Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Man fought gunman: He ‘was going to have to work to kill me’

- By Sheila Burke

NASHVILLE, TENN. » The man who wrestled the gun away from the Waffle House shooting suspect in Tennessee said Sunday if he were going to die, the gunman would “have to work to kill me.”

Police are calling James Shaw Jr. a hero for saving lives in the busy restaurant, but the 29-year-old Nashville resident said he only made a split-second decision to challenge the shooter and called it a “selfish” act to avoid being killed.

Shaw said at a news conference Sunday he had spent an evening out at a nightclub and entered the restaurant minutes ahead of the gunman. He said he and another friend were seated at a counter when he heard gunshots, thinking at first that a stack of freshly washed plates had crashed down.

Then, he said, restaurant workers scattered and he turned and saw a body near the front door as the gunman burst in. It was then he realized he had heard gunshots.

“I looked back and I saw a person lying on the ground right at the entrance of the door, then I jumped and slid ... I went behind a push door — a swivel door,” Shaw said. “He shot through that door; I’m pretty sure he grazed my arm. At that time I made up my mind ... that he was going to have to work to kill me. When the gun jammed or whatever happened, I hit him with the swivel door.”

Shaw said it was then that they began wrestling, ignoring his own pain as he grabbed the hot barrel of the AR-15 weapon.

“He was kind of cussing while we were wrestling around. When I finally got the gun he was cussing like I was in the wrong,” he said. “It wasn’t any kind of talking between us; I just knew I just had to get that away from him.”

Of the gun, he added: “I grabbed it from him and threw it over the countertop and I just took him with me out the entrance.” Shaw said after getting the man out of the Waffle House, he then ran one way and saw the suspect jogging or trotting another way.

Shaw’s right hand was bandaged at the news conference. He also said he had an apparent bullet graze on one elbow and fell and hit his knee as he escaped, landing in the hospital for a time early Sunday. He added he didn’t see himself as a hero, but feels certain he wouldn’t be alive if he hadn’t succeeded.

 ?? GEORGE WALKER IV — THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP ?? Law enforcemen­t officials work the scene of a fatal shooting at a Waffle House in the Antioch neighborho­od of Nashville, Sunday.
GEORGE WALKER IV — THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP Law enforcemen­t officials work the scene of a fatal shooting at a Waffle House in the Antioch neighborho­od of Nashville, Sunday.
 ?? LARRY MCCORMACK — THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP ?? James Shaw Jr., shows his hand that was injured when he disarmed a shooter inside a Waffle House on Sunday in Nashville, Tenn. A gunman stormed the Waffle House restaurant and shot several people to death before dawn, according to police, who credited...
LARRY MCCORMACK — THE TENNESSEAN VIA AP James Shaw Jr., shows his hand that was injured when he disarmed a shooter inside a Waffle House on Sunday in Nashville, Tenn. A gunman stormed the Waffle House restaurant and shot several people to death before dawn, according to police, who credited...
 ?? METRO NASHVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT VIA AP ?? This photo provided by Metro Nashville Police Department shows Travis Reinking, who police are searching for in connection with a fatal shooting at a Waffle House restaurant in the Antioch neighborho­od of Nashville early Sunday.
METRO NASHVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT VIA AP This photo provided by Metro Nashville Police Department shows Travis Reinking, who police are searching for in connection with a fatal shooting at a Waffle House restaurant in the Antioch neighborho­od of Nashville early Sunday.

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