Officers in Jasper, Georgia, confronted and fatally shot a suspected gunman outside a Veterans Affairs clinic Tuesday after the man opened fire and wounded an employee. The VA worker was airlifted to a hospital.
The shooting struck a small community about 60 miles north of Atlanta, and it struck a facility dedicated to serving the men and women who served this country. Jasper Police Chief Matt Dawkins called it a “significant event” for the city. Multiple federal and state agencies now share the investigation.
Officers with the Jasper Police Department were dispatched around 1:30 p.m. Tuesday to a report of shots fired at the Pickens County VA Clinic on East Church Street, CBS News Atlanta reported. When they arrived, they located the suspected shooter at the scene.
Police confronted the individual outside the clinic. Officers shot and killed him during the encounter.
One victim, confirmed by a Department of Veterans Affairs spokesperson as a clinic employee, was found at the scene and taken for medical treatment before being airlifted to a hospital. The specific hospital was not named. Chief Dawkins told reporters no one else inside the clinic was believed injured.
The Washington Times reported that Dawkins confirmed the lone victim:
“Everybody in there, as far as I know, nobody else is injured, the people inside, just one victim.”
That is a small mercy in a situation that could have been far worse.
Authorities have not identified the suspected shooter. They have not disclosed a motive. Chief Dawkins was blunt about how little investigators know so far.
As AP News reported, Dawkins said:
“We don’t know what led up to it.”
He described the scene as “eye-opening” for a department that rarely faces this kind of violence. “We don’t have this often,” Dawkins said.
The FBI told CBS News Atlanta it was aware of the shooting and was assessing whether federal involvement would be necessary. Dawkins confirmed the bureau would investigate. The Georgia Bureau of Investigation also confirmed it would probe the police shooting, standard procedure when officers use deadly force.
The Washington Examiner noted that the VA Office of Inspector General is also assisting the investigation, adding another federal layer to the response. The multi-agency presence reflects the seriousness of any attack on a federal facility, and the urgency of protecting those who care for veterans, much as federal authorities have pursued those who exploit veterans’ benefits for personal gain.
VA Secretary Doug Collins addressed the incident directly. Breitbart reported his social media statement:
“The threat is eliminated.”
The VA clinic will stay closed for the rest of the week. City officials asked residents to avoid the area around the building while investigators continue their work.
VA spokesman Peter Kasperowicz addressed the aftermath:
“VA is rescheduling appointments as necessary and ensuring Veterans and staff have access to counseling and chaplain services in the wake of this tragic event.”
The disruption hits veterans who depend on that rural clinic for care. Jasper sits in the north Georgia mountains. For many local vets, the next closest VA facility means a longer drive, an added burden on people who already gave plenty.
The Jasper Police Department responded fast and ended the threat. One employee was hurt, but no one else inside the clinic was harmed. In a nation that has seen too many attacks on soft targets, that outcome matters.
Questions remain, about the shooter, about the motive, about security at federal health care facilities in small towns. Those answers will come as the investigation unfolds.
What we know right now is simple: officers ran toward the gunfire, and they stopped it. That is what law enforcement does when it works the way it should.
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