Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Firefighte­r hit by gunfire while tending to patient

- By ASHLEY LUTHERN aluthern@journalsen­tinel.com

A Milwaukee firefighte­r was shot overnight Sunday while he and other firefighte­rs tended to a patient who was having trouble breathing.

The 46-year-old firefighte­r, whose name was not released, suffered a graze wound to the right side of his head and has been treated and released from the hospital, according to a Fire Department news release issued Monday.

The firefighte­rs were

called just after midnight to the area of N. 40th St. and W. Lisbon Ave. to assist a patient.

They assessed and treated the patient and were in the process of transferri­ng the patient to Curtis Ambulance when shots were fired from an alley in the direction of the first responders, according to the news release. Several rounds also hit the ambulance.

Police Chief Edward Flynn said it does not appear that

the firefighte­r had been targeted.

Flynn said detectives had recovered shell casings near the scene that appear relevant to the investigat­ion.

“In this particular case, so far the physical evidence we have indicates that this individual wasn’t targeted, but in all likelihood someone else several blocks away was,” Flynn said.

Milwaukee police continue to search for suspects.

“Milwaukee firefighte­rs have a difficult and dangerous job, and we are committed to serving our citizens,” Fire Chief Mark Rohlfing said in a written statement.

“This incident will serve to heighten our awareness but will not stop us from providing needed emergency medical care to our citizens.”

Deadly weekend

The shooting came at the end of a deadly holiday weekend that saw six people killed in homicides, including a 14-yearold boy who was fatally shot Friday night shortly after Milwaukee’s lakefront fireworks.

Rohlfing said his department joins with the mayor and Police Department to demand “a stop to the senseless gun violence that is causing so much pain and suffering

in our city.”

The firefighte­r and firefighti­ng crew will continue to receive support for any physical and psychologi­cal effects, the news release said.

The shooting prompted the Milwaukee Profession­al Firefighte­rs’ Associatio­n Local 215 to call a news conference, where the union’s president said the “city is in crisis.”

“We are not trained to respond to ‘shots fired’ or ‘fight in progress,’ ” David Seager said, according to prepared remarks released by the union.

“That is not our scope,” he said. “We are always on the front line ready and willing for all citizens.”

Seager said the department has been “systemical­ly dismantled,” losing staffing and the decommissi­oning of several pieces of equipment, and he called on Mayor Tom Barrett and the Common Council to “take up funding the Milwaukee Fire Department fully.”

Barrett released a statement later Monday describing the shooting as a “brazen and outrageous criminal act” and saying his “thoughts and prayers” were with the firefighte­r and his family.

Responding to the fire union, Barrett said his administra­tion has worked with the Fire Department “to maintain staffing levels that continue to provide excellent response times. No budget action has closed a fire house.”

He said his office would continue to work with department officials to improve safety for firefighte­rs and emergency responders.

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