HERKIMER, N.Y. - Intelligent, fond of trivia, a World War II buff. An exemplary employee who seemed to work twice as fast as his peers, got along with people and didn't cause problems.
That was how his former boss described the 1980s Kurt Myers.
Spooky, a loner, odd and a ghost in the tightknit, upstate New York hometown his family had lived in for generations. That's the updated version of the man police said killed four people, apparently randomly, then holed up for nearly a day in an abandoned bar called Glory Days before dying in a gunfight with police who tried to root him out.
Authorities were still trying to piece together what drove the 64-year-old Myers to set fire to his apartment, casually stroll into a barbershop and open fire, killing two and injuring two others, then drive a mile up the road and work his shotgun again, killing two more at a car-care shop on the main drag in the village next door.
The superintendent of New York's state police, Joseph D'Amico, said at a briefing Thursday the information they've gotten so far hasn't helped draw a complete picture of Myers.
"He's apparently a loner," D'Amico said. "He didn't have a lot of contact with his family. The few people we did find that were relatives — we interviewed some neighbors — nobody could offer any explanation."
Steve Copperwheat, who hired Myers as a machine operator in the early 1980s at Waterbury Felt, a manufacturer of industrial textiles, said he encountered him in a Walmart parking lot three months ago after not seeing him in about 10 years.
"I yelled over to him, and he looked at me, said my name, said he was retired and just went booking away," Copperwheat said. "It was almost like he didn't want anybody to know where he was. He was trying to be very distant, which surprised me. The whole conversation was really spooky."