KALAMAZOO, Mich. — The shootings came out of nowhere, one after the other, and with no apparent connection.
A woman was shot multiple times as she stood in the parking lot of her suburban townhouse complex here in Kalamazoo County. A few miles away, and a few hours later on Saturday night, a man and his teenage son were killed outside a balloon-lined car dealership near a strip of fast-food restaurants. Minutes after that, along an interstate highway just outside Kalamazoo, four women were shot to death, and a teenage girl was gravely injured, as they sat in their cars outside a Cracker Barrel restaurant.
The authorities said a single gunman, Jason B. Dalton, a driver for Uber, was responsible for the night of terror, and investigators were looking into reports that he was ferrying his passengers before the attacks began and perhaps even in between some of the shootings.
One customer said Mr. Dalton took him on a harrowing ride around 4:30 p.m. on Saturday, less than two hours before the shootings. Another said Mr. Dalton agreed to provide her a ride late Saturday, after the attacks were over.
The explosion of violence here left the authorities trying to piece together what might have prompted someone to roam in search of victims.
In all, six people were killed and two injured at three shooting scenes across Kalamazoo County, in southwest Michigan between Detroit and Chicago. The victims ranged in age from 14 to 74.
Mr. Dalton, 45, a former insurance company employee, was arrested without incident in the parking lot of a downtown Kalamazoo bar about six hours after the rampage began.
“There’s this sense of loss, there’s this anger, there’s fear, there’s all these emotions,” Jeffrey Getting, the Kalamazoo County prosecutor, said at a news conference early on Sunday. “You put on top of that: How do you go and tell the families of these victims that they weren’t targeted for any reason than they were there to be a target?”
Over the past year, the country has experienced a series of mass shootings — including ones at a church in Charleston, S.C.; at a community college in Oregon; and at a county government gathering in San Bernardino, Calif., which was later declared an act of terrorism. President Obama has repeatedly called for the nation to take steps to curb gun violence and carry out stricter background checks.
The authorities here did not immediately provide a motive for the rampage. “There is some information out there about what was happening” in the suspect’s life, Mr. Getting said. “You know, of course, it doesn’t come anywhere near to explain what he’s done.”
Mr. Dalton, who was in custody on Sunday and was expected to face formal charges as early as Monday, had no criminal record. Neighbors described him as quiet and polite, though he caught their attention when he occasionally shot a gun out the back door of the house he shared with his wife and two children. He had worked for Progressive Insurance until mid-2011.
According to one passenger, he started working as an Uber driver recently. The passenger, Sara Reynolds, 25, said Mr. Dalton drove her and a friend to a movie theater on Feb. 14 so they could see “Deadpool.”
In an interview, Ms. Reynolds recounted how Mr. Dalton had told her that he and his son had also seen the movie. But he also told Ms. Reynolds, unsolicited, that he was a new driver for Uber and that he had quickly picked up poor marks.
“He had just started doing Uber as a driver a day or two ago and that he had already gotten some bad reviews, which was a little weird, so I asked him about it,” Ms. Reynolds said. “And he said it was just drunk kids and his car messing up a little bit.”
“I could tell that he didn’t really want to talk about it anymore,” said Ms. Reynolds, who described Mr. Dalton as “a little shy and awkward, but he was pretty normal for the most part.” Ms. Reynolds said she had no complaints about his driving that night.
An Uber official who declined to be identified because of the continuing investigation said Mr. Dalton had passed a company background check.
Joe Sullivan, the chief security officer for Uber, said the company was “reaching out to police to help with their investigation in any way that we can.”
“Our hearts and prayers are with the families of the victims of this devastating crime and those recovering from injuries,” Mr. Sullivan said.
Another Uber passenger, Matt Mellen, said in an interview with WWMT-TV that a driver who appeared to be Mr. Dalton picked him up late Saturday afternoon, and that the man had driven erratically, speeding through the streets, ignoring a stop sign and swerving through traffic.
“He wouldn’t stop,” Mr. Mellen said. “He just kind of kept looking at me like, ‘Don’t you want to get to your friend’s house?’ and I’m like, ‘I want to get there alive.’ ” Mr. Mellen said he had left the vehicle as quickly as he could.
He later told his fiancée what had happened, and she posted a warning on Facebook around 5:30 p.m. Saturday and said they had called 911. He said he also contacted Uber about the ride.
Shortly before 6 p.m., in a quiet suburban community northeast of Kalamazoo, shots rang out. James George, 17, said he had looked out the window to see a vehicle speeding away and a woman, wounded, sitting in the parking lot of the development. At least five bullet holes peppered the side of one rental townhouse. The woman, whom the authorities did not publicly identify, remained hospitalized on Sunday evening.
About four hours later, at a Seelye Ford and Kia car dealership in Kalamazoo, there were more shots. Tyler Smith and his father, Richard Smith, 53, were killed, the authorities said.
Then, in a matter of minutes, five others were shot as they sat in two cars — parked beside each other — at a Cracker Barrel in an isolated area near an exit ramp from an interstate highway. Bullet holes were left in a windshield and the car windows.
Four women died of multiple gunshot wounds, the medical examiner’s office said. They were identified as Mary Jo Nye, 60; Dorothy Brown, 74; Barbara Hawthorne, 68; and Mary Lou Nye, 62. A 14-year-old girl, part of the group, was in critical condition at a hospital.
In a nearby mobile home park, Chris Juenemann said she had been watching television when she heard five bangs, which she immediately recognized as gunshots. “It was just so loud,” she said.
Ms. Juenemann, whose family has lived there for 17 years, said that the restaurant was always busy, and that serious crime was rare. She said dozens of emergency vehicles soon arrived.
More than two hours later, Mr. Dalton was arrested. Officers from the Department of Public Safety and deputies from the Kalamazoo Sheriff’s Department spotted the suspect’s car in downtown Kalamazoo Sunday morning and pulled him over and arrested him, the authorities said. No shots were fired.
A semiautomatic handgun was found in his vehicle, and the authorities said it appeared to match the evidence from the shootings. Investigators said Mr. Dalton had been in touch with more than one person over the course of the evening, and they were examining his cellphone for more evidence.
“We are very confident that we have the right person in custody,” said Mr. Getting, the prosecutor.
In the rural area outside the city where Mr. Dalton lived, police searched his brown, one-story home on Sunday morning. Sally Pardo, a retired nurse who lived across the street from him and his family, said she and her husband had always thought of Mr. Dalton as a “nice guy” who worked on cars in his spare time. But he used guns in a troubling manner and sometimes sounded a little paranoid, she said.
“He periodically shot his gun out the back door,” Ms. Pardo said. “He would shoot randomly into the air.”
James Block, 53, who said he had lived next door to Mr. Dalton for about 15 years, said he was “well-mannered” and pleasant. Mr. Block noted that Mr. Dalton bought a guard dog about a year ago after an apparent burglary, and said he had spoken of concerns about people passing through his backyard.
Less than an hour after the shootings ended, Mr. Dalton agreed to pick up a couple at a local pub, according to Carmen Morren, who said she and her boyfriend had agreed to the ride around 11 p.m.
Minutes before the pickup, though, the couple — unaware of the shootings — happened to change their plans and rode with a different Uber driver.
“By the grace of God, we ended up canceling the Uber that we had,” said Ms. Morren, who provided a screenshot that showed Mr. Dalton had been the driver for a trip that had been scrapped. “We lucked out on that one.”
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