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Investigators in a small Florida town were working Sunday to determine what 
led a 72-year-old former employee of a trucking company to go on 
a shooting spree Saturday, attacking former co-workers and his ex-boss, 
killing two and wounding two more before killing himself.Authorities say 
Hubert Allen Jr. drove to several locations around Union County, including 
the headquarters for Pritchett Trucking Inc. and shot the men Saturday. 
Investigators believe Allen acted alone.According to a Union County Sheriff's 
Office news release, Allen shot and killed former co-worker Rolando Gonzalez-Delgado, 
28, around 9 a.m. Saturday, then went a short distance and fatally 
shot his former employer, 80-year-old Marvin Pritchett.A few minutes later, 
he pulled over where another former co-worker was driving a farm tractor, 
exchanged words with him and then fired one shot from a shotgun, 
authorities said. That victim, 66-year-old Lewis Mabrey Jr., was in good 
condition as he was preparing to undergo surgery for a broken arm 
and other injuries, according to officials.Not long after that, Allen went 
to the company's headquarters in Lake Butler and shot 44-year-old David 
Griffis in the stomach, the release said. Griffis was in critical condition. 
Authorities said Allen then returned to his nearby home and killed himself.With 
a population of about 2,000, Lake Butler is located about an hour's 
drive southwest of Jacksonville.Investigators were working at the five s
atives gained access to 
the family's property in Groveland, just 26 miles from the park's entrance, 
on Saturday and was able to confirm their vacation cabin had burned 
to the ground.The family saw firefighters on a TV news report a 
day earlier defending the cabin."It's just mind-blowing the way the fire 
swept through and destroyed it so quickly," said Sanderson, who's been monitoring 
the fire from her home near Tampa Bay, Fla. "The only thing 
left standing is our barbeque pit."The Rim Fire has burned nearly 200 
square miles -- an area about the size of Chicago. It started 
in a remote canyon of the Stanislaus National Forest Aug. 17 and 
is just 5 percent contained. Its cause was under investigation.The fire 
has grown so large and is burning dry timber and brush with 
such ferocity that it has created its own weather pattern, making it 
difficult to predict in which direction it will move."As the smoke column 
builds up it breaks down and collapses inside of itself, sending downdrafts 
and gusts that can go in any direction," said Daniel Berlant, a 
spokesman for the California Department of Forestry and Fire Protection. 
"There's a lot of potential for this one to continue to grow."The 
tourist mecca of Yosemite Valley, the part of the park known around 
the world for such sights as the Half Dome and El Capitan 
rock formations and waterfalls, remained open, clear of smoke and free from 
other signs of the fire that remained about 20 miles away.

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