Oroville Mercury-Register

Dance hall 911 caller: ‘He might start shooting again’

- By Brian Melley

A gunman had fired his first deadly shots outside a dance hall when Monterey Park police got a call for help from a man trying to make sense of what happened to his partner sitting in the car next to him.

“Is your girlfriend awake?” the dispatcher asked.

“I’m not sure,” the caller said.

Audio from the 911 recordings released Thursday provides a sense of the confusion and chaos that unfolded Jan. 21 at the Star Ballroom Dance Studio on a night that had been full of celebratio­n for the Lunar New Year.

Police said Huu Can Tran, 72, a onetime fixture at the ballroom who told people he was dance instructor, killed 11 people and wounded nine with a submachine gunstyle semiautoma­tic handgun. He killed himself as police surrounded his van the next morning.

In the course of just over three minutes, dispatcher­s fielded 911 calls about the shooting from three men, including one who saw gunfire erupt in the dance hall and initially believed it was firecracke­rs.

That man, who said he saw the gunman reloading the weapon as people ran for safety, urged a dispatcher to “send police here right away.”

“He might start shooting

again,” the man said in a panicked voice.

The dispatcher asked several times if anyone was hurt. The man said he didn’t know.

“It happened too fast,” he said. “Everybody ran away.”

The man who phoned from the car reported that he and his girlfriend left the party early and someone tried to break a car window as they were leaving. He then said the window had been shot out and his girlfriend was unconsciou­s.

He did not identify the woman, but Mymy Nhan, 65, was identified as the only person shot in the parking lot.

A fire dispatcher pressed

for details, asking if the wounded woman could speak.

“My, can you talk to me?” the caller pleaded. “No, she cannot talk.”

The dispatcher then asked if she was breathing.

“Oh, no,” the man said. “Maybe she die. I’m not sure.”

He then reported she was bleeding from the head. The dispatcher assured him police and paramedics were on their way.

Five minutes into the call, a police dispatcher, who had remained on the line after connecting the caller with the fire department, asked what kind of car the man was in and told him to wave

to officers for help.

“Come here, please. Help!” the man can be heard yelling. “Right here! Right here! Right here!”

The police dispatcher then notified his peer in the fire department there are “several gunshot victims inside.”

“Inside the same car?” the fire dispatcher asked.

The police dispatcher clarified that he meant the business — the dance hall.

After this exchange, some 7 minutes into the call, the man could still be heard calling for help.

The police dispatcher told him to keep waving. Eventually, he said, “They’re here. they’re here.”

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? A man visits a memorial outside Star Dance Studio in Monterey Park on Jan. 26. Police dispatch calls released Thursday from the night of the Monterey Park dance hall shooting that killed 11people and wounded nine reveal the confusion and chaos in the first moments the shots rang out.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE A man visits a memorial outside Star Dance Studio in Monterey Park on Jan. 26. Police dispatch calls released Thursday from the night of the Monterey Park dance hall shooting that killed 11people and wounded nine reveal the confusion and chaos in the first moments the shots rang out.

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