What is it about America? It is very hard to ignore this.
Virginia
TV journalists shot dead on air in attack staged by former colleague
Alison
Parker and Adam Ward killed during live broadcast by suspected gunman
Vester Lee Flanagan, who posted own video of shooting before killing
himself
26
August, 2015
Two
local TV reporters were shot dead in the midst of a live broadcast in
Virginia on Wednesday, the victims of an attack perpetrated by a
disgruntled former colleague.
The
shooting occurred around 6.45am local time, in Moneta, near Roanoke,
and appeared to have been carefully orchestrated to construct a
horrific spectacle that would play out live on TV.
Reporter
Alison Parker, 24, and cameraman Adam Ward, 27,
were broadcasting a live interview with an official from the local
chamber of commerce when there was the sudden sound of gunfire and
screams. The camera tumbled to the ground, and producers at the local
WDBJ7 news station cut off the broadcast, switching to a
shocked-looking anchor in the studio.
It
later emerged that both Parker and Ward died at the scene. The gunman
also shot their interviewee, Vicki Gardner, the executive director of
the Smith Mountain Lake regional chamber of commerce. Gardner
survived and is in stable condition after surgery.
The
suspect, Vester
Lee Flanagan II, 41,
was a former TV reporter at WDBJ7, who broadcast under the on-air
name Bryce Williams. He died several hours after shooting himself.
By
then Flanagan had posted on the internet his own video of the attack,
apparently shot with a GoPro-style camera.
Flanagan,
who is black, and claimed racially toned grievances against his
former employer, also faxed a 23-page document to ABC News in which
he made bizarre references to mass shooting.
He
connected the atrocity in Roanoke to the recent shooting by a white
supremacist at a black church in Charleston, South Carolina.
“Why
did I do it? I put down a deposit for a gun on 6/19/15. The Church
shooting in Charleston happened on 6/17/15 …,” Flanagan wrote in
the document, according
to ABC News.
“What sent me over the top was the church shooting.”
At
a press conference later on Wednesday, Franklin County sheriff Bill
Overton said it was too early to conclude any specific motives behind
the killings and said investigators were in possession of the
document faxed to ABC as well as a cascade of social media postings
published by the suspect before and after the attack.
“It is obvious that this gentleman was disturbed in some way, the ways things had transpired at some point in his life,” he said. “It would appear that things were spiralling out of control.”
Overton
told reporters that Flanagan fled the scene of the shooting in a gray
Chevrolet Sonic, sparking a manhunt that culminated, four hours
later, near Washington DC.
Around
11am, a Virginia state police patrol car equipped with a license
plate reader identified Flanagan’s vehicle on the Interstate 66 in
Fauquier County. After a brief pursuit, Flanagan shot himself. He
died in hospital two hours later.
Flanagan
had driven some 200 miles from the lakeside resort where he is
suspected of killing his former colleagues, around four hours earlier
live on TV. He apparently posted messages and video on Twitter and
Facebook either immediately before or during his journey north.class="Apple-converted-space" Location
of Moneta, Virginia
“Vester
was an unhappy man,” WDBJ7’s station manager, Jeff Marks, told
viewers live on air a few hours later. “We employed him as a
reporter, and he had some talent in that respect and some experience,
although he’d been out of the business for a while.
“He
quickly gathered a reputation as someone who was difficult to work
with,” he added, saying that Flanagan would quickly “take
offence”. “Eventually after many incidents of his anger coming to
the fore, we dismissed him. And he did not take that well, we had to
call the police to escort him from the building.”
Marks
added that Flanagan filed an action against the TV station with the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, in which he alleged staff at
the company had made “racial comments”. A copy of the suit, filed
in 2014 and obtained by the Guardian on Wednesday,
shows he was disciplined by the Virginia station. Marks added the
EEOC complaint was not upheld.
“This
is the worst day of my career – worst day of all our careers,”
Marks said in an interview with the Guardian outside the TV station
on Wednesday evening. “We’ve lost beloved colleagues.”
On
the youth of the victims, he said: “Why was I not targeted? Why was
Kelly [Zuber, the news director] not targeted? We are the ones who
actually put this guy out of a job.”
