Some Wisconsin residents with loved ones at Fort Hood, Texas, were receiving reassuring messages on Thursday, while at least one mother reported that her daughter was among those wounded in the shooting rampage at the base.
Military officials late Thursday had released no information about a Madison-based unit, the 467th Combat Stress Control Army Reserve Detachment, which had soldiers training at the base at the time of the shooting, a military source said. A unit of that size would have about 44 soldiers, the source said. It was not known if anyone in that unit was injured in the shooting. The State Journal is not naming the source because that person is not authorized to speak for the military.
The 467th provides mental health and other services to soldiers suffering from combat stress.
At the unit's office, in the Truman Olson U.S. Army Reserve Center, 1402 Park St., a man who answered the door referred questions to the Fort Hood public affairs office, which wouldn't provide information about the unit's status.
The Army identified the shooter as an Army psychiatrist, Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, who came to Fort Hood in July after six years at the Walter Reed Army Medical Center.
Lisa Pfund, of Random Lake, said her daughter, 19-year-old Amber Bahr, was shot in the abdomen during the attack and was hospitalized in stable condition, the Associated Press reported.
A Fort Hood public affairs officer would not confirm any identities of the injured.
Pfund said her daughter joined the Army Reserve when she was 17 and she last saw her in May. She was unsure of Bahr's rank or unit.
Pfund said she didn't know anything other than that Bahr had been shot and that she hoped to get more details soon. She talked to emergency room personnel, who filled her in on her daughter's condition. Random Lake is about 35 miles north of Milwaukee.
Col. Bob Evans, director of psychological health for the Wisconsin National Guard, said it was shocking that a psychiatrist was the alleged shooter.
"I think we're all just stunned by it," he said. "Mental health services have been pushed continuously by the military."
Other families were getting relatively good news from soldiers at the base.
Deborah Beers, who lives outside of Footville, near Janesville, said she had heard from her daughter, First Lt. Amanda Beers, 23, who is stationed at Fort Hood in the 467th.
"She called me about 4:30 this afternoon ... saying that she was fine and that was all she could tell me," Deborah Beers said.
Beers said her daughter was "right there" when the shooting happened. "They are in lockdown," she said. Beers said her daughter has been with the Army for four years and had arrived at Fort Hood on Friday.
Angela Rivera Caraveo confirmed that her husband, L. Eduardo Caraveo, was at Fort Hood as part of the 467th. In a brief telephone conversation, Rivera Caraveo, of Virginia, said she'd been trying for hours to reach her husband, who is a psychologist.
"I haven't been able to reach anyone at the unit," she said late Thursday night.
Army Capt. Scott Sweeney, an Edgewood High School graduate, also arrived Friday. He's starting a stint with the 3rd Battalion, 4th Combat Aviation Brigade.
"We're all kind of shook," his mother, Kathy McCarty Sweeney of Madison, said Thursday, a few hours after receiving a phone call from her son. "We feel real fortunate. We're counting our blessings tonight."
Scott Sweeney said he found out about the shooting when a buddy called to make sure he was OK. He kept busy the rest of the day checking on other friends and letting family members and others know that he was unhurt.
Jon Zech, 23, originally of Fort Atkinson, has been at Fort Hood with the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment for about three years, according to his father, Ed Zech, of Fort Atkinson.
Ed Zech said he had been watching news coverage of the shootings all day and was concerned about his son's safety until his son was able to make a very brief call to him at about 2:30 or 3 p.m.
"Fortunately, he was out in the field doing some training," Zech said. "If he's out in the field, he could have been 30 miles away" and still on the base because of its size.
Amber Hayes Kunz, 25, from Baraboo, said she and her husband, Christopher, were in lockdown in military housing outside of Fort Hood.
She said Christopher, who is in the 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment, got a call shortly after 1:30 p.m. letting him know there was a shooting and telling him to stay home. He had been working nights and was at home sleeping.
"It's been nerve-wracking," she said. "But we're in our home. We know at this point and time that we're safe."