[VIDEOS IN EXTENDED ARTICLE]
Dallas was in shock and beset by uncertainty early Friday after gunmen shot and killed five police officers and wounded seven during a peaceful protest over fatal police shootings of black men in other states, police said, in bloodshed evoking the trauma of the nation’s tumultuous civil rights era.
Police Chief David Brown blamed “snipers” and said three suspects were in custody while a fourth had exchanged gunfire with authorities in a parking garage downtown and told negotiators he intended to hurt more law enforcement officials.
Early Friday, Dallas Mayor Mike Rawlings said the fourth suspect had died.
“We don’t exactly know the last moments of his death but explosives did blast him out,” Rawlings told The Associated Press.
He said police swept the area where the standoff took place and found no explosives.
Police did not identify any of the suspects or mention a possible motive.
The shooting began about 8:45 p.m. Thursday while hundreds of people were gathered to protest the fatal police shootings in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, and suburban St. Paul, Minnesota. Brown told reporters the snipers fired “ambush style” on the officers. A civilian was also wounded, Rawlings said.
Brown said it appeared the shooters “planned to injure and kill as many officers as they could.” Video from the scene showed protesters marching along a downtown street about half a mile from City Hall when shots erupted and the crowd scattered, seeking cover.
The attacks made Thursday the deadliest day for U.S. law officers since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, according to The National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial Fund, which tracks on-duty deaths.
It also drew a comparison with the November day in 1963 when a U.S. president was slaughtered by a sniper on a Dallas street only a few blocks away.
“I think the biggest thing that we’ve had something like this is when JFK died,” resident Jalisa Jackson downtown said early Friday as struggled to fathom the still-unsettled situation. Officers crouched beside vehicles, SWAT team armored vehicles arrived and a helicopter hovered overhead.
Protests were held in several other U.S. cities Thursday night after a Minnesota officer on Wednesday fatally shot Philando Castile while he was in a car with a woman and a child, the shooting’s aftermath livestreamed in a widely shared Facebook video. A day earlier, Alton Sterling was shot in Louisiana after being pinned to the pavement by two white officers. That, too, was captured on a cellphone video.
Thursday’s shootings occurred in area of hotels, restaurants, businesses and some residential apartments only a few blocks from Dealey Plaza, where President John F. Kennedy was assassinated.
The scene was chaotic, with officers with automatic rifles on the street corners.
“Everyone just started running,” Devante Odom, 21, told The Dallas Morning News. “We lost touch with two of our friends just trying to get out of there.”
Carlos Harris, who lives downtown, told the newspaper that the shooters “were strategic. It was tap, tap pause. Tap, tap pause,” he said.
Brown said police don’t have a motivation for the attacks or any information on the suspects. He said they “triangulated” in the downtown area where the protesters were marching and had “some knowledge of the route” they would take.
Video posted on social media appeared to show a gunman at ground level exchanging fire with a police officer who was then felled.
Authorities have not determined whether any protesters were involved with or were complicit in the attack and were not certain early Friday that all suspects have been located, Brown said.
Rawlings said at the news conference that authorities will likely ask some people to stay away from downtown Dallas on Friday. Rawlings said a map would be posted online showing an area where people should avoid on Friday.
Early Friday morning, there were dozens of officers of the corridor of the ER at Baylor Medical Center, where other injured officers were taken. The mayor and police chief were seen arriving there.
Four of the officers who were killed were with the Dallas Police Department, a spokesman said. One was a Dallas Area Rapid Transit officer. The agency said in a statement that 43-year-old officer Brent Thompson was the first officer killed in the line of duty since the agency formed a police department in 1989.
“Our hearts are broken,” the statement said.
Theresa Williams told The Associated Press that the injured civilian was her sister, 37-year-old Shetamia Taylor.
Williams said her sister was at the protests Thursday night with her four sons, ages 12 to 17.
When the shooting began, Taylor threw herself over her sons, Williams said. She was undergoing surgery early Friday after being shot in the right calf.
Texas Gov. Greg Abbott released a statement saying he has directed the Texas Department of Public Safety director to offer “whatever assistance the City of Dallas needs at this time.”
“In times like this we must remember — and emphasize — the importance of uniting as Americans,” Abbott said.
Other protests across the U.S. on Thursday were peaceful. In midtown Manhattan, protesters first gathered in Union Square Park where they chanted “The people united, never be divided!” and “What do we want? Justice. When do we want it? Now!” In Minnesota, where Castile was shot, hundreds of protesters marched in the rain from a vigil to the governor’s official residence. Protesters also marched in Atlanta, Chicago and Philadelphia.
President Barack Obama said America is “horrified” over the shootings and there’s no possible justification for the attacks.
Speaking from Warsaw, Poland, where he was meeting with leaders of the European Union and attending a NATO summit, the president said justice will be done and he’s asking all Americans to pray for the fallen officers and their families. He also said the nation should express its gratitude to those serving in law enforcement.
(AP)
7 Responses
If guns weren’t so easy to purchase, especially assault weapons, maybe we wouldn’t be having this problem.
#1 I truly hope that you are being sarcastic.
#1 mw13 – How do you know that they acquired their weapons legally? Maybe they purchased them on the black market.
Outlawing merchandise does not prevent people from acquiring things. It just reroutes the sources. For example, pot was not so long ago illegal across the United States. However, anyone who wanted could easily find a drug dealer.
The difference between legal and illegal is one thing… regulation.
Same thing here. Gun control at least allows for some level of regulation. Prohibition of guns will just empower criminals. You are just looking at the cases of misuse of legal guns. You are not considering the amount of crimes (home invasions and the like) that have been thwarted due to civilian ownership of guns. Turn to the father who saved his family by shooting an invader (who often has a violent background) and tell him that it would have been better that his family had been raped and murdered and not have guns.
If blacks weren’t such animals this wouldn’t happen! People kill not guns!
The left will blame guns (as if criminals and terrorists ever had a problem getting guns, or would willingly obey gun laws and take up stabbing instead). I suspect most Americans will see a connection to the “Black lives matter” movement, which the politically correct embraces and that the “All lives matter” and “Blue lives matter” will turn against Obama (who spoke out against the police earlier in the day) and towards Trump. The “PC” declared open season on police, and someone listened and took up the cause.
Define assault weapon
To #1 – Nope. First of all, they made no information available about what kind of weapons were used so you’re a little too quick to blame what you call “assault weapons”. Secondly, if criminals can have drugs smuggled in from Mexico, why wouldn’t they smuggle guns? (Here’s a hint: They already do!) I’d rather maintain my right as a law abiding citizen to legally purchase a firearm for the defense of myself and my family because although these murderers and criminals purchase weapons illegally, I wouldn’t.