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Downtown Dayton where the attack took place

Police in Ohio say at least 9 dead, 16 wounded in another mass shooting

Dayton city police say they were able to 'put an end to it quickly' and the suspected shooter is now deceased; incident comes just hours after 20 people were shot dead in El Paso, Texas by a suspected white supremacist

A gunman wearing body armor and carrying extra magazines opened fire in a popular nightlife area of Dayton, Ohio, killing nine and injuring dozens, authorities say, in the second U.S. mass shooting in less than 24 hours.

 

 

The incident comes just hours after 20 people were killed and 26 others had been wounded in a shooting by a suspected white supremacist outside a Walmart store in El Paso, Texas.  

 

Scene of the shooting in Ohio
Scene of the shooting in Ohio

 

Dayton police patrolling the area responded in less than a minute to the shooting, which unfolded around 1 a.m. Sunday on the streets of the Oregon District, Dayton Mayor Nan Whaley said at a press conference.

 

Whaley said if the police had not responded so quickly, "hundreds of people in the Oregon District could be dead today."

 

The Oregon District is a historic neighborhood that Lt. Col. Matt Carper described as "a safe part of downtown," home to entertainment options, including bars, restaurants and theaters.

 

Downtown Dayton where the attack took place
Downtown Dayton where the attack took place

 

The gunman, who has not been identified by authorities, was shot to death by responding officers. Whaley said he was carrying a .223-caliber rifle and had additional high-capacity magazines with him. Police believe there was only one shooter, and have not yet identified the suspect or a motive.

 

At least 26 others are being treated at area hospitals, though no details about their conditions have been released.

 

Miami Valley Hospital spokeswoman Terrea Little said the hospital had received 16 victims, but she couldn't confirm their conditions. Kettering Health Network spokeswoman Elizabeth Long said multiple victims from a shooting had been brought to system hospitals, but she didn't have details on how many.

 

Bodies being carried away after the shooting (Photo: AP)
Bodies being carried away after the shooting (Photo: AP)

 

Nikita Papillon, 23, was across the street at Newcom's Tavern when the shooting started. She said she saw a girl she had talked to earlier lying outside Ned Peppers Bar.

 

"She had told me she liked my outfit and thought I was cute, and I told her I liked her outfit and I thought she was cute," Papillon said. She herself had been to Ned Peppers the night before, describing it as the kind of place "where you don't have to worry about someone shooting up the place."

 

"People my age, we don't think something like this is going to happen," she said. "And when it happens, words can't describe it."

 

Tianycia Leonard, 28, was in the back, smoking, at Newcom's. She heard "loud thumps" that she initially thought was people pounding on a dumpster.

 

Police in Dayton (Photo: AP)
Police in Dayton (Photo: AP)

 

"It was so noisy, but then you could tell it was gunshots and there was a lot of rounds," Leonard said.

 

Gov. Mike DeWine issued his own statement before 7 a.m., announcing that he's ordered flags in Ohio remain at half-mast and offered assistance to Whaley.

 

"Fran and I are absolutely heartbroken over the horrible attack that occurred this morning in Dayton, the statement said. "We join those across Ohio and this country in offering our prayers to victims and their families."

 

The FBI is assisting with the investigation. A family assistance center was set up at the Dayton Convention Center.

  

Sunday's shooting in Dayton is the 22nd mass killing of 2019 in the U.S. The 20 mass killings in the U.S. in 2019 that preceded this weekend claimed 96 lives.

 


פרסום ראשון: 08.04.19, 11:36
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