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Va. councilmember set on fire in attack at magazine office

The suspect doused Lee Vogler in flammable liquid before igniting him in what appears to be a personal dispute, Danville Police said

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J. Lee Vogler.

City of Danville

By Olivia Diaz
Associated Press

DANVILLE, Va. — A city councilmember in Virginia was set on fire by a man who entered a local magazine office, police said Wednesday.

Investigators believe the attack stemmed from a “personal matter” and was unrelated to his politics or work as councilman, authorities said.

Lee Vogler, 38, is an elected official in Danville, Virginia.

Police say the suspect entered Vogler’s office, where he works at a local magazine, confronted him and doused him in flammable liquid. Both men then left the building and the 29-year-old suspect set Vogler on fire, police said.

His condition wasn’t immediately known. The suspect, Shotsie Michael Buck Hayes of Danville, was in police custody. Police said charges were pending, and it wasn’t immediately known whether Hayes had a lawyer who could comment.

The attack occurred at the office of Showcase Magazine, a monthly publication on southwest Virginia and North Carolina, magazine owner and publisher Andrew Brooks said.

Brooks said there were two employees at the magazine’s office at the time. The other employee called Brooks and told him what happened.

“Our door is locked,” Brooks told The Associated Press. “They forced their way into the office, and went to Lee. The next thing, Lee is running through the office covered in gasoline, yelling for our officemate to call 911. The guy chased him outside and set him on fire.

“There is no justification for lashing out,” he said. “There is no amount pain you can be under that can justify you inflicting violence on others.”

Vogler has served on the Danville City council for more than 12 years and is currently serving his 4th term. He’s married with two children. Vogler is a managing partner at the Andrew Brooks Media Group, a marketing firm that publishes several regional magazines and operates a branded merchandise website and a music publishing company, according to its website.

He graduated from Virginia Commonwealth University in 2010 and returned to his hometown to run for office. He formed a group in 2010 called Moving Danville Forward, to come up with ideas to revitalize the city.

Danville is about 140 miles (227 kilometers) north of Charlotte, North Carolina.

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