Artifacts From the DC Navy Yard Shooting
The following videos and photographs of the September 16 shooting incident at the Navy Yard complex in Washington DC have been sent in by MHB readers over the past two days. They include edited audio of Washington DC emergency response workers.
Additional photos depict one apparent shooting victim being attended to by pedestrians, as police officers stand by and an individual in plainclothes zones off part of the scene with crime tape.
-JFT
Video 1. An anonymous MHB reader’s brief analysis of the recording (Received 9/17):
Naval Yard Shooting Audio, Washington DC, 9/16/13.
The audio has been edited and is not real time. Audio used under a creative common license from Broadcastify.com. I’m assuming that the empty audio was removed to make this easier to listen to, so it’s more than 45 minutes. At the very end it is determined that they will not be needing a large staging area for non-existent (my words) casualties. I heard of three or four patients that were described (3 @ 37 minutes + and later a fourth), but EMS didn’t receive them, from my understanding of the audio.
Video 2. This is a second version of the Washington DC Fire/EMS response to the Navy Yard mass causality shooting. This audio feed archive begins at the 8:34 AM EST mark and ends at the 10:04 AM CST mark. This is from the original source recording provided by http://www.broadcastify.com
Video 3. A Headline News reporter and local official are inadvertently captured sharing a hearty laugh as they prepare to go live.https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZWE7BIwalfI
Figure 1. In this photograph pedestrians attend to an apparent shooting victim while a police officer (or soldier) looks on close by. Another figure that appears to be in plainclothes is visible demarcating area with crime scene tape.
Figure 2. In another angle of the same scene as that of Figure 1, pedestrians continue to attend to a shooting victim as a police officer and other pedestrians appear to casually proceed about their business.
Figure 3. Anonymous EMS workers share notes on the September 16 shooting.
Figure 4. A sensationalistic September 17 front page of New York’s Daily News relates the Navy Yard incident with the Sandy Hook School shooting.
Figure 5. Broadcast news media personnel assemble outside of DC Navy Yard shooting scene.
Figure 6. First responders at the scene exhibiting perplexity and/or boredom.
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