Cincinnati nightclub shooting: Personal dispute kills 1, injures 15; focus back on gun violence in US

Cincinnati nightclub shooting: Personal dispute kills 1, injures 15; focus back on gun violence in US

FP Staff March 27, 2017, 21:46:44 IST

A gunfight broke out inside a crowded Cincinnati nightclub early Sunday, leaving one man dead and 15 other people wounded after a dispute among several patrons escalated into a shootout, authorities said.

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Cincinnati nightclub shooting: Personal dispute kills 1, injures 15; focus back on gun violence in US

Cincinnati: A gunfight broke out inside a crowded Cincinnati nightclub early Sunday, leaving one man dead and 15 other people wounded after a dispute among several patrons escalated into a shootout, authorities said.

No suspects were in custody by Sunday night in the shooting at the Cameo club, which has a history of gun violence, and police said there was no indication of any terrorism link.

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Cincinnati Police Chief Eliot Isaac said one of the wounded was in “extremely critical condition,” while a hospital spokeswoman said two victims were listed in critical condition.

Police began receiving calls at 1:30 am about gunshots at the club near the Ohio River east of downtown Cincinnati. Isaac said some 200 people were inside the club, one of the few hip-hop venues in the city, for music and dancing. Isaac identified the dead man as 27-year-old O’Bryan Spikes, but provided no other details. He said 15 others were injured, with some already treated and released from hospitals.

“What we know at this point in the investigation is that several local men got into some type of dispute inside the bar, and it escalated into shots being fired from several individuals,” Isaac said. It wasn’t clear how many people fired shots.

Club patron Mauricio Thompson described a chaotic scene in which as many as 20 shots were fired as people scrambled to get away. He said there was a fight and people were yelling for security to intervene before the gunfire began.

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“Once I got outside, people coming out bloody, gunshot wounds on them, some of their friends carrying them to the car, rushing them to the hospital,” Thompson told WCPO-TV. “It was just crazy.”

Another patron told the television station that she dove to the ground outside the nightclub to dodge bullets and her boyfriend climbed on top of her to protect her.

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“I thought I was going to die. At that point survival skills started kicking in,” said Sherell, who preferred not to give her last name. “Once I heard the third shot — I didn’t know whether it was coming from outside, someone was shooting at the club, or whether it was coming from inside.”

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Police Sgt. Daniel Hils said the large crowd at the club was a factor in the number of people who suffered gunshot wounds.

A body is removed as police work at the Cameo club after a fatal shooting on Sunday in Cincinnati. AP

“When you’re talking about something tightly packed like that, I think intended targets aren’t going to be the only thing that’s hit,” said Hils, who is president of the Fraternal Order of Police local. “When you starting throwing lead around, and there’s a lot of other people standing around, then the other people are going to get hit.”

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Isaac said the club has its own security operation that uses detection wands and pat-downs, but that police believe several firearms got inside. Four officers were working security in the club’s parking lot and some tried unsuccessfully to revive the man who died.

Cameo’s Facebook profile said it caters to college students on Friday nights, when anyone over 18 is allowed in, while Saturdays are “grown and sexy night” for ages 21 and older. The page was taken down later Sunday.

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The club has a history of gun violence, including a shooting inside the club on New Year’s Day in 2015 and one in the parking lot in September of that year, City Manager Harry Black said.

Police Capt. Kim Williams said there was “just a lot of chaos, obviously, when shots were fired.” “Saturday night, it is a very young crowd. We have had incidents here in the past, but this is by far the worst,” she said. Referring to initial speculation about possible terrorism, Mayor John Cranley said: “What difference does that make to the victims? Innocent people were shot.”

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He called the shootings “unacceptable” and said authorities would work to find ways to prevent such violence. A single body was removed by the coroner shortly after 6 am A federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives team was also at the scene.

Among the injured, five were treated at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center and released, hospital spokeswoman Kelly Martin said. She said two people were in critical condition and another three were listed in stable condition by late afternoon. She had no details on the types of injuries or the ages of the victims. Other injured people were taken to or drove themselves to other hospitals.

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Authorities asked anyone with information to come forward. Investigators were checking to see if surveillance cameras were working, Williams said. The owner of the nightclub, Jay Rodgers, released a statement Sunday night calling the shooting that took place there, “senseless.”

“We will do everything in our power to cooperate and make sure the monsters that did this are caught and brought to justice,” Rodgers said. He added that the club would remain closed until “both our management completes our own investigation and the Cincinnati Police Department completes their investigation.”

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The area is mostly industrial but also home to several nightclubs with a smattering of homes. A regional airport is nearby. The neighborhood is fairly desolate at night, with the exception of the nightlife scene and 24-hour gas stations. The road where the club is located was easily cordoned off by a single police cruiser and officer at either end.

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First responders had problems reaching the shooting victims because the parking lots were full, Sgt. Eric Franz told the Cincinnati Enquirer. Ohio governor John Kasich said on Twitter that he was “saddened to learn about last night’s shooting” and that he was offering the state’s assistance.

American gun violence

But shootings are a common feature of life in America, where the right to bear arms is protected by the US Constitution. Cincinnati, a city of 300,000 people nestled along the northern banks of the Ohio River, had 66 homicides in 2016, all but nine of them as a result of firearms. This year has seen a spike in gun violence, with 57 shooting victims in the city as of Thursday last week, compared to 31 during the same period last year.

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Elsewhere in the United States, a gunman opened fire Saturday on a double-decker bus on the Las Vegas Strip, killing one person and wounding another. Police said the suspect appeared to have “mental issues.” More notorious gun crimes in recent years included the rampage carried out by 21-year-old white supremacist Dylann Roof, who shot to death nine people during a Bible study session at a historically African American church in Charleston, South Carolina on June 17, 2015.

And a massacre at an elementary school in Newtown, Connecticut on December 14, 2012 claimed the lives of 20 children and six adults. Gunman Adam Lanza, who had a history of mental illness, also killed his mother and went on to commit suicide.

The tragedy sparked calls for stricter gun control laws, but bills banning assault weapons and expanding background checks on gun purchases were defeated in the US Congress.

With inputs from Associated Press and AFP

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