Virginia shooting: Chilling video captures gunfire erupting at graduation ceremony leaving two dead
Chilling video has captured the moment gunfire erupted at a high school graduation ceremony with the shooting leaving two dead and dozens of others injured.
Seven people were shot in the mass shooting during the high school graduation ceremony at a theatre in Richmond, Virginia on Tuesday.
Two men, 18 and 36, suffered gunshot wounds and later died from their injuries.
The incident caused panic among attendees, who can be seen in the video, which was reportedly captured by an uncle of one of the graduates, fleeing the scene in fear.
The suspect, a 19-year-old, was apprehended while attempting to escape and will face charges of second-degree murder, police have said.
Five others were injured in the shooting, and many more suffered from panic attacks as they tried to feel the chaos.
The two men who sadly died had just graduated, and the alleged shooter is believed to have known at least one of them.
The incident occurred in an area surrounded by a park and the Virginia Commonwealth University campus at around 5.15pm on Tuesday.
Multiple handguns were recovered from the scene, and an additional suspect was determined to be uninvolved.
“As they heard the gunfire, it was obviously chaos,” Interim Richmond Police Chief Rick Edwards said.
“We had hundreds of people in Monroe Park, so people scattered. It was very chaotic at the scene.”
The men’s names have not yet been released, but police believe the suspect, who was not immediately identified, knew at least one of the victims.
“This should have been a safe space. People should have felt safe at a graduation,” Mr Edwards said.
“It’s just incredibly tragic that someone decided to bring a gun to this incident and rain terror on our community.”
Six people were brought to VCU Medical Center and their conditions ranged from serious to critical late Tuesday, VCU Health System spokesperson Mary Kate Brogan said.
Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney vowed to ensure anyone responsible faces justice.
“This should not be happening anywhere,” Mayor Stoney said.
Officers inside the theater, where the graduation ceremony for Huguenot High School had been taking place, heard gunfire around 5:15 p.m and radioed to police stationed outside, who found multiple victims, Edwards said.
School board member Jonathan Young told Richmond TV station WWBT that graduates and other attendees were leaving the building when they heard about 20 gunshots in rapid succession.
“That prompted, as you would expect, hundreds of persons in an effort to flee the gunfire to return to the building,” Mr Young said.
“It materialized in a stampede,” he said.
Two people were treated for falls; one juvenile was struck by a car and sustained injuries that were not life-threatening; and nine people were treated at the scene for minor injuries or anxiety, according to police spokeswoman Tracy Walker.
Richmond Public Schools Superintendent Jason Kamras said the new graduates were outside taking photos with families and friends when the shooting broke out.
“I don’t have any more words on this,” Mr Kamras said.
“I’m just tired of seeing people get shot, our kids get shot. And I beg of the entire community to stop, to just stop.”
As he heard the gunshots and then sirens, neighbour John Willard, 69, stepped onto the balcony of his 18th-floor apartment.
Below, he saw students fleeing in their graduation outfits and parents hugging children.
“There was one poor woman in front of the apartment block next to ours who was wailing and crying,” Mr Willard said, adding that the scene left him deeply saddened.
Edythe Payne was helping her daughter sell flowers outside the theatre to students as they left the ceremony.
She told the Richmond Times-Dispatch that the shooting caused a panic on nearby Main Street, which was packed with people at the time.
“I felt bad because some elderly people were at the graduation and they got knocked down to the ground,” Ms Payne said.
The school district said a different graduation scheduled for later Tuesday had been cancelled “out of an abundance of caution” and schools would be closed Wednesday.
The mass shooting, the latest in a nation increasingly accustomed to them, prompted calls for reform.
“The gun violence epidemic is a public health crisis that we must address,” U.S. Rep. Jennifer McClellan, a Democrat whose district includes Richmond, said in a statement.
“We cannot continue to live in fear. We must address the root causes of gun violence and pass common sense gun safety policies that protect our communities.”
Republican Lt. Gov. Winsome Earle-Sears, an ardent gun-rights advocate, said in remarks to news outlets near the scene that the problem lies not with guns but with criminals.
“We have to figure out what’s going on in our communities,” she said.
On Tuesday evening, Virginia Commonwealth President Michael Rao tweeted: “Graduations should be times of happiness and celebration. Today’s shooting is heart-wrenching and shocking.”