2025 Lexington shootings

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Location37°56′23.6796″N 84°24′19.8648″W / 37.939911000°N 84.405518000°W / 37.939911000; -84.405518000
Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.
DateJuly 13, 2025 (2025-07-13)
c.11:35 a.m. (EST)
TargetMother of perpetrator's children[1]
2025 Lexington shootings
Richmond Road Baptist Church in 2011
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7km
4.3miles
3
2
1
1
Shooting of Kentucky State Police trooper
2
Carjacking
3
Location of church
Location37°56′23.6796″N 84°24′19.8648″W / 37.939911000°N 84.405518000°W / 37.939911000; -84.405518000
Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.
DateJuly 13, 2025 (2025-07-13)
c.11:35 a.m. (EST)
TargetMother of perpetrator's children[1]
Attack type
Mass shooting, spree shooting, killing spree, attempted uxoricide
Deaths3 (including the perpetrator)
Injured3
PerpetratorGuy E. House
MotiveUnder investigation

On July 13, 2025, a shooting spree took place in Lexington, Kentucky, United States, that left three people dead, including the perpetrator, along with three others critically wounded, including a state trooper that was shot twice during the initial shooting. The incident began when 47-year-old Guy E. House shot and injured a Kentucky State Police trooper near Blue Grass Airport during a traffic stop, before fleeing and carjacking a woman at a retirement community. With the woman's vehicle, he drove to Richmond Road Baptist Church, where he shot and killed two people and injured two others, including the pastor, before he was fatally shot by police.

The shooting began around 11:35 am EST when 47-year-old Guy E. House shot Jude Remilien, a Kentucky State Police trooper, near Blue Grass Airport on Terminal Drive during a traffic stop in which Remilien had received a license plate reader alert.[2][3] Remilien had asked House and the driver routine traffic stop questions when House opened fire on him and struck him in the leg.[4]

Jimmy Alexander, a bystander, used his belt to create a tourniquet for Remilien's leg. Alexander was joined by his wife Jessica Alexander and daughter Taylor Hall, two registered nurses who applied pressure to the gunshot wound.[5] Mrs. Alexander and Hall also gave Remilien water, checked his pulse, and asked him questions to keep him from falling unconscious. They were then joined by Blue Grass Airport officer, Adam Arnold, who radioed for help and applied a proper tourniquet to Remilien's leg.[6] The driver of the vehicle House was in also aided Remilien after he was shot.[5]

After shooting Remilien, the driver and House both exited the vehicle and House got into the driver's seat.[5] House then drove to Sayre Christian Village, a retirement community where his mother used to live. House confronted a woman in the parking lot who was visiting a family member and stole her vehicle. The woman escaped uninjured into the retirement community.[7]

House then drove to Richmond Road Baptist Church while being pursued by police officers.[8] House entered the church through a back door and asked if the mother of his three children was in attendance. Parishioners told House that she wasn't there, to which he responded that "someone is gonna have to die" before opening fire.[1]

House shot 72-year-old Beverly Gumm in the chest, killing her, inside the church before going outside where he killed 34-year-old Christina Combs and injured Gumm's husband and the church pastor.[1] House was then confronted by police who shot and killed him.[9][8]

Perpetrator

The perpetrator was identified as 47-year-old Guy E. House (June 20, 1978 – July 13, 2025), a native from Pewee Valley, Kentucky who lived in Lexington throughout most of his life.[10] House was the father to three children and a rapper with the stage name HonKyKong.[11] House had a lengthy criminal history dating all the way back to his first crime in 1999, which included two speeding charges out of Ohio in 2011, as well as auto theft in Kentucky.[12] On September 11, 2022, House was arrested and charged with 1st degree fleeing and evading, resisting arrest, and possession of a handgun by a convicted felon.[13][12][14]

An ex-girlfriend of House had filed for a domestic violence restraining order against him in summer 2025. Court documents allege that House had begun menacing her, stalking her, and threatening to get her fired from her job. On July 4, when she broke up with him, House stole her car, driver's license, and several of her guns.[11] House had been scheduled to attend the domestic violence hearing in court the day after the attack.[15]

Reaction and aftermath

See also

References

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