A man accused in a shooting rampage at a Southern California …
42-year-old Scott Evans Dekraai of Huntington Beach, Calif. (Seal Beach Police Dept.)
Southern California prosecutors said Friday they will seek the …
Updated: Thursday, 13 Oct 2011, 4:30 PM CDT
Published : Thursday, 13 Oct 2011, 6:36 AM CDT
SEAL BEACH, Calif. (AP) — The ex-wife of the man suspected of killing eight people in a shooting rampage at a hair salon claimed in court papers filed this year that he was mentally unstable and had threatened to kill himself or someone else at least once.
Michelle Fournier Dekraai made the allegations in May in a filing related to her long-running, bitter custody battle with Scott Dekraai over their 7-year-old son.
There was no sign that she had filed a restraining order, but a relative of Scott Dekraai said Michelle told her that he had walked into the Meritage Salon as recently as two months ago and threatened to kill Michelle and her co-workers.
Police say Scott Dekraai opened fire Wednesday afternoon in the salon, where his ex-wife worked, and was arrested soon after. On Tuesday he had been in court for a hearing related to the custody dispute.
Police have not released information about the victims and it's unclear if Dekraai's ex-wife is among them, but witnesses say she was at the salon when the gunman barged in and began shooting.
The couple divorced in 2007, and Scott Dekraai remarried, but the battle over their son continued to rage. Michelle Fournier Dekraai wrote in the court papers that her ex-husband was "almost manic when it comes to demanding absolute right to control our son and make unilateral decisions."
She wrote that giving Scott Dekraai more custody of their child would be lead to "a situation where the inmates are running the asylum."
Sharyn White, a step-aunt of Scott Dekraai and a friend of Michelle's, said Michelle previously told her that Scott had walked into the salon and threatened to kill Fournier and others. White said that according to Michelle, her colleagues and the customers in the salon laughed off the threat.
White, of Seal Beach, said in a telephone interview that Scott Dekraai had a troubled upbringing and grappled with mental illness.
Michelle Dekraai wrote in the court filing that her ex-husband had been physically abusive to her during their marriage, and that in 2008 he beat his stepfather, pleaded guilty to assault and battery and underwent a year of anger management.
A temporary restraining order obtained by Scott Dekraai's stepfather in 2007 said that Dekraai attacked him that year, leaving him with cuts and bruises on his face and right arm. It said Dekraai's son witnessed the attack.
Michelle Dekraai also alleged that her ex-husband called 911 at least once "advised that he was going to kill himself or someone else." She wrote that he "is a diagnosed bipolar individual who has problems with his own medication and his reaction to same, and he certainly shouldn't be allowed to have unilateral and unfettered control of any and all medical and psychological aspects of our son's life."
In his own court filing, Scott Dekraai alleged that his ex-wife had a drinking problem, saying she was talking loudly and slurring words at their son's Little League baseball game earlier this year and that her breath smelled of alcohol when he picked up his son from her house one time last year.
He told the court in 2008 that he wanted to communicate with his ex-wife only by email because she was verbally abusive, and that she used an expletive word in place of his name.
Lydia Sosa, a hairstylist who worked at the salon until about two years ago, said Michelle Dekraai spoke often of her "bitter" problems with her ex-husband.
Scott Dekraai's neighbors in Huntington Beach also were aware of the custody battle. They described him as an outgoing man who invited them over for pool parties and played catch with his son in his yard.
"It was a very difficult battle and he was trying to get more time" with his son, said Jo Cornhall, who lives across the street from Dekraai.
Next-door neighbor Stephanie Malchow, 29, said she was shocked when she saw the photo of the stocky man with thinning hair being detained by Seal Beach police.
"I'm like, 'No, not this neighbor, no way. He's the nicest guy ever,'" Malchow said.
Six women and two men were killed in the shooting. Their identities were not officially released, but owner Randy Fannin's niece, Tami Scarcella, told the Los Angeles Times her uncle was among the dead.
Wednesday was a busy afternoon at the salon and every hair-dressing station was full. Terrified customers dove for cover as the gunman opened fire in the shop blocks from the beach in this quaint seaside town.
The shooter stepped outside, shot a man sitting in a truck in the parking lot and sped off.
Police arrested Dekraai, 41, about a half-mile from the scene. He did not struggle, police said
A woman who was wounded in the rampage remained in critical condition Thursday, police said. Sgt. Steve Bowles said the woman was showing some signs of improvement. Her name was not released.
The crime scene tape around the salon was gone early Thursday, with blinds on the side windows drawn and black plastic bags taped over the front windows and door.
A memorial to the victims early Thursday
started with two candles, some pink hibiscus blooms and a handwritten poem called "The Day After."
