1995 San Diego tank rampage
Date | May 17, 1995 |
---|---|
Time | 6:45 p.m. (UTC−07:00) |
Location | National Guard Armory and nearby San Diego |
Motive | Unknown |
Perpetrator | Shawn Nelson |
Outcome | Nelson killed by police |
Deaths | 1 (Nelson) |
Non-fatal injuries | 0 |
Property damage | US$149,201 (eq. $289,855 in 2023) |
The 1995 San Diego tank rampage was the theft of an M60A3 tank by Shawn Timothy Nelson and his destruction of cars and utilities in suburban San Diego.
Nelson was a native Californian and United States Army veteran with unusual habits that drew the attention of his neighbors. By the second quarter of 1995, the 35-year-old had recently suffered financial, professional, and interpersonal setbacks, some of which stemmed from long-term substance abuse.
On May 17, he stole a 57.3-tonne (56.4-long-ton; 63.2-short-ton) tank from the local California Army National Guard armory and drove it around for six miles (9.7 km), crushing cars and infrastructure in his path—though without injuring anyone. The tank crashed and was partially disabled, and San Diego police forced it open before shooting and killing Nelson.
Nelson's motives are unknown. The incident raised questions about military security at the Guard armory and spurred changes in California's tank storage.
Background
Shawn Nelson
Shawn Nelson | |
---|---|
Born | California, United States | August 21, 1959
Died | May 17, 1995 | (aged 35)
Cause of death | Gunshot wound |
Occupations |
|
Spouse |
Suzy Hellman
(m. 1984; div. 1991) |
Military career | |
Branch | United States Army |
Years | 1978–1980 |
Rank | Private |
Unit | Armor Branch |
Born on August 21, 1959, in California,[1] Shawn Timothy Nelson[2] was the second of Betty and Fred Nelson's three sons.[3] He attended James Madison High School—where he was a sophomore during the 1975–1976 academic year,[4] grew up in Clairemont, San Diego, and later married Suzy Hellman in 1984.[5]
In 1978, Nelson enlisted in the
A patient at
In Clairemont, Nelson was a minor celebrity for his unusual behavior. He spent nighttime hours mowing his lawn and digging for gold in a 20-foot (6.1 m) backyard pit, his property was covered in machine detritus and garbage, and police had visited nine times in 1994–95 "on calls ranging from reports of domestic violence to a complaint that Nelson's van had been stolen." He was renowned, but not well known by his neighbors.[3]
Nelson long struggled with
Armory
The California National Guard armory at 32°48′02″N 117°09′42″W / 32.800612°N 117.161560°W[9] was surrounded by an eight-foot (2.4 m) chain-link fence, which was topped by three runs of barbed wire. Armory personnel usually left by 6 p.m.[10]
The M60A3 tank is 31 feet (9.4 m) long, weighs 57.3 tonnes (56.4 long tons; 63.2 short tons) fully-loaded,[9] and can reach speeds of 45 miles per hour (72 km/h) with a range of nearly 300 miles (480 km).[10] It has a 7.62-millimetre (0.300 in) M73 machine gun, 12.7-millimetre (0.50 in) M2 Browning heavy machine gun, and 105-millimetre (4.1 in) M68 tank gun; these weapons systems at the San Diego armory were all unloaded.[11]
Theft and destruction
On the evening of May 17, the armory's gates were unsecured because personnel were working late.[6] Nelson was uncontested at 6:30 p.m. when he drove his Chevrolet van onto the property. The shirtless and disheveled man then broke the padlocks on three different tanks before starting an M60A3.[2] Nelson crashed through the armory's gate at approximately 6:45 in the evening.[11]
Nelson drove the tank through residential San Diego neighborhoods, where residents described the destruction as intentional: "He didn't go down the center of the street, [...] It seems he just wanted to get the utilities and cause as much as damage without hurting people."[11] Over a distance of six miles (9.7 km),[3] he destroyed traffic lights, a bus bench,[2] 40 cars[7]—crushing some down to a height of 2+1⁄2 feet (0.76 m)—and took out fire hydrants and utility poles, disrupting electricity to roughly 5100 households.[11] Nelson inflicted no injuries during his 25-minute rampage.[12]
The San Diego Police Department (SDPD) learned of the incident at 6:46 p.m. when a detective reported that he was following Nelson. SDPD units headed to intercept the tank, and California State Route 163 (SR 163) was closed. An SDPD captain said of Nelson's tank skills: "He obviously knew what he was doing. He was working that tank pretty good."[9]
Death
