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He said he jumped from his seat, heard the rifle go off more than once and rushed for the door, the last to escape the room. He said he returned seconds later to see an interpreter for the Army struggling to subdue Siddiqui. After that, prosecutors say, the chief warrant officer shot her with a pistol. Once the shooting stopped, about 150 Afghan security personnel -- some wielding rifles and looking "very agitated"
-- began swarming as about 15 U.S. authorities tried to carry away a still-kicking Siddiqui on a stretcher outside the police station, Snyder said. "The situation was very tense to say the least," he said. The captain said he later "compared notes" with the chief warrant officer and was surprised by his attitude. The soldier "felt he had saved the day," the witness said. "He had returned fire, so to speak. ... I felt that some of the actions or inactions he took contributed to the situation."
Synder credited the interpreter who first lunged at Siddiqui with being the real hero. "I expressed my overwhelming gratitude for what he did," he said. Besides the defendant, no one was seriously injured.
[Associated
Press;
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