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Two women killed in Louisiana theater shooting

LAFAYETTE, La. — One co-owned a gift and toy shop. Another was a college student who also worked at a women’s clothing store and planned to start ra...
Jillian Johnson and Mayci Breaux

LAFAYETTE, La. — One co-owned a gift and toy shop. Another was a college student who also worked at a women’s clothing store and planned to start radiology school in the coming days.

Jillian Johnson, 33, and Mayci Breaux, 21, were among those shot Thursday night by a gunman at a Lafayette, Louisiana, movie theater at a showing of the Amy Schumer comedy, “Trainwreck.”

Two women killed in Louisiana theater shooting

Breaux, of Franklin, Louisiana, was shot dead at the scene, and Johnson, who was from Lafayette, died a short time later at a nearby hospital, Lafayette police Chief Jim Craft said.

“Don’t lose sight of the fact that these two individuals had a vision, had a name, had a future,” said Col. Michael Edmonson of the Louisiana State Police. “It wasn’t to die as they did horribly in this theater here.”

Of the nine others injured, one was in critical condition Friday morning, and two had been released, Craft said. Authorities identified the gunman as 59-year-old John Russell Houser.

An online business profile identifies Johnson as the co-owner of the Red Arrow Workshop. The business is described as a gift, apparel, accessories and toy shop. Johnson owned the shop with her husband, Jason Brown, the website says.

She was “obsessed with Fats Waller,” and her all-time favorite movie was “Coal Miner’s Daughter,” according to the site.

“Pretty much any time you go in, she is there and doing work,” a friend, Caitlin Sonnier, said of Johnson’s presence at the shop. “She was very devoted to it.”

Two women killed in Louisiana theater shooting

Johnson was also part of a band, the Figs, which was at the “forefront of a movement of a younger generation embracing Cajun/folk music traditions and making them popular and ‘cool’ again,” Molly Rowe, who knew her, said via email.

“She was … a phenomenal musician, which is what most of the community knew her for,” Rowe said.

A friend and band member, Caroline Clem, said in a statement that news of Johnson’s death was devastating.

“I wish there were words to penetrate the hearts of the people watching or listening (to) the news and to make them understand the kind of person Jillian was,” Clem said. “Jillian made everything more beautiful. She worked to make Lafayette a more beautiful place, and one of the most tragic things that has ever happened here took her. She was a mother, a wife, a sister, an artist, a collaborator, a band member, a friend to so many.”

Kimberly Wooten said the impression Johnson made on people was lasting.

“She was a creative being,” Wooten said. “She made life better, from what she said … from her hand to what she made. Her and her husband are just such a presence here in Lafayette, and Lafayette has become such a better place just for not only Jillian but her entire family.”

The Red Arrow Workshop posted a message on its Facebook page.

“Our hearts are shattered,” the post said. “We will love you forever. She was a once-in-a-lifetime gal. A mother, daughter, sister and a truly exceptional wife. She was an artist, a musician, an entrepreneur and a true renaissance woman. She was the love of my life and I will miss her always.”

Tributes to Johnson appeared on her Facebook page.

E. Joseph Savoie, president of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette, offered thoughts and prayers for the families and friends of the victims. Johnson graduated from the university in 2004.

“The entire campus mourns the loss of lives in our Lafayette community,” Savoie said in a statement.

The statement said Johnson founded apparel store Parish Ink in downtown Lafayette and River Ranch as well as Red Arrow Workshop in Lafayette and New Orleans. She had been a producer at KRVS, a National Public Radio affiliate on campus.

“Jillian Johnson was a much-loved creative talent known throughout the community,” Savoie said.

Breaux attended Louisiana State University-Eunice, according to LSU President F. King Alexander.

She was supposed to start radiology school at Lafayette General Hospital in the coming days, said David Callecod, president of Lafayette General Health. She toured the hospital and met staff two weeks ago.

“All the folks in this very close-knit community have been affected by the horrific events,” Callecod said, adding that Johnson also was well-known to the hospital staff. “We’re very close-knit here at Lafayette General, and we certainly had many ties to the victims as well.”

Breaux also worked at Coco Eros, a women’s clothing store in Lafayette. Her employer posted on Facebook that “many of you had come to know and love Mayci” during her time working there.

“Nothing ever prepares you for a loss… Much less the loss of such an amazing young woman,” the Coco Eros post said. “We are deeply saddened.”

The store was closed Friday “in memory of our beloved friend,” Breaux’s employer posted on Facebook.

Houser killed both women and wounded the others after opening fire from the back of the theater before shooting himself, Craft said. Authorities said he was a “drifter” from Alabama who had arrived in Lafayette in early July and didn’t appear to know anybody there, much less the victims.

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