After driving onto SR 163, Nelson crashed the tank into a three-foot (0.91 m) traffic barrier[11] at 32°47′38″N 117°09′30″W / 32.793958°N 117.158426°W,[9] near Sharp Memorial Hospital.[2] The impact dislodged one of the tank's tracks. Four SDPD officers boarded the tank and opened the hatch (which was in "combat lockdown") with bolt cutters. Nelson refused to surrender and attempted to dislodge the police by spinning the tank.[9]
Having no armament capable of penetrating the armor, and unsure whether Nelson was armed, police shot him. Two days after the incident, the Los Angeles Times reported that Nelson was shot in the right shoulder,[2] and The New York Times said he was alive when pulled from the tank;[8] 18 days after the event, People published that Nelson had been shot in the left shoulder, killing him immediately.[3] Sharp Memorial later reported that Nelson died of "gunshot wounds",[11] and the San Diego coroner's office said that Nelson "smelled of alcohol."[2]
Aftermath
Nelson's friends criticized the shooting, saying police should have used tear gas or crisis negotiation; SDPD captain Tom Hall defended the decision, saying "[t]he bottom line was, we had to stop this guy."[3]
For legal culpability, the California Guard was found to be negligent and therefore responsible. The state paid out a total of US$149,201 (equivalent to $289,855 in 2023): $10,000 (equivalent to $19,427 in 2023) to Pacific Bell, $12,500 (equivalent to $24,284 in 2023) to the city of San Diego, $40,965.69 (equivalent to $79,585 in 2023) to San Diego Gas & Electric, and the rest to individual citizens (mostly for damage to vehicles).[13]
In the following years, the uncertainty of Nelson's motives led to commentators projecting their theories onto his actions: "a saga about the middle class under siege; a fable about the emasculation of American men; a warning about what happens when ex-servicemen, lacking foreign enemies and domestic opportunities, bring the war home."[5]
National Guard
Immediately afterwards, the National Guard planned to send two additional tanks to SR 163 to help maneuver the disabled tank onto a flatbed truck.[9]
The Guard confirmed that vehicles entering the armory grounds were not checked (despite heightened security after the recent Oklahoma City bombing).[2] Major Ed Gale told the media that Nelson apparently broke an exterior lock on the tank to gain access, and that it was the first tank theft at the armory.[9] By the next day, the batteries had been removed from 28 more National Guard tanks in Southern California, and San Diego Mayor Susan Golding had written to California Governor Pete Wilson, demanding an investigation into the armory's security.[2]
By November 1996, the Guard had improved security and awareness at its armories, and moved all its tanks to either
See also
- 1974 White House helicopter incident – Theft & flight of military aircraft
- 1993 Perth tank rampage – 1993 tank rampage
- 2008 Jerusalem bulldozer attack – Vehicle-ramming attack in West Jerusalem
- Craig D. Button – US Air Force pilot who disappeared and crashed his A-10 aircraft (1964–1997)
- Marvin Heemeyer – American criminal (1951–2004)
- Tank (film) – 1984 film by Marvin J. Chomsky
References
- California Department of Health Services, Sacramento, California
- ^ from the original on May 25, 2020. Retrieved November 11, 2022.
- ^ from the original on November 7, 2022. Retrieved January 7, 2023.
- ^ Clark, Martha; Garner, Diana, eds. (1976). "Sophomores". Prospectus 1976. Vol. XIII. James Madison High School. pp. 290–305.
- ^ from the original on January 8, 2023. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
- ^ a b c Noll, Jessica (February 11, 2020). "'The American Tank Rampage': Podcast chronicles 23 minutes of terror". KFMB-TV. Archived from the original on November 7, 2022. Retrieved January 8, 2023.
- ^ a b "Man steals tank, ransacks neighborhood". San Diego: United Press International. May 18, 1995. Archived from the original on May 24, 2020. Retrieved November 7, 2022.
- ^ OCLC 1645522.
- ^ ISSN 1063-102X.
Clairemont plumber killed by police gunfire; Route 163 traffic snarled
- ^ OCLC 1645522.
- ^ a b c d e f Fordahl, Matthew (May 18, 1995). "Police Kill Man Who Hijacked Tank". San Diego: Associated Press. Archived from the original on November 6, 2022. Retrieved November 6, 2022.
- from the original on March 28, 2009. Retrieved November 18, 2022.
- ^ from the original on July 6, 2017. Retrieved January 7, 2023.
Further reading
- ISBN 0-688-12299-X.
- Scott, Garrett; Olds, Ian (2002), Cul de Sac: A Suburban War Story (documentary film)
- Wiedemann, Joe (February 9, 2020), "Tank Rampage", True Crime Chronicles (podcast), archived from the original on January 8, 2023