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Walter Birdsong Jr., Amanda Birdsong Killed in Rankin County Double Murder-Suicide; Gunman Kurt Tyler Birdsong Dead Amid Family Land Dispute Linked to W.E. Birdsong & Associates Firearms Business.

Tragedy on Monterey Road: How a Decades-Old Family Land Dispute Ended in Gunfire

BRANDON, Miss. โ€” A quiet Friday afternoon in rural Rankin County was shattered by violence when an escalating family feud over inherited property culminated in a double murder-suicide, leaving three members of the same family dead. The victims have been identified as Walter E. Birdsong Jr., 62, and Amanda L. Birdsong, 43, who were fatally shot before the suspected gunman, Kurt Tyler Birdsong, 56, took his own life inside a bathroom of the family home.

The incident, which unfolded just before 4 p.m. on the 1400 block of Monterey Road, has sent shockwaves through the small community of Florence and drawn attention to the dangerous intersection of family legacy, land rights, and access to firearms. According to the Rankin County Sheriffโ€™s Office, deputies received a frantic 911 call reporting that two people had already been shot. The caller added a chilling detail: the armed suspect had not fled but had retreated inside a residence on the same property, barricading himself as law enforcement scrambled to respond.

What followed was a multi-hour standoff involving the sheriffโ€™s office SWAT team, crisis negotiators, and a host of federal agencies, including the FBI Jackson Field Office, the Mississippi Office of Homeland Security, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) , and even the Clinton Bomb Squad. The outsized response was not merely precautionaryโ€”authorities soon learned that the Birdsong family was no ordinary rural clan. They were the founders and operators of W.E. Birdsong & Associates Inc. , a federally licensed firearms manufacturer operating since 1973 at 1435 Monterey Road in Florence.

A Family Built on Firearms

W.E. Birdsong & Associates is a name well known in military and law enforcement circles, though it has remained largely out of the public eye. The company specializes in manufacturing Black-T, a proprietary weapons coating renowned for its corrosion resistance and lubricity, used extensively by government and military clients. The business, which holds a federal firearms license, has been a cornerstone of the Birdsong familyโ€™s identity and livelihood for over five decades.

This connection to the firearms industry is precisely why the Rankin County Sheriffโ€™s Office requested federal assistance. Sheriff Bryan Bailey noted in a preliminary statement, โ€œDue to the familyโ€™s involvement in a firearms-related business, there was an elevated risk to officers and nearby residents. We could not rule out the presence of unexploded ordnance, booby traps, or a large cache of weapons on the premises.โ€ As a result, neighboring homes were evacuated as a precaution, and armored vehicles were brought in before SWAT teams made their approach.

The Victims: Walter E. Birdsong Jr. and Amanda L. Birdsong

Walter E. Birdsong Jr. , 62, was described by those who knew him as a private but dedicated member of the family business. As the son of the companyโ€™s founder, Walter Jr. had grown up around firearms and manufacturing, eventually taking on a leadership role within W.E. Birdsong & Associates. Neighbors recall him as a quiet man who kept to himself but was always willing to lend a hand with mechanical repairs or farm work.

Amanda L. Birdsong, 43, was a more recent addition to the family circle. Her exact relationship to Walter Jr. and Kurt Tyler Birdsong has not been officially disclosed by investigators, but court records suggest she was either a spouse or a close in-law. Friends describe her as a vibrant presence who had tried to mediate family disputes in the past. โ€œShe was always the one trying to get everyone to sit down and talk,โ€ said a neighbor who requested anonymity for fear of reprisal. โ€œItโ€™s a tragedy she got caught in the middle of this.โ€

The Gunman: Kurt Tyler Birdsong

The suspected shooter, Kurt Tyler Birdsong, 56, was no stranger to law enforcement or to the familyโ€™s internal strife. Earlier court documents obtained by local news outlets reveal that Kurt had been involved in a protracted legal battle with other family members over the division of land surrounding the Monterey Road property. The dispute, which dated back nearly a decade, centered on a parcel of approximately 40 acres that Kurt allegedly believed had been unfairly withheld from him following the death of the family patriarch.

According to sources familiar with the litigation, Kurt had become increasingly isolated in recent years. He had reportedly been living in a separate structure on the same property but was barred from the main residence after a heated argument in 2022. That argument, according to one filing, involved threats of violenceโ€”though no charges were ever filed.

On the day of the shooting, investigators believe Kurt entered the main home on Monterey Road armed with at least two handguns. An altercation ensued, during which Walter E. Birdsong Jr. and Amanda L. Birdsong were shot multiple times. After the gunfire, Kurt retreated to a bathroom at the rear of the house, locked the door, and refused all communication attempts.