Written on line notebook paper and signed only Laurie, it was "dedicated to all who lost and a most precious Seal Beach that didn't deserve this carnage."
Mary Stearns of Huntington Beach came by to show her respects and leave a red candle. She knew Fannin, the salon owner, for more than 30 years, following him to three different salons over the years to get her hair done every eight weeks.
"I was going to have him over for Christmas. I just saw him on Saturday. I had a bottle of wine I brought back from Australia. He loved wine," she said.
The mass shooting was the worst in Orange County history since July 12, 1976, when a custodian killed seven people and wounded two others at California State University, Fullerton. Seal Beach had seen just one homicide in the four years before Wednesday.
Scott Dekraai was seeking full custody of the couple's son but a court-ordered review recommended against that, John Cate Jr., the attorney for Michelle Dekraai, told the Orange County Register.
Dekraai appeared for a court hearing in the case on Tuesday but it was merely a scheduling meeting, Cate said.
"Obviously, I saw no indication" that he was violent, the attorney said.
Kari Salveson of Los Alamitos, who attended a service for the victims at SeaCoast Grace Church in Seal Beach, said she had known Michelle Dekraai for more than 10 years, and that she made every visit to the salon special.
"She could gab away. She was one of those girlfriends you could never get enough of. She made you smile and she made you laugh," Salveson said.
Scott Dekraai married his current wife two or three years ago in his backyard, said his neighbor Malchow, who attended the wedding.
"He seemed very happy, he was just so happy he found someone new who loved his son," she said.
Dekraai walked with a limp after a tug boat accident that killed a fellow tug boat operator about two miles off the coast in 2007.
The area where the shootings took place is dotted with salons, restaurants, antique shops and boutiques clustered just blocks from a beach and pier popular with teenagers and young families. Many residents live and work within walking distance of the ocean and many businesses cater to Leisure World, a gated retirement community a few miles away that is home to 9,000 people.
"It's like Mayberry in the middle of Los Angeles," said Doyle Surratt, lead pastor of SeaCoast Grace Church.
Salon owner had loyal following at popular shop
If there is a Southern California way of life, Randy Fannin seemed to have found it.
The salon owner lived along the back nine of a desert golf course and his prosperous business is located just blocks from the beach and boasts a loyal clientele that had followed him from salon to salon.
A golf cart and Jet Skis were stored in his garage, and he had a swimming pool in his backyard.
Fannin was among the six women and two men killed Wednesday in a shooting rampage at his Salon Meritage in Seal Beach. Their identities were not officially released, but Fannin's niece, Tami Scarcella, told the Los Angeles Times her uncle was among the dead.
Fannin was a wine connoisseur, said friend and customer Mary Stearns. When he built the salon 20 years ago, he put slate tiles on the floor and Roman-inspired paintings on the walls. He called it a "fine blend of hair, skin and nails."
Fannin and wife Sandy, a stylist at the salon, were married at least 20 years, Stearns said.
Sandy Fannin survived the attack because she was in the back of the shop, said Ron Sesler, who owns a steakhouse next to the salon where many customers and stylists sought refuge during the shooting.
Stearns had stopped by the shop Saturday to make an appointment for Oct. 15 and give Fannin a bottle of Dragon's Lair wine she bought for him on a recent trip to Australia.
"I was really, really, really happy I got to see him," she said, explaining she'd known him for more than 30 years and followed him to three different salons to get her hair done every eight weeks.
Asked if Fannin had a specialty, Stearns said, "He loved the 'Brazilian Blowout.' He tried to get me to do it, but it was too expensive." A large sticker on the salon door also promoted the hair straightening treatment.
The Fannins spent Sundays, Mondays and Tuesdays at their home on the 18-hole Golf Club at Rancho California in the desert town of Murrieta. They drove to the salon every Wednesday, neighbor Sam Zorilla said.
Wednesday through Sunday, the Fannins stayed at a friend's home near the beach.
"He liked to play basketball with his grandson," said friend and neighbor Pandora Gage, who has known the Fannins since 2005. "He liked to golf. He was a really, really nice guy. They were a wonderful couple."
Neighbors described Randy Fannin as solid, friendly, caring and involved. Customers described him as family.
Handsome too, said customer Elaine Metz of Long Beach. "He looked like Tom Selleck."
Neighbor
and occasional golf partner Ross Vacca said he last saw Fannin on Monday.
"I was playing golf with two guys and he was on his bedroom patio hosing down around his pool," Vacca said. "It's just so hard to imagine that he is gone. It's a shock,"
Conversations with Fannin generally focused on "just neighbor chit chat," Gage said.
"He would always call me kiddo," she remembered.
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Associated Press writers Anthony McCartney, Thomas Watkins, John Rogers and Michael R. Blood in Los Angeles and Amy Taxin in Huntington Beach contributed to this report.
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