Flanagan,
who had experience in local TV news across the country, had made
similar allegations against another employer, in Florida, more than
15 years ago. Court filings showed he sued TWC, the NBC affiliate in
Tallahassee, alleging racial discrimination in a case that was
settled out of court in 2001.
Shocked
and distraught and barely able to compute what had happened, WDBJ7’s
news team continued to broadcast through the day, telling viewers
they had news of a story “that has affected our WDBJ7 family very
deeply”.
WDBJ7
interspersed updates from police about the hunt for Flanagan with
emotional, hastily pulled-together tributes to their murdered
colleagues. Occasionally, the anchors had to fight back tears, or
just expressed their disbelief at what had happened.
“It’s
surreal, I was on the air when it happened,” anchor Kimberly
McBroom said. “We thought it was a car backfiring, possibly
fireworks. That was the last thing I thought was happening.”
Parker
had been at the station for less than a year, but was a familiar face
to residents of Roanoke and the surrounding towns in rural Virginia.
Ward was described by colleagues as a supremely
talented photographer who
could put his subjects at ease. It was to be his last day at the
network.
In
recent weeks Flanagan had posted dozens of images of his life, going
back to his childhood. After the shooting, Flanagan tweeted
disparaging remarks about both of his victims.
“Alison
made racist comments,” he said of Parker. “They hired her after
that???” In a reference to Ward, he added: “Adam went to hr
[human resources] on me after working with me one time!!!”
Seconds
later, there was a chilling update: “I filmed the shooting see
Facebook.”
The
disturbing video Flanagan posted on Facebook was filmed from the
perspective of the shooter.
It
showed the gunman approaching Parker and Ward as they interviewed
Gardner on a wooden deck at the Bridgewater Plaza, near Smith
Mountain Lake. They were mid-broadcast, and Gardner was telling WDBJ7
viewers about the benefit to local tourism of the nearby lake.
The
gunman walked slowly toward the trio, stood behind the cameraman,
whispered “bitch” and pointed his handgun at the reporter.
Concentrating on the interview, she appeared not to notice.
The
interview continued for approximately 20 seconds before shots rang
out. The final segments of the film showed Parker screaming and
running away.
In
a cycle that is now familiar to Americans, the horrific,
made-for-media shooting was immediately followed by calls
for changes to the country’s lax gun laws that
have enabled so many similar tragedies.
There
was, however, also an acknowledgement, on all sides, that the
political appetite for reform does not exist, particularly among
Republicans.
Hillary
Clinton, campaigning in Iowa, said: “I hope that in addition to
expressing sympathy for those directly affected, that this – maybe
for the media, public, elected officials, for every American – is
what it will hopefully finally take for us to act.”
The
White House press secretary, Josh Earnest, said the shooting was
“another example of gun violence that is becoming all too common in
communities large and small all across the United States”.
“While
there is no piece of legislation that will end all violence, there
are some commonsense things that only Congress can do that we know
will have a tangible impact on reducing gun violence in this
country,” he added.
The
last major push for modest gun reforms in Washington – following
the mass shooting at Sandy Hook elementary school in Newtown,
Connecticut, in 2012 – ended in failure. Twenty children and six
adults were killed.
In
Roanoke on Wednesday, there was an outpouring of grief for the two
dead reporters, including from the local police department, which
works closely with local journalists.
“Alison
was always very kindhearted to the officers she interviewed and had
the ability to tell a great story. Adam always put our officers, who
might have been a little nervous when being interviewed, at ease with
his kind words and warm smile,” the department said in a statement.
“They
were a team and we enjoyed working together with them on several
stories as a team. They will be missed.”
Erin
Arnold, the sister of the attack’s lone survivor, said she was
grateful Gardner was alive and in stable condition.
“She
lost a kidney and part of her large intestine,” Arnold said en
route to Roanoke. “She’s 60 years old and still wakeboards. She
still climbs up and paints the lighthouse. She’s incredible.”
This is going to get the right-wing nuts in the GOP as well Alex Jones, very excited. We might even hear about another "false-flag"
There has been a second attack in Louisiana
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