Lodi News-Sentinel

Answers demanded after ‘botched’ Walter Reed shooter lockdown

- By Lillian Reed and Kevin Rector

BALTIMORE — Maryland Rep. Dutch Ruppersber­ger was demanding answers from the Pentagon on Tuesday after experienci­ng firsthand an activeshoo­ter lockdown at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, which officials alternatel­y blamed afterward on a “false alarm” and an inadverten­t mass notificati­on made by staff preparing for a drill.

“It was botched. Somebody messed up,” Ruppersber­ger said. “I’m going to get with the Pentagon and find out how this happened.”

Ruppersber­ger, who sits on the House committee that handles defense appropriat­ions, said he had just finished a personal medical appointmen­t at the facility, the nation’s largest joint military medical center, when “somebody came up who works at the hospital and said, ‘We’re sorry, there’s an active shooter, you have to get in this back room.’ “

He and about 40 others were then ushered through a pharmacy into a back conference room, where the doors were barricaded and the blinds were drawn as sirens could be heard approachin­g outside, he said. A message played at intervals over an intercom system saying there was an active shooter in the building. Emotions were raw.

“There were a lot of people who were very concerned and upset,” Ruppersber­ger said. “There was a lady next to me crying on the phone because her husband was also at the hospital in another spot.”

Ruppersber­ger tweeted that he was at the hospital and “currently safe in a conference room” with others about 2:30 p.m.

Outside, confusion reigned as to what was occurring at the facility.

A spokesman for the Naval Support Activity Bethesda, which handles base operationa­l support at the hospital, said the facility was on lockdown and that security personnel were sweeping the grounds but hadn’t found any evidence of a shooter. A Montgomery County Police spokeswoma­n confirmed officers received a call reporting a possible active shooter and were responding to the scene in a “support and assist” capacity.

U.S. Navy and a Department of Defense spokeswoma­n then said the incident was a “drill,” without providing an explanatio­n. Then Naval Support followed that up by saying they had received a call about an active shooter that was “a false alarm and not part of a scheduled drill.”

Then, the U.S. Navy said the incident was the result of an “improper use” of a mass notificati­on system.

“While preparing for an upcoming drill, the notificati­on system was inadverten­tly enacted without containing the words ‘EXERCISE’ or ‘DRILL,’ “and people who saw the message alerted security, it said. Security then “responded accordingl­y and instituted an installati­on-wide active shooter response.”

Ruppersber­ger said when the “all clear” was given about 3:20 p.m., and he heard from his staff that some military officials were saying it had all been a drill, he was angry — mostly on behalf of the military men and women receiving care in the facility, some of whom have been recently wounded in overseas conflicts, he said.

“What bothers me is that you have people with post-traumatic stress, you have people in that hospital who are really hurting and have problems, you have amputees,” Ruppersber­ger said. “To me, that’s not the way you do a drill and teach people how to deal with a situation like that.”

Just after 3:30 p.m., another tweet came from the congressma­n: “We’ve been given the all clear at Walter Reed — at no point was there any indication that this was a drill.”

 ?? UNITED STATES ARMY FILE PHOTOGRAPH ?? Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in 2011.
UNITED STATES ARMY FILE PHOTOGRAPH Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in 2011.

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