A Man Disqualified from Joining the Army Allegedly Returned and Shot Up the Recruiting Station

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A photo of the Greensboro, North Carolina, recruiting station after the Dec. 14 shooting.
A photo of the Greensboro, North Carolina, recruiting station after the Dec. 14 shooting. Photo via Recruiter Times' Facebook page

This article by Haley Britzky originally appeared on Task & Purpose, a digital news and culture publication dedicated to military and veterans issues.

A person who applied to join the Army but was disqualified allegedly returned on Monday evening and fired shots at a recruiting station in North Carolina, officials confirmed to Task & Purpose.

"Shots were fired at the Greensboro, North Carolina, Army Recruiting Station the evening of Dec. 14, causing damage to the entrance of the facility," Kelli Bland, a spokeswoman for U.S. Army Recruiting Command, said in a statement. "The station was closed, and no Army personnel were present at the time of the incident."

Bland said that the suspect -- who had attempted to apply to join the service multiple times -- is in police custody. A public information officer for the Greensboro Police Department, Ronald Glenn, confirmed to Task & Purpose that the suspect, James Cooper, 36, was taken into custody on Dec. 14.

Cooper had "several outstanding orders for arrest," Glenn said.

He was charged Monday with six counts of assault with a deadly weapon, one charge of discharging a firearm in city limits, one count of carrying a concealed weapon, and one count of discharging a firearm into occupied property.

News of the shooting first surfaced on the Recruiter Times Facebook page, an unofficial page that highlights the activities of Army recruiters.

Recruiters at the station teleworked on the 15th but "requested the ability to return today at the current approved levels, which is 50 percent capacity to enable us to follow CDC guidelines."

"Our leaders and personnel are constantly evaluating the current environment to ensure we are taking the appropriate measures to protect our force at recruiting stations across the country," Bland said. "While I can't get into the specific force protection measures in place at each of our stations, I can tell you we focus on visibility, access control, and physical protection measures."

This isn't the first time military recruiting stations have come under fire. In 2009, a man "upset about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan opened fire from his truck at two soldiers standing outside a military recruiting station" in Little Rock, Arkansas. In 2015, a man "started spraying bullets" at a recruiting station in Chattanooga, Tennessee, before driving to a Naval Reserve center seven miles away and injuring at least three people.

-- This article originally appeared at Task & Purpose. Follow Task & Purpose on Twitter.

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