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Suspect in college shooting went about routine despite arrest warrant

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(MCT) — ST. LOUIS — The shooting of a career-college administrator downtown marked Sean Johnson’s second sudden violent outburst, officials said Wednesday, and exposed an unavoidable rip in the law-enforcement net intended to catch fugitives.

Although Johnson had been wanted in St. Louis County since May on an arrest warrant for violating terms of probation from the earlier attack, he continued with his usual routine as an on-again, off-again student at the Stevens Institute of Business & Arts.

That’s where he allegedly wounded the financial aid officer, Greg Elsenrath, 45, with a single shot about 2 p.m. Tuesday. Johnson, 34, also wounded himself, possibly by accident while putting his pistol under his coat, police said. Both men, hit in the chest, were expected to survive.

St. Louis Police Chief Sam Dotson said Wednesday the failure to rein in Johnson sooner exposes a flaw: “The number of people who are wanted out there, and the resources we have to go to get them, there is a disparity there.”

Paul Fox, the county court administrator, said, “It’s not unusual for some people to be wanted for more than a year on outstanding warrants. There is such a large number that it overwhelms the system, and these departments don’t have the staff to go out and look for every individual.”

County police send information to other jurisdictions where fugitives have home addresses, but said St. Louis city police asked about a year ago to be taken off the list.

Dotson, appointed city police chief in December, said he was unaware of that request, but doesn’t think it would have mattered to the capture of Johnson. “The reality is, we are actively looking for individuals who are wanted in aggravated assaults and homicide cases,” he said. “This was a violation for probation, and that’s a challenge because there are so many out there.”

Information in law enforcement databases would have revealed Johnson’s wanted status to any police officer who checked his record. It appears that none did, until he allegedly attacked Elsenrath on Tuesday.

Johnson, 34, was charged Wednesday in St. Louis Circuit Court with first-degree assault, armed criminal action, unlawful possession of a firearm and possession of a defaced firearm.

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