LOCAL

Alleged gunman in Tuesday's rampage had history of violence

Jim Schultz
Redding Record Searchlight
Law enforcement officials investigate a portion of Rancho Tehama Road where shooting suspect Kevin Neal was gunned down by police Tuesday.

A portrait of a violent and crazed man began to emerge late Tuesday, just hours after he allegedly killed four people and wounded 10 others in rural Tehama County before dying at the hands of police.

At least one person living near Kevin Janson Neal, the man suspected of the mass killing, described the “hell” of having Neal as a neighbor and court documents reveal the alleged violent attack in January against a woman authorities said is one of the people killed in Tuesday’s rampage.

Kevin Janson Neal

Tehama County Assistant Sheriff Phil Johnston said Neal earlier in the year stabbed the woman, who he did not name.

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Prosecutors allege Neal attacked her and robbed another woman in the Jan. 31 incident, according to court documents. A criminal complaint names both women, though authorities haven’t identified which one he killed during Tuesday’s rampage.

A Tehama County judged signed a protective order against Neal for both women and a felony criminal trial against Neal was set to begin next year.

Neal held both women against their will using violence, according to the complaint.

He also fired a gun – possibly an AR-15 Bushmaster rifle – during the attack, prosecutors allege.

The rifle was specifically called out as an illegal assault rifle in the criminal complaint against Neal, though it’s unknown whether the same weapon was used during Tuesday’s deadly shooting.

Certain unmodified AR-15s are illegal under California law.

Tuesday’s attacks began at Neal’s property, a collection of mobile homes scattered around a home about 15 miles southwest of Red Bluff. Google Earth images show numerous marijuana grows in the neighborhood.

The Rancho Tehama Reserve — an isolated rural subdivision home to about 1,485 people — is described on its website as a “quiet private country community” located 12 miles west of Interstate 5 between Red Bluff and Corning.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, it was 86.3 percent white in 2010 and had a poverty rate of 43 percent.

Resident Brian Flint said he got a call Tuesday morning that his roommate was injured and that his truck had been stolen. It turned out his neighbor was the gunman, who Flint on Tuesday only identified as Kevin.

“The crazy thing is that the neighbor has been shooting a lot of bullets lately, hundreds of rounds, large magazines,” Flint said. “We made it aware that this guy is crazy and he’s been threatening us.”

Living near the gunman was "hell," Flint said, adding the man often harassed him and his neighbors.