• http://player.rogersradio.ca/ckwx/on_air Listen Now
 
  • Home
  •  
  • News
  •  
  • World
  •  
  • Brother: Mormon church shooter was mentally ill, felt wronged by leader in 1980s
Zoom in
Visalia Police detectives point to an area where a suspect was shot after lay bishop Clay Sannar of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was shot and killed Sunday, Aug. 29, 2010 in Visalia, Calif. (AP Photo/The Fresno Bee, Gary Kazanjian)

Brother: Mormon church shooter was mentally ill, felt wronged by leader in 1980s

The Associated Press Aug 30, 2010 16:31:50 PM

VISALIA, Calif. - The gunman in a fatal shooting of a Mormon church official in Central California was a former member of the congregation who felt wronged when a bishop "shunned him to hell" in 1988, his younger brother said Monday.

Kenneth James Ward was mentally ill and remained upset by the incident that occurred more than two decades ago, his brother Mike Ward told the Visalia Times-Delta.

Kenneth Ward, 47, of Modesto, California, walked into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Visalia between Sunday services and asked for the leader of the congregation, police said.

He was directed to lay Bishop Clay Sannar, 40, who was doing paperwork when he was shot and killed. Mike Ward, 44, said his brother didn't know Sannar.

After the shooting, Kenneth Ward called police to say he was the gunman and led them to his childhood home, his brother said.

Officers confronted Ward and exchanged gunfire, Visalia police Chief Colleen Mestas said. Ward was shot multiple times and pronounced dead at a hospital.

No police officers were injured.

Police have not yet determined a motive.

"We have several detectives out actively investigating this so we can come up with answers, especially for the family," Mestas said. "It's just tragic."

A voicemail left at Kenneth Ward's home was not immediately returned.

Sannar was the general manager of Soil Basics, a fertilizer company in Visalia, according to the company website.

Members of the congregation described Sannar as a well-loved family man. One of his sons is less than 6 months old.

"We're devastated," said Scott Henriksen, 47, a church member. "This is something that should not happen."

Features

follow News1130

Vancouver Home Improvement

Download News1130 BlackBerry application

Breaking News Alerts Subscribe and be the first to know!

  • Text alerts sent to your inbox or other e-mail enabled mobile devices.
  • Breaking news, weather and traffic stories about your city and the world around you.
  • Seven days a week, 24 hours a day
Subscribe now!
Destination Hyundai