SAN BERNARDINO >> Police on Sunday continued their investigation into the fatal shooting of a San Bernardino father of seven and the wounding of his girlfriend and another woman.

Harold “Hook” Cook, 49, died at the scene. His girlfriend of seven years, Dawn “Chocolate” Sutton, 36, was reportedly in critical condition and given a 10 percent chance of survival by doctors, said Cook’s children Sunday.

The third victim, Ellen Wimbish, 55, also suffered gunshot wounds, but the injuries were not life threatening, said her husband of 38 years, Dale Wimbish, on Sunday.

A motive for the shooting was not known Sunday, and no suspects had been identified. Two or three people, reportedly walking north on G Street, passed the apartment complex, stopped, and started shooting at the victims, who were in the driveway.

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Detectives gathered more than a dozen spent shell casings of different caliber from the crime scene.

“There is evidence that multiple weapons were used,” San Bernardino police Lt. Rich Lawhead said.

The gunfire erupted shortly after 8 p.m. Saturday at the two-building, six-unit apartment complex in the 900 block of North G Street, north of Ninth Street.

Resident Irene Wilson had just exited her apartment when the gunshots started.

“They started blasting. I ducked because I had just walked outside my apartment,” said Wilson, 62, who has lived at the complex for 12 years.

After Saturday, Wilson said she was having second thoughts about continuing to live there since the shooting occurred right outside her apartment. A bullet hole pocked the stucco wall above her living room window.

“It’s time to go. This was too close to home,” said Wilson.

Police were called to the scene at 8:11 p.m. They found Cook dead in the driveway.

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Witnesses said Cook had been sitting in a chair in front of his parked white Toyota Corolla, talking to Sutton, whom everyone called “Chocolate” because of her skin tone, and neighbor Ellen Wimbish, a preschool teacher for the county, just before the shooters fired. Wimbish had just walked over to her parked BMW 740 iL, just feet from where Cook and Sutton were, when the gunshots started, her husband, Dale Wimbish said.

“I asked her why she moved, and she said it was because God asked her to move,” Dale Wimbish said.

Ellen Wimbish was shot in the leg and foot as she stood at the rear passenger side wheel of her BMW. Two bullets pierced the rear passenger side door, and the rear passenger side and front driver’s side tires were blown out and flattened by the gunfire, Dale Wimbish said.

Blood stained the ground where Ellen Wimbish, Cook and Sutton were shot. A makeshift shrine with religious candles and a white sign with “RIP Hook” and “Sleep with the Angels” written on it in bright red, along with a heart drawn in the center, sat in front of Cook’s Corolla Sunday.

Cook’s family said he earned the nickname “Hook” because he loved to fish. He was planning a fishing trip with his children this week at Fisherman’s Retreat in Redlands.

“He loved fishing,” said Bridgette Cooper, Cook’s sister-in-law. She’s the sister of Cook’s late wife, Michelle, who died in 2001 and was the mother of three of Cook’s children, Devanaire, 20, and twin daughters Tajzae and Tajznae, both 19. All three children had been living with Cook at the G Street apartment complex for the last five months.

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Cook also has two grown children from a prior relationship, Jazmen and Rashad Cook, who both live in Ohio. He also has two stepchildren, Oshakia and Christoper Glover, who were Michelle Cook’s children from a prior relationship, Devanaire Cook said.

Dale Wimbish said Sunday his wife was undergoing surgery at Loma Linda University Medical Center.

“They’re going to put steel plates in her foot. It was shattered and fractured,” he said.

The prognosis for Sutton was more somber, but Harold Cook’s family was trying to remain positive under the circumstances. Devanaire Cook, still in shock, said he could not return to the hospital just yet to see Sutton.

“She’s barely responding. I can’t go back to the hospital because she keeps staring at me and trying to talk to me, but she can’t,” he said outside his apartment Sunday, flanked by loved ones, breaking into heavy sobs.

For Harold Cook’s children, the grief is compounded by a family history of tragedy that began when Michelle Cook died of breast cancer. In 2005, Harold Cook, while working as a manager at a Walgreens in Las Vegas, the family’s prior city of residence, slipped, fell and broke his neck while unloading boxes from a truck.

Doctors gave Harold Cook, who had a steel plate surgically implanted in his neck and needed a cane to walk afterward, 10 to 15 years to live, Devanaire Cook said.

Harold Cook lasted 11 years, until he was gunned down in his driveway Saturday.

Daughter Tajzae Cook, a warehouse worker at the Amazon distribution center, couldn’t understand why anybody would want to hurt her father, whom she said was very strict with is children and held them to high expectations. Her twin sister, Tajznae, is a sophomore at Western New Mexico University.

“My dad didn’t have problems with anybody,” she said. “I don’t know anybody who’d want to hurt my dad.”