The Palm Beach Post

Gunman kills five at Maryland newspaper

Reporter said ‘it was like a war zone’; man detained, no motive yet.

- By Brian Witte

ANNAPOLIS, MD. — A gunman opened fire at a newspaper office in Maryland’s capital on Thursday, killing at least five people and gravely wounding several others before being taken into custody in what appeared to be one of the deadliest attacks on journalist­s in U.S. history, police and witnesses said.

Police gave no immediate details on the gunman or his motive in the rampage at the Capital Gazette and said he was being interrogat­ed. Authoritie­s said they also found what they believed to be an explosive device.

Phil Davis, a reporter who covers courts and crime for the paper, tweeted that the gunman shot out the glass door to the office and fired into the newsroom, sending people scrambling for cover under desks.

“A single shooter shot multiple people at my office, some of whom are dead,” he wrote.

Davis added: “There is nothing more terrifying than hearing multiple people get shot while you’re under your desk and then hear the gunman reload.”

The attacker had mutilated his fingers in an apparent attempt to make it harder to identify him, according to a law enforcemen­t official who was not authorized to discuss the investigat­ion and spoke on condition of anonymity. Another official who also spoke on condition of anonymity said investigat­ors identified the man

using facial recognitio­n technology.

The shooting — which came amid months of verbal and online attacks on the “fake news media” from politician­s and others from President Donald Trump on down— prompted New York City police to immediatel­y tighten security at news organizati­ons in the nation’s media capital.

At the White House, spokeswoma­n Lindsay Walters said: “There is no room for violence, and we stick by that. Violence is never tolerated in any form, no matter whom it is against.”

The gunman, whose name was not immediatel­y released, was believed to have used a shotgun, according to a U.S. official who was briefed on the investigat­ion but not authorized to discuss it publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity. The gunman was not carrying any identifica­tion, authoritie­s said.

“The shooter has not been very forthcomin­g, so we don’t have any informatio­n yet on motive,” Anne Arundel County Executive Steve Schuh said. “To my knowledge, there was no verbal aspect to the incident where he declared his motives or anything else, so at this point we just don’t know.”

Anne Arundel County Acting Police Chief William Krampf confirmed five deaths and said several others were gravely hurt. At least two hospitals said they received three patients, two of them with minor injuries not caused by gunshots.

Police spokesman Lt. Ryan Frashure said officers raced to the scene, arriving in 60 seconds, and took the gunman into custody without an exchange of gunfire.

About 170 people in all were evacuated from the building as a multitude of police cars and other emergency vehicles converged on the scene. People could be seen leaving the building with their hands up.

The newspaper is part of Capital Gazette Communicat­ions, which also publishes the Maryland Gazette and CapitalGaz­ette.com.

In an interview with the Capital Gazette’s online site, Davis said it “was like a war zone” inside the newspaper’s offices — a situation that would be “hard to describe for a while.”

“I’m a police reporter. I write about this stuff — not necessaril­y to this extent, but shootings and death — all the time,” he said. “But as much as I’m going to try to articulate how traumatizi­ng it is to be hiding under your desk, you don’t know until you’re there and you feel helpless.”

Davis told the paper he and others were still hiding under their desks when the gunman stopped firing.

“I don’t know why. I don’t know why he stopped,” he said.

Annapolis Mayor Gavin Buckley said the community is grieving the attack on the community paper.

“These are the guys that come to city council meetings, have to listen to boring politician­s and sit there,” Buckley said. “They don’t make a lot of money. It’s just immoral that their lives should be in danger.”

New York police sent counterter­rorism teams to news organizati­ons around the city in a move authoritie­s said was a precaution, not prompted by any specific threat. Police could be seen outside The New York Times, ABC News and Fox News early in the evening.

 ?? MATT MCCLAIN / WASHINGTON POST ?? An officer takes a position outside of a building where at least five people were killed in Annapolis, Md., on Thursday. The shooting happened in the newsroom of the Capital Gazette.
MATT MCCLAIN / WASHINGTON POST An officer takes a position outside of a building where at least five people were killed in Annapolis, Md., on Thursday. The shooting happened in the newsroom of the Capital Gazette.
 ?? JOSHUA MCKERROW / CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Police responded within a minute of being alerted to the shooting at 888 Bestgate in Annapolis, Md.
JOSHUA MCKERROW / CAPITAL GAZETTE Police responded within a minute of being alerted to the shooting at 888 Bestgate in Annapolis, Md.
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 ?? JOSHUA MCKERROW / CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Police, fire and rescue teams gather outside 888 Bestgate, Annapolis, Md., where a shooter killed five people in the Capital Gazette newsroom Thursday.
JOSHUA MCKERROW / CAPITAL GAZETTE Police, fire and rescue teams gather outside 888 Bestgate, Annapolis, Md., where a shooter killed five people in the Capital Gazette newsroom Thursday.
 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA / AP ?? About 170 people were evacuated from 888 Bestgate after the shooting.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA / AP About 170 people were evacuated from 888 Bestgate after the shooting.
 ?? JOSHUA MCKERROW / CAPITAL GAZETTE ?? Police wait outside the Capital Gazette offices, where authoritie­s said they found what they believed to be an explosive device.
JOSHUA MCKERROW / CAPITAL GAZETTE Police wait outside the Capital Gazette offices, where authoritie­s said they found what they believed to be an explosive device.

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