<p>Though the FBI is tight lipped about the identity of the shooter behind the gruesome killing of six people at a Gurudwara in Wisconsin, media reports say he was a white Army veteran in his 40's and possibly a "skin head" or "white supremacist".<br /><br /></p>.<p>Few details emerged about the man whose Cudahy duplex apartment was searched by police hours after the shooting in Milwaukee's Oak Creek suburb.<br /><br />He was described as white, single, in his 40s and an Army veteran. <br /><br />"That description came in part from Kurt Weins, who lives in the 3700 block of E Holmes Avenue in Cudahy. He said he rented the property to a man he believed to be from Chicago with no record of violence in Wisconsin," Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel reported.<br /><br />Authorities did not tell Weins whether his tenant was the shooting suspect, but the description matches that of the man that sources said was the shooter, the report said.<br /><br />ABC News, citing unnamed sources, said it was told the shootings were the work of a "white supremacist" or "skinhead".<br /><br />Weins said he ran a thorough check on the man, whom he would not name because police told him not to disclose the name.<br /><br />"I had him checked out and he definitely checked out," Weins said. The man appeared to be something of a loner, he said.<br /><br />Tattoos on the body of the slain gunman and certain biographical details led the FBI to treat the attack at a Milwaukee-area temple as an act of domestic terrorism, Los Angeles Times said quoting sources.<br /><br />Eyewitness have said that the shooter had a "9/11 tattoo" on his arm. </p>
<p>Though the FBI is tight lipped about the identity of the shooter behind the gruesome killing of six people at a Gurudwara in Wisconsin, media reports say he was a white Army veteran in his 40's and possibly a "skin head" or "white supremacist".<br /><br /></p>.<p>Few details emerged about the man whose Cudahy duplex apartment was searched by police hours after the shooting in Milwaukee's Oak Creek suburb.<br /><br />He was described as white, single, in his 40s and an Army veteran. <br /><br />"That description came in part from Kurt Weins, who lives in the 3700 block of E Holmes Avenue in Cudahy. He said he rented the property to a man he believed to be from Chicago with no record of violence in Wisconsin," Milwaukee-Wisconsin Journal Sentinel reported.<br /><br />Authorities did not tell Weins whether his tenant was the shooting suspect, but the description matches that of the man that sources said was the shooter, the report said.<br /><br />ABC News, citing unnamed sources, said it was told the shootings were the work of a "white supremacist" or "skinhead".<br /><br />Weins said he ran a thorough check on the man, whom he would not name because police told him not to disclose the name.<br /><br />"I had him checked out and he definitely checked out," Weins said. The man appeared to be something of a loner, he said.<br /><br />Tattoos on the body of the slain gunman and certain biographical details led the FBI to treat the attack at a Milwaukee-area temple as an act of domestic terrorism, Los Angeles Times said quoting sources.<br /><br />Eyewitness have said that the shooter had a "9/11 tattoo" on his arm. </p>