Ark. Party Leader Killer's Note A Mystery
Police Find No Connection Between Slain Party Chair And Phone Number Found In Murderer's Home
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In this June 23, 2007, photo, Arkansas' Democratic Party Chairman Bill Gwatney addresses his party's state convention in North Little Rock, Ark. (AP Photo)
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Play CBS Video Video Dem. Official Shot And Killed "CBS News RAW:" Arkansas Democratic Party official Bill Gwatney was shot three times by an assailant at the Party's headquarters in Little Rock. Both Gwatney and the gunman have died.
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Video Shooting At Ark. Democratic HQ "CBS News RAW:" Arkansas Democratic party chairman Bill Gwatney was shot by an assailant at the Democratic headquarters in Little Rock. Gwatney remains in critical condition.
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Interactive Crime Beat Statistics and specifics on crime in America.
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Interactive FBI Crime Statistics Explore the latest information on U.S. crime, from acts of violence to property damage.
The number did not match state party headquarters, Gwatney's home number, any of his three General Motors car dealerships or any cell phone police know of for him, said Little Rock police Lt. Terry Hastings. A subpoena has been issued to determine who owns the working Arkansas phone number, he said.
The note found at Timothy Dale Johnson's house is one of the few clues left that police hope will help them determine why Johnson drove 30 miles to Little Rock to shoot and kill Gwatney at state party headquarters Aug. 13. Johnson, 50, was shot and killed by police after a 30-mile chase into Grant County.
The telephone number "could be anything," Hastings said. "It could a salesman he talked to at Gwatney. It could be a friend's phone number. We just don't know."
Hastings said police will not release the number.
Johnson also had two sets of keys bearing Gwatney's dealership logo, but Hastings said investigators hadn't found the vehicles to which they belong.
"They're old keys. They probably don't go to anything anymore," he said. "The only vehicle he had was the truck and it didn't go to that."
Johnson owned at least 16 guns, had antidepressant pills and made out a will before shooting Gwatney, police documents said. He shot Gwatney soon after quitting his job at a Target store over some graffiti written on a store wall.
Police will also send a computer found at Johnson's home to a forensic lab and are working with the FBI to determine whether there is anything on it that may indicate why he targeted Gwatney, Hastings said.
Former President Clinton, Sen. Hillary Rodham Clinton and Gov. Mike Beebe were among the hundreds who attended Monday's funeral for Gwatney, who was a state senator for 10 years before becoming the state's Democratic chairman last year.
Beebe, a Democrat, is to pick Gwatney's replacement, and the governor said Tuesday he expects it will take several weeks to make that decision.
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Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





Probably bought two pieces of junk from his car lot. Used car sales men and politicians.