The Law Enforcement Response

The first deputies arrived on scene within eight minutes of the 911 call. They immediately established a perimeter and confirmed that the two victims were deceased. The suspect, however, was still alive inside the residence, and deputies could hear movement but no verbal responses.

Because of the familyโ€™s firearms business, Sheriff Bailey made the decision to request the Clinton Bomb Squad. โ€œWe had credible concerns about explosive materials that might be stored on site for coating or manufacturing processes,โ€ Bailey explained in a press conference Saturday morning. The ATFโ€™s National Response Team also deployed agents to assist with tracing any firearms that might have been used or stored at the address.

For more than three hours, SWAT negotiators attempted to contact Kurt Tyler Birdsong via loudspeaker, telephone, and even drone-deployed communication devices. All attempts went unanswered. Finally, just after 7 p.m., deputies used armored equipment to breach the front door. After clearing the main living areas, they found the bathroom door locked from the inside. Using a tactical ram, they gained entry and discovered Kurt Tyler Birdsong deceased from what the Rankin County Deputy Coroner Cliff Dunlap later confirmed was a self-inflicted gunshot wound.

Dunlap responded personally to the scene, transporting all three deceased to the state medical examinerโ€™s office for formal autopsy. โ€œThis is one of the most difficult scenes Iโ€™ve worked in 20 years,โ€ Dunlap told reporters. โ€œNot because of the condition of the bodies, but because of the sheer weight of family destruction.โ€

The Land Dispute: A Slow-Burning Fuse

While the Rankin County Sheriffโ€™s Office has not released specific details about the nature of the land dispute, public property records paint a picture of years of bitterness. The Birdsong family property on Monterey Road comprises over 100 acres, much of it zoned for agricultural and light industrial use. W.E. Birdsong & Associates occupies a sizeable workshop and office building on the land, while several family members have lived in separate residences scattered across the acreage.

Court filings from 2019 show that Kurt Tyler Birdsong filed a lawsuit against Walter E. Birdsong Jr. and two other relatives, alleging that they had improperly transferred a 14-acre plot to a third party without his consent. Kurt claimed that the land had been promised to him in an oral agreement by his father before the elder Birdsongโ€™s death in 2015. The court ultimately ruled against Kurt, citing the lack of a written contract. After that ruling, Kurtโ€™s behavior reportedly became more erratic.

Neighbors recall multiple visits from sheriffโ€™s deputies over the past two years to mediate arguments between Kurt and other family members. โ€œYouโ€™d hear yelling sometimes, late at night,โ€ said one neighbor living half a mile down Monterey Road. โ€œBut nobody ever thought it would come to this. Theyโ€™re a gun family, sure, but they were always professional about it.โ€

The Aftermath and Ongoing Investigation

As of Monday morning, the investigation remains active. The FBI Jackson Field Office continues to assist with digital forensics, including the analysis of Kurt Tyler Birdsongโ€™s cellphone and computer for any manifesto, messages, or planning related to the shooting. The ATF is conducting a full inventory of all firearms and explosives at W.E. Birdsong & Associates to ensure no illegal activity occurred and to rule out any additional threats to the community.

Meanwhile, the surviving members of the Birdsong family have requested privacy. A brief statement issued through a family attorney read: โ€œWe are heartbroken beyond words. We ask that you respect our grief as we bury Walter, Amanda, and even Kurtโ€”despite what he did, he was still family. The land that was meant to unite us has torn us apart. Please pray for us.โ€

The Rankin County Sheriffโ€™s Office has announced that it will release a final report within 30 days, including findings from the autopsies and ballistics analysis. Sheriff Bailey has also indicated that he will request a state-level review of how family land disputes are handled by local courts, with an eye toward preventing future tragedies.

A Community Grapples with Loss

For the small town of Brandon and the surrounding area, the deaths mark one of the deadliest incidents of domestic violence in the countyโ€™s recent history. Grief counselors have been made available at the Rankin County Sheriffโ€™s Office substation and at a local church near Monterey Road.

โ€œThis wasnโ€™t a stranger shooting or a home invasion,โ€ said Dr. Lila Merritt, a sociologist at the University of Mississippi who studies rural family conflict. โ€œThis was a slow-moving tragedy that played out over yearsโ€”court hearings, angry phone calls, property line disputes. When you mix family legacy, access to firearms, and unresolved legal grievances, you have a recipe for disaster. The only question is when, not if.โ€

As the investigation continues, one thing is clear: the land on Monterey Road, which Walter E. Birdsong Jr., Amanda L. Birdsong, and Kurt Tyler Birdsong once called home, will never be the same. And a family that built a business protecting firearms now faces the impossible task of burying three of its own.


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