooting on June 17. The church was formed in 1816.
Wade Spees/The Post And Courier/AP
People pray in a hotel parking lot across the street from the scene of the shooting on June 17. Every Wednesday evening, the church holds a Bible study in its basement.
David Goldman/ap
An armed police officer moves up Calhoun Street on June 17.
Wade Spees/The Post And Courier/AP
People gather after the shooting.
David Goldman/AP
Police stand outside the church.
Wade Spees/The Post And Courier/AP
Police close off a section of Calhoun Street near the scene of the shooting.
David Goldman/AP
Police in Charleston released this security-camera image that they say shows Roof entering the Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.
City of Charleston
Charleston church shooting
Story highlights
Details emerge about how the Charleston shooting unfolded
Police: Dylann Roof stood over victim, shouted racist comment
Youngest victim tried to shield his great aunt; both were killed
He was greeted by the deep baritone of the Rev. Clementa Pinckney, known simply as Clem by his friends and congregation. A man so steeped in faith, Pinckney was called into the ministry in his teens. He served as pastor for the last 23 years and a South Carolina legislator for 19.
It wasnât unusual for a stranger to stroll into the church. Summertime brings tourists by the thousands to historic downtown Charleston. Many stop in to catch a glimpse of history inside the oldest black church in the South. The church is known as âMother Emanuelâ in Charleston.
As the nation grappled with the carnage of Wednesdayâs massacre, relatives of victims â as well as church members who spoke with survivors â told CNN how the shooting unfolded:
Pinckney brought Roof into his Bible study shortly after 8 p.m.
âBeing the nice, kind welcoming person he is, Clementa welcomed him to his congregation,â said Sylvia Johnson, a cousin of the pastor.
Wednesdays at the church are a time of thoughtful reflection and a time to catch up with friends. Casserole dishes are served up with smiles at Wednesday night supper before talk turns to God.
If Roof had arrived earlier, the church wouldâve been packed. Dozens of people had attended a church session in the hour before. Thatâs around when Tywanza Sanders, 26, posted a quote from Jackie Robinson on his Instagram account: âA life is not important except in the impact it has on other lives.â
Sanders was at the Bible study with his pastor and about a dozen others, including Sandersâ mother and his great aunt, 87-year-old Susie Jackson. The family matriarch, Jackson loved everything about the church, living just a few blocks away and singing in its choir for decades.
The group could never have known what was in his mind. The scowl on his face in his Facebook profile photo. His dark eyes snarling, above patches on his jacket of the South African and Rhodesian flags representing white supremacy.
The worshipers couldnât have known his plan. He was there to start a race war. He was there with the intent to kill them. Because they were black.
What words congregants may have been exchanged with their visitor during the Bible study remains unknown. But it is clear he was surrounded by love.
And thatâs why what happened next is so haunting. So disturbing. That he could spend time to meet his victims â and still carry through with his plan to commit mass murder. According to CNN-affiliate WBRC, Roof had second thoughts but decided to go through with the massacre because no one else was going to do it.
âAfter joining them for some period of time, he obviously became very aggressive and violent,â Johnson said.
He pulled out his handgun â .45-caliber shell casings were later found at the scene â that had been hidden behind a fanny pack around his waist, and he opened fire. It is believed he shot Pinckney first.
Tywanza Sanders leapt up, concerned about the pastor. He pleaded with Roof. Said he didnât have to do this. Tried to talk him down.
Roof disagreed. âNo, youâve raped our women and you are taking over the country. I have to do what I have to do,â he said, according to Johnson, who was quoting a survivor.
He then pointed his gun at the oldest person in the room, Susie Jackson. Sanders tried to shield his great aunt from the volley of bullets. Both were killed.
âHe was trying to protect his aunt. Thatâs him 100%,â family friend A.J. Harley said.
Sandersâ mother,Felecia, pretended to be dead.
âShe watched her son fall,â Johnson said. âShe laid there in his blood.â
Survivors have told friends Roof reloaded his gun at least five times. He told one woman that he would spare her so she could tell the world what happened and that he planned to kill himself.
When the shooting was done, nine were dead â one of the worst acts of domestic terrorism since the 1995 Oklahoma City bombing. Each victim was shot multiple times.
Before Roof left the church, he stood over one of the victims and âuttered a racially inflammatory statement,â according to his arrest warrant.
âIt is devastating that somebody would go into Godâs house and commit such a crime,â said Kent Williams, a cousin of the pastor.
At 26, Tywanza Sanders was the youngest victim. His great aunt was the oldest.
Pinckney, a father of two girls and stalwart of the black community, was 41. âHe had this deep voice that everybody wished they had. When he spoke, he commanded your attention. He always had words of wisdom,â Williams said. âWeâre just gonna miss him.â
The other six victims were:
Cynthia Hurd, 54, who worked at the Charleston County Public Library for 31 years. She took delight in helping residents, young and old, learn to read.
The Rev. DePayne Middleton-Doctor, 49, the âenthusiastic leaderâ and admissions coordinator at the Charleston learning center of Southern Wesleyan University.
Ethel Lance, 70, who was a city worker for 34 years and devoted much of that time working backstage at the Galliard Auditorium.
The Rev. Sharonda Singleton, 45, a speech coach and track coach at Goose Creek High School.
Myra Thompson, 59, a Bible study teacher who dedicated her life to God.
The Rev. Daniel Simmons Sr., 74, a church staff member and former pastor of Friendship AME Church in Mount Pleasant, South Carolina.
The bloodshed has shaken Charleston â and the nation. In the words of Williams: âIt says to the world that weâre not safe anywhere anymore. ⦠It is despicable.â
The 21-year-old Roof appeared before a judge Friday through a remote video feed, showing no emotion in a striped prison jumpsuit. He is charged with nine counts of murder.
If his plan was to start a race war, Roof was met by an amazing level of forgiveness.
âYou hurt a lot of people but God forgives you, and I forgive you,â a daughter of Ethel Lance said.
Felecia Sanders â the mother who saw her son die Wednesday night â recalled how she and the others welcomed Roof into the Bible study.
âWe enjoyed you,â she told the court. âBut may God have mercy on you.â