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"I couldn't see what was going on," Long said, adding that she and other shoppers were confused because no one knew if the shootings would move inside the store. Stacy Gilchrist said the scene on I-40 was "chaos." She said she saw a police officer lying in the road when she pulled up. "It was a disaster, cars were just going everywhere," Gilchrist told Memphis television station WMC. Hours later at the Walmart, an unmarked, blue police car was parked near the white minivan. The car's doors were open, with blood on the bumper and the asphalt below and bullet holes in the windshield. Outside the West Memphis Police Department station, officers went in and out, some hugging each other as they passed. Shelton said the two slain officers were doing the "most dangerous job" in the department because they dealt with drug traffickers. "They were both very friendly, outgoing, dependable people, and I was proud to call them friends," he said. Arkansas Gov. Mike Beebe said the killings were a reminder of the risks police face. "I have reached out to express my condolences to the entire West Memphis Police Department, including Sergeant Paudert's father, Chief Bob Paudert," Beebe said in a statement. "This is a loss shared by all Arkansans."
[Associated
Press;
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