View Full Version : Photographer shot
Shot A Load
Jul 18th 2008, 05:53 AM
AP-IN--Photographers Shot (Tops),0136
2 photographers shot while covering house fire
INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - A TV news cameraman and a freelance
photographer were shot while covering a fire at a vacant house in
Indianapolis this morning.
Police both were treated and released from Methodist Hospital.
The incident occurred about 2:30 a.m. as firefighters were
battling the fire on the city's near east side.
A freelance photographer working for the Indianapolis Fire
Department was shot in the arm.
WISH-TV photographer Kevin Hankins says he was filming the scene
when he was shot in the back. He said he felt and heard a smack,
lifted his shirt and saw that he was bleeding.
Police say bullet also apparently struck an air tank worn by a
firefighter, but the firefighter was not injured.
Police are looking for the gunman. The cause of the fire is
under investigation.
(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)
Bureau Chief
Jul 18th 2008, 07:58 AM
Makes me want to load up and shoot back!
wx4svr
Jul 18th 2008, 08:14 AM
Those cameras aren't that light. Just sneak up behind em' and let him have it. I've always wanted to hit someone with a camera. Make sure its rolling first though! =)
The Fedora
Jul 18th 2008, 08:20 AM
Great writing.
Punctuation anyone?
Mom
Jul 18th 2008, 08:33 AM
... and they say farmers have the most dangerous job?
Who Cares???
Jul 18th 2008, 10:55 AM
Any word on the Photogs condition...???
I've dealt with bullet wounds before... even a .22 can make a big mess of things...
Prayers headed that way...
Shot A Load
Jul 22nd 2008, 12:34 PM
Apparently it was only a pellet gun.
INDIANAPOLIS (WISH) - Police said a man has confessed to firing the pellets that struck two photographers, including a WISH-TV photographer, and a firefighter's air tank. The shooting happened at the scene of a massive fire on the northeast side early Friday morning.
Police have arrested 30-year-old Derek Matthews.
IMPD Chief Michael Spears called a press conference Friday afternoon regarding the overnight shooting.
Police and firefighters should not have to worry about some deranged citizen using force against them, Spears said.
Police originally believed a .22 caliber gun was used in the shooting but retracted that information after further investigation. They have since recovered the pellet gun Matthews allegedly used.
Following the shooting, police focused their search across the street from the fire at 838 Tacoma where Matthews and a woman were staying. Police said the woman had nothing to do with the incident.
A detective said Matthews spoke with WISH-TV photographer Kevin Hankins, who was eventually shot, prior to the shooting.
"He was like 'Stuff happened over by my house on this street a couple of weeks ago. You guys should've came here...You're on my sidewalk.'...I'm like 'It's a public street. I'm sorry, I need to do my job.'," said Hankins. "I just walked away from him and never saw him again."
Matthews' history
Police told 24-Hour News 8 that Matthews is a registered sex offender in Marion County who has a history of failing to register along with drug and battery arrests.
The shooting
The shooting happened as firefighters were battling a fire at 833 N. Tacoma Ave. just after 2 a.m. Friday. No one was inside the vacant home.
As firefighters worked to put out the fire, police say someone fired shots at several people. One shot hit a firefighter's breathing tank.
"Firefighters arrived and started addressing the fire and during the incident, people around the scene, a group of people just to the west in the alley. We believe possibly in that area there, someone fired some type of weapon at individuals who were on the scene," said Sgt. Paul Thompson with IMPD.
Other shots wounded two photographers, including WISH-TV's Kevin Hankins.
"I was just gathering shots around the scene and then all of sudden heard a pop and felt something on my left back. And then the medic behind me, you don't got to be so jumpy. I said I just got hit by something. And I lifted up my shirt and he said you're bleeding and were shot by something," said Hankins.
Both photographers were taken to Methodist Hospital. Hankins has since been released.
The other person was freelance photographer Todd Parker, who was doing work for a township fire department. He was not severely hurt. Police say he was struck in the arm.
ewink
Jul 22nd 2008, 06:41 PM
Police and firefighters should not have to worry about some deranged citizen using force against them, Spears said.
However the media should. :doh:
Produce man
Jul 22nd 2008, 07:24 PM
"He was like 'Stuff happened over by my house on this street a couple of weeks ago. You guys should've came here...You're on my sidewalk.'...I'm like 'It's a public street. I'm sorry, I need to do my job.'," said Hankins. "I just walked away from him and never saw him again."
Sounds like a typical conversation between 2 chicks at the mall...:rolleyes:
Zero
Jul 22nd 2008, 10:35 PM
A TV news cameraman and a freelance photographer were shot while covering a fire at a vacant house in Indianapolis this morning.
And they were shot not with a dangerous life threatening bullet from a high calliber weapon, but with a child's pellet gun.
Quite a striking distinction, don't you think? Yet someone withheld that basic information from the public . Was it the AP writer? Or the police public affairs officer ? Or the media involved?
This story is a prime example of why so few people trust what is reported. And rightly so.
Who ever is guilty should be shot.
The Fedora
Jul 23rd 2008, 01:55 AM
ok. in the story it said police originally thought (and they released this) it was a .22 caliber rifle that the shooter was using.
jeez. stick to erasing tapes and looking for black helicopters please
The Mockingbird
Jul 23rd 2008, 03:41 AM
Police originally thought someone might have thrown a puppy at the photographer. :eek: