Kuwait Times

No shots fired; calls prompt lockdown at US military post

-

Two 911 calls and a tweet about the possibilit­y of an active shooter at a military installati­on set off a day of panic and confusion in Alabama. The emergency calls Tuesday came from within the Redstone Arsenal base near Huntsville and led the installati­on to tweet a warning to its 30,000 government employees, civilians and contractor­s: “run hide fight.”

Police cars with flashing lights rushed to the scene and blocked entrances to the post, home to Army missile defense programs, NASA’s rocket propulsion operations and federal law enforcemen­t agencies. Even before any gunfire was confirmed, the governor offered her prayers and social media lit up with worried friends and families talking about the lockdown.

At one point, Redstone spokesman Christophe­r Colster acknowledg­ed he didn’t know whether the lockdown was part of a drill or an actual threat. In the end, an investigat­ion found there was no active shooter and no shots were fired, garrison commander Col. Tom Holliday said. He said authoritie­s would continue to investigat­e what happened, including whether the 911 calls were part of a hoax. “We did have initial reports of someone hearing shots fired and someone seeing a weapon.

That in itself drove us to our response,” he said. “I would say that the situation that we live in the United States today leads to caution. Honestly, if we have to overreact, I would rather overreact than underreact.” He said the phrase used in the tweet - “run hide fight” - is a standard response during an active shooter situation. An active shooter drill planned for Wednesday was canceled. “We believe we have learned everything we needed to as part of the event today,” he said, adding that the response worked as designed.

Images on social media showed an ambulance and what appeared to be civilians standing outside the Sparkman Center, which includes offices, an auditorium, cafeteria and an interior courtyard. Holliday said the 911 calls came from the Sparkman complex and that some people who evacuated the building needed medical attention unrelated to the 911 calls. It took two hours to give the all-clear for the installati­on and another two hours to make sure the sprawling Sparkman complex was secure.

Amy Jay said her husband, who was working at the Sparkman Center, was told the situation was over through an announceme­nt over the building’s public address system. “Feeling like I can breathe again!” Jay wrote in a message to The Associated Press. “My husband is a contractor and a veteran so when we hear things like this we’re reminded of what happened at Fort Hood,” she said, referring to the 2009 shooting at a military base in Texas. Alabama Gov Kay Ivey’s office said after the lockdown was lifted that she didn’t know what led to the alert. “The important thing is everybody’s safe,” Ivey said.—AP

 ??  ?? HUNTSVILLE: Authoritie­s block an entrance to Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Ala. The military post said in a tweet it was on lockdown Tuesday amid reports of possible active shooter, telling workers to “run hide fight.” —AP
HUNTSVILLE: Authoritie­s block an entrance to Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville, Ala. The military post said in a tweet it was on lockdown Tuesday amid reports of possible active shooter, telling workers to “run hide fight.” —AP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Kuwait