Tag Archives: Hubert Allen

Lake Butler Trying to Pull Together ‘Real Tight’ In Wake Of Third Shooting Victim Death

By   and on August 27th, 2013

A large crowd is expected at Pritchett's funeral service, which will be held 2 p.m. Friday at the First Christian Church in Lake Butler. Many businesses, including the courthouse, will be closed for a majority of the afternoon.
Amanda Jackson / WUFT News
A large crowd is expected at Pritchett’s funeral service, which will be held 2 p.m. Friday at the First Christian Church in Lake Butler. Many businesses, including the courthouse, will be closed for a majority of the afternoon.

Flags remain at half-staff outside many businesses around Lake Butler, where a community mourns the loss of a third victim from a deadly Saturday shooting spree.

Forty-four year old David Griffis was shot in the stomach and rushed to the Shands at UF Trauma Unit on Saturday. After undergoing numerous surgeries and remaining in critical condition for three days, Griffis died of his injuries early Tuesday morning. He was the fourth to die by Hubert Allen Jr.’s gun, authorities said, including Allen himself.

Allen, 72, a former employee of Pritchett Trucking Company had written the names of his four victims in what Union County Sheriff Jerry Whitehead described as a suicide note left at his residence. Although the note mentioned the names of his intended victims, the sheriff’s department said it still has not determined a motive.

Whitehead said all the guns used have been located. He said Allen purchased them legally.

Lake Butler residents laid flowers by the sign at the entrance of Pritchett Trucking on State Road 121, where all the victims were employed.

Shortly before WUFT was asked to leave the premises, reporters overheard a conversation between two co-workers.

When one was asked how she was holding up, the other said, “We’re keeping things going. That’s the way he would have wanted” (an apparent reference to the deceased owner of the company, Marvin Pritchett).

Whitehead said the community is really coming together during this difficult time.

“We pull together through our schools and our church, that’s what we are,” he said.

This town isn’t a stranger to tragedy. In 2006, a truck/bus crash left seven children dead and several more seriously injured.

“Learning how to grieve is just something you have to go through. It can’t be taught,” Whitehead said. “My father told me many, many years ago that in these situations you have to get up, put your boots on, tie them real tight and go to work.”

In Lake Butler, it seems almost everyone has a family connection. Coincidentally, Whitehead’s own mother passed away just two weeks ago. His mother was the sister of Pritchett’s widow.

 

‘Pillar To This Community’ Gone From Union County After Pritchett Trucking Shootings

‘Pillar To This Community’ Gone From Union County After Pritchett Trucking Shootings

The entrance to Marvin Pritchett's farm outside Lake Butler in Union County.
The entrance to Marvin Pritchett’s farm outside Lake Butler in Union County.
Jerry Whitehead, Union County sheriff, answers questions at a press conference Monday in Lake Butler.
Jerry Whitehead, Union County sheriff, answers questions at a press conference Monday in Lake Butler.

A 72-year-old Lake Butler man who killed himself after fatally shooting his former boss and a coworker and wounding two others left a hand-written note listing targets, Union County Sheriff Jerry Whitehead said Monday.

Starting at 9 a.m. on Saturday, Hubert Allen Jr., a longtime employee of Pritchett Trucking Company, sent members of Lake Butler looking for answers after the sheriff’s office said the man drove to several locations in Union County, shot four men and returned to his farm to kill himself.

Whitehead said the sheriff’s office recovered Allen’s “suicide note” Saturday afternoon. It was three-quarters of a page long, Whitehead said, and looked as if it had taken two or three sittings to write.

Investigators at Allen’s home also found a .22 caliber rifle, a .410 small bore shotgun, and an unfired .32 caliber handgun, Whitehead said.

Whitehead said the suicide note contained names of people Allen planned to kill. There was one name listed that Allen did not go after. Whitehead did not release the name, but said his office interviewed the man, and he was fine.

Whitehead said he was shocked by Allen’s behavior.

Allen did not have any previous incidents with the law, Whitehead said.

He never knew Allen to suffer from any kind of mental health disorder, he said, and could not determine a motive.

Three of the men Allen shot were former coworkers at Pritchett Trucking, according to Union County investigators. The fourth was 80-year-old company owner Marvin Pritchett.

The sheriff’s office said Allen shot Pritchett and Rolando Gonzalez-Delgado, 28, killing both men.

Allen worked for Pritchett for 35 years, Whitehead said. Just nine days before the shooting, interviewees told the sheriff’s office, Allen had retired from the company with no issues. The men were described as friends.

One of the wounded men, David Griffis, 44, was in critical condition and the other, Lewis Mabrey Jr., 66, was in good condition at UF Health Shands Hospital in Gainesville, Whitehead said.

To show its support, the community is organizing local blood drives to help Griffis.

“It’s tough,” Whitehead said. “We’re going to get through it.”

James Tallman, a Union County commissioner, said Pritchett’s death leaves a hole in the community.

“Mr. Pritchett was an absolute pillar to this community,” Tallman said, “and we’re going to dearly miss him.”

“We lost not one person,” he said, “but we lost several friends in this community.”

At the foot of the Pritchett parking sign in Lake butler, someone laid a bouquet of eight red roses in the grass to commemorate the victims. Beside them sat a cup of red, white and blue carnations. And to the right, a bundle of purple flowers wilted on the concrete.
At the foot of the Pritchett parking sign in Lake butler, someone laid a bouquet of eight red roses in the grass to commemorate the victims. Beside them sat a cup of red, white and blue carnations. And to the left, a bundle of purple flowers wilted on the concrete.

Tallman said the recovery from the tragedy will be a community-wide struggle.

“I think a lot of prayer is what we need right now,” he said.