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Filed at 12:11 a.m. ET
COLUMBUS,
Ohio (AP) -- The man who gunned down former Pantera guitarist ``Dimebag''
Darrell Abbott during a concert was an obsessed fan of Abbott's former band and
alarmed people with his bizarre behavior, a one-time friend said Friday.
Nathan Gale had told friends that Pantera musicians had stolen lyrics from
him and were trying to steal his identity, former friend Dave Johnson said.
Gale, 25, charged the stage Wednesday at a show by Abbott's new band,
Damageplan, and gunned down four people including Abbott before a police officer
shot him to death. Two others were wounded.
Investigators said they may never know Gale's motive. Some witnesses said he
yelled accusations that the influential heavy metal guitarist broke up Pantera,
but police had not verified those reports.
Gale once showed up at a friend's house with songs he said he had written,
said Johnson, 27. He wanted to sing the songs with Johnson's band but one
musician said no because the lyrics were copied from Pantera.
``He'd been kind of weird before that so we thought it was another 'Crazy
Nate' thing,'' Johnson said. ``That was our nickname for him, 'Crazy Nate.'''
Johnson said Gale then calmly said that Pantera had stolen the lyrics from
him and he was going to sue them. He also said the band was trying to steal his
identity.
Johnson said Gale was a ``hardcore'' Pantera fan and ``that was all he
listened to.''
Johnson said he last saw Gale in their hometown of Marysville, about 25 miles
northwest of Columbus, about six months ago. He had distanced himself from Gale
by then because of odd behavior that included talking and laughing to himself
and once appearing to be holding an imaginary dog, he said.
An imposing figure at 6-foot-3, Gale had made people uneasy at a Marysville
tattoo parlor, staring and locking them into conversations about heavy metal
music.
When he played offensive line for the semi-pro Lima Thunder football team, he
psyched himself up before games by piping Pantera music into his headphones,
coach Mark Green said.
``He seemed like a normal guy you would meet any other day,'' said Anthony
Bundy, 20, who lived on the same block as Gale. ``He was a keep-to-yourself type
of person. He was real quiet.''
Hours before the shootings, Gale got into an argument with a worker at the
tattoo studio over some equipment he wanted the studio to order for him. He
later angrily walked out of the shop.
The worker, Bo Toler, said he thought Gale had come to the tattoo parlor
because he wanted somebody to hang out with. ``I just thought he was quiet. I
thought he had low-self esteem because of his thick glasses,'' Toler said.
Gale had had minor run-ins with police since 1997 but wasn't considered a
troublemaker, authorities said.
He served in the Marines in
North Carolina until November 2003, when he was discharged after less than half
of the typical four-year stint, Marine spokeswoman Gunnery Sgt. Kristine Scarber
said. She declined to explain the discharge, citing privacy rules.
Gale's mother, Mary Clark, did not return phone messages seeking comment.
The violence at the Alrosa Villa club came just after the opening chords by
Texas-based Damageplan, the band formed by Abbott and his brother, drummer
Vinnie Paul Abbott, after they left Pantera. Gale dodged two band members,
grabbed Darrell Abbott and shot him at least five times in the head, witnesses
and police said.
In less than five minutes, Gale had also killed Erin Halk, 29, a club
employee who loaded band equipment; fan Nathan Bray, 23; and band bodyguard Jeff
Thompson, 40.
The band's drum technician, John Brooks, was released from Riverside Hospital
on Friday, said Sgt. Mark Allen of hospital security. Tour manager Chris Paluska
was in stable condition.
Vinnie Paul Abbott thanked fans for their support in a statement the band
released Friday.
``With all his greatness and accomplishments on the guitar, DIME will be
missed more for his giving personality, charisma, caring for others, love and
most of all his HEART!! Twice as big as the state of TEXAS!!!!!!!!!!!!,'' Abbott
said.
On the Net:
http://www.damageplan.com
http://www.pantera.com
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