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ALGER, Wash. — Authorities on Wednesday were trying to determine what set off a shooting and stabbing rampage that left six people dead and four wounded, attacks they blame on a drug offender who was released from jail less than a month ago.

The mother of suspect Isaac Zamora said he is “desperately mentally ill” and had been living in the woods. Dennise Zamora said one of those killed Tuesday was a sheriff’s deputy who had tried to help their family for years.

Isaac Zamora, 28, was being held Wednesday on suspicion of first-degree murder and attempted first-degree murder and is being held in lieu of $5 million bail.

The shootings began close to Dennise Zamora’s house near Alger, about 70 miles north of Seattle. They continued amid a high-speed police pursuit on Interstate 5 and ended in Mount Vernon, about 20 miles south of Alger, when Isaac Zamora turned himself in at a sheriff’s office.

The dead included two construction workers killed in Alger and a motorist shot along I-5 near a rest stop.

“Some of these are just random shootings,” Trooper Keith Leary said.

A host of questions remained unanswered Wednesday, including whether the suspect knew any of the victims, how the shootings apparently continued during the police chase and how Zamora managed to turn himself in rather than being arrested by one of the many officers pursuing him.

There are eight crime scenes, which are being investigated by more than 100 people from 15 agencies, Leary said Wednesday.

Zamora had just served a six- month jail sentence for drug possession in Skagit County.

Dennise Zamora told The Seattle Times that her son had lived in the woods off and on for years, was unaware of his mental illness and resisted all efforts to get him to accept treatment.

The six who died included Skagit County Sheriff’s Deputy Anne Jackson, 40, who was shot while responding to a call from Dennise Zamora. The mother told The Seattle Times that she called Jackson after seeing her son going in and out of her neighbors’ homes.

Dennise Zamora described Jackson as a sympathetic figure who had tried to help the family in the past.

“She was very gracious,” she said. “She knew exactly what we were going through, said her brother was going through some similar stuff.”

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