A gay nightclub here was the scene early Sunday of the worst terror attack in U.S. history since 9/11.
* 50 people were killed inside the Pulse club and at least 53 people were injured, police say.
* The gunman was Omar Mateen of Ft. Pierce, Florida, a law enforcement source told CNN.
* Orlando police shot and killed Mateen.
"It
 appears he was organized and well-prepared," Orlando Police Chief John 
Mina said early Sunday. The shooter  had an assault-type weapon, a 
handgun and "some type of (other) device on him." 
There
 has been no claim of responsibility for the attack on jihadi forums, 
but ISIS sympathizers have reacted by praising the attack on pro-Islamic
 State forums.
Officials, aided by 
the FBI, warned that a lengthy investigation was ahead given the number 
of victims and the scope of the violence.
"There's blood everywhere," U.S. Rep. Alan Grayson told reporters. "There's an enormous amount of evidence to be collected."
It's
 just shocking," said Christopher Hansen, who was inside Pulse when he 
heard gunshots, "just one after another after another."
"It could have lasted a whole song," he said.
Hansen was getting a drink at the bar about 2 a.m. when he "just saw bodies going down."
Orlando
 Mayor Buddy Dyer said he had declared a state of emergency for the city
 and has requested the governor do the same for the state.  
Before
 Sunday, the deadliest shootings in U.S. history were at Virginia Tech 
in 2007 and Sandy Hook Elementary School in 2012, with 32 and 27 killed. 
Law enforcement sources had told CNN 
that the suspect had possible explosive devices strapped to his body and
 in his vehicle, but a U.S. official said later that no explosives were 
found. 
Mina said authorities were 
called to the club. After a shootout with the gunman around 2 a.m. ET, 
the shooter ran back inside the club and took people hostage. 
People inside the club were 
communicating on their phones with law enforcement between that time and
 around 5 a.m., when authorities used an armored vehicle to break down 
the door of the building. The club is a vast, open space that was 
hosting more than 300 patrons late Saturday and into Sunday morning.
One
 officer suffered an eye injury when a bullet struck his Kevlar helmet, 
said Danny Banks, special agent in charge of the Florida Department of 
Law Enforcement's Orlando bureau. The helmet saved the officer's life, 
Banks said. 
The shooter, Omar Saddiqui Mateen, is 29
 and from Fort Pierce, about 120 miles southeast of Orlando, two law 
enforcement officials told CNN. He had been trained as a security guard,
 CNN has learned.
Orlando 
authorities said they consider the violence an act of domestic terror. 
The FBI is involved. While investigators are exploring all angles, they 
"have suggestions the individual has leanings towards (Islamic 
terrorism), but right now we can't say definitely," said Ron Hopper, 
assistant special agent in charge of the FBI's Orlando bureau. 
Video from CNN affiliate WKMG captured clubgoers carrying injured people from the club. 
When the shots erupted, Hansen hit the ground, crawling on his elbows and knees, before he spotted a man who had been shot. 
"I took my bandana off and shoved it in 
the hole in his back," Hansen said, adding that he saw another woman who
 appeared to be shot in the arm.
Luis
 Burbano was with his best friend inside the club when they realized the
 pop, pop, pop they were hearing wasn't the music but gunfire. 
It
 was getting, "closer and louder and louder," he told CNN's Jake Tapper.
 He and his friend noticed a 10-second break in the shooting, so they 
managed to make a break for the door. 
"We tried to save ourselves and as many people as we could to make it out of there," he said. 
Once
 outside he saw a young man collapse in front of him. "I grabbed him not
 realizing that his forearm was split in two," Burbano said. 
He acted fast by ripping off his shirt and tightening it around the man's arm to try to slow the bleeding.
Burbano spoke with CNN hours after talking with police and getting home. He was still very shaken. 
Pulse describes itself
 as "the hottest gay bar" in the heart of Orlando. Hours before the 
shooting, the club urged partygoers to attend its "Latin flavor" event 
Saturday night.  
Jovial, well-dressed crowds heeded the call in an event that turned into a nightmare. 
Ricardo Negron Almodovar said he was in the club when the shooting started. He barely escaped. 
"People
 on the dance floor and bar got down on the floor and some of us who 
were near the bar and back exit managed to go out through the outdoor 
area and just ran," he posted on the club's Facebook page.
 "I am safely home and hoping everyone gets home safely as well." 
Anthony
 Torres, who was at the club, said he and his friends were leaving the 
club when the shots were fired just after last call, as the club was 
nearing closing time. 
"The shots 
did not sound like a regular handgun. It sounded like it was shooting 
repetitively and it wouldn't stop," said Torres, who added that he saw 
at least 10 people who had been shot. 
Source: CNN.com 
 


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