Police: Indianapolis FedEx shooter not racially motivated

A FedEx flight on final approach flies over the FexEx Ground facility, Friday, April 16, 2021, in Indianapolis, where multiple people were shot at a FedEx Ground facility near the Indianapolis airport. (AP Photo/Michael Conroy)

INDIANAPOLIS (Network Indiana) — Police say the mass shooting in April which killed eight Indianapolis FedEx employees was an act of “suicidal murder.”

Indy Metro Police say they’ve closed their investigation after conducting 120 interviews and reviewing thousands of files from 19-year-old Brandon Hole’s computer. I-M-P-D Deputy Chief Craig McCartt says Hole had long had suicidal thoughts, and had been planning to couple it with a mass murder since at least last July, when he purchased the first of two rifles used in the shooting.

Hole had worked at the FedEx distribution hub, but McCartt says Hole didn’t know any of the people he shot, and didn’t target FedEx out of any grudge against the company — his departure from the job occurred when he simply stopped showing up for work.

This photo released by the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department shows Brandon Scott Hole. Authorities have identified Hole as a former employee who shot and killed at least eight people late Thursday night, April 15, 2021, at a FedEx facility in Indianapolis. (Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department via AP)

McCartt and F-B-I Indianapolis Special Agent in Charge Paul Keenan say Hole considered several undisclosed targets for the shooting, but at some point settled on FedEx because he knew the layout from when he worked there. Keenan says Hole also believed — incorrectly — that he’d spotted a security vulnerability that would allow him to penetrate deep into the building.

Instead, police say, Hole killed one worker in the parking lot, then went into the building’s foyer where employee lockers were. He opened fire there, but was stopped by a security gate from going any further. McCartt says he returned to the parking lot and continued firing “indiscriminately.”

McCartt says one employee retrieved his own gun from his car and fired one shot at Hole, which missed, before driving away and calling 9-1-1. McCartt says Hole reentered the building and killed himself.

The FedEx hub employs several Sikhs, and four of the eight people killed were Sikh. But Keenan says agents found no evidence the victims’ racial or ethnic background played any part in Hole’s motivation. He says they found Hole had viewed Nazi propaganda from World War Two on his computer, but says it was a tiny fraction of the files reviewed, and doesn’t appear to have reflected a belief system.

Keenan says the F-B-I’s Behavioral Analysis Unit concluded Hole sought to carry out long-held suicidal thoughts, and to “demonstrate his masculinity and capability while fulfilling a final desire to experience killing people.”