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1 employee escaped deadly Florida bank shooting by running out back door: sheriff’s office

Click to play video: 'Suspect in Florida bank shooting identified'
Suspect in Florida bank shooting identified
WATCH: Suspect in Florida bank shooting identified – Jan 23, 2019

A fifth bank employee escaped a massacre that killed five women at a SunTrust branch in Florida, running out a back door when the gunfire began, according to a sheriff’s office.

The employee was in in a back break room when the attack began in the Sebring bank, Highlands County Sheriff’s Office spokesman Scott Dressel said Friday.

READ MORE: 5 victims shot execution style at Florida bank, police say

“Upon hearing the shots, the employee ran out a back door and contacted law enforcement,” Dressel told The Associated Press. No additional information about the employee was released.

Four SunTrust employees and a customer were killed in the bank’s lobby. Zephen Xaver, 21, was arrested after a standoff with police and now faces five counts of premeditated murder. State Attorney Brian Haas has said he will seek the death penalty.

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SunTrust banks planned to observe a moment of silence Friday to honour the five women.

In a Facebook post, SunTrust said the moment of silence will begin at 12:36 p.m. That was the time on Wednesday when Xaver called 911 and told dispatchers he had shot everyone inside the bank.

WATCH: SunTrust Bank victims were all women, both employees, customers: police

Click to play video: 'SunTrust Bank victims were all women, both employees, customers: police'
SunTrust Bank victims were all women, both employees, customers: police

The shooting appeared to be a random act, not part of a robbery, and Xaver had no connection to any of the victims, Sebring Police Chief Karl Hoglund said Thursday at a news conference.

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Xaver recently moved from northern Indiana to Sebring, about 80 miles (130 kilometres) southeast of Tampa. He also recently quit his job as a prison guard trainee.

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An Indiana police department released a 2014 report in which Xaver, then 16, said he had dreams of hurting other students in a classroom.

WATCH: Man who reportedly fired shots inside Sebring, FL bank called police himself: police

Click to play video: 'Man who reportedly fired shots inside Sebring, FL bank called police himself: police'
Man who reportedly fired shots inside Sebring, FL bank called police himself: police

The Bremen Police Department report said the Bremen High School Principal contacted police after Xaver reported having the dream the previous night and again during a nap at school. The report said Xaver’s mother agreed to take him to a behavioural health centre. Police took no further action.

Authorities also released log entries of other incidents involving Xaver, including one in March 2017, when Michigan State Police advised that a girl received messages from Xaver indicating he was “possibly thinking of suicide by cop and taking hostages.”

An Indiana woman who identified herself as Xaver’s ex-girlfriend has told reporters that he long had been fascinated with the idea of killing, but no one took her warnings about him seriously. His father told CNN that Xaver “had his troubles, but he has never hurt anyone ever before.”

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READ MORE: An in-depth look at how Toronto’s paramedics work to save victims of gun violence, trauma

Police have identified three of the victims: customer Cynthia Watson, 65, and two bank employees: 55-year-old Marisol Lopez and 38-year-old Ana Pinon Willliams, a mother of seven.

The husband of a fourth victim identified her to NBC News. Maine Montague said he and his wife, 31-year-old Jessica Montague, had a 3-year-old child.

In compliance with a newly passed victims’ rights law in Florida, police have withheld the name of the fifth victim at the family’s request.

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