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But when two police officers approach in a hurry, Johnson turns and pulls a handgun from a bag. Then, the scene explodes into action. People seated on a bench behind the gunman and pedestrians standing close to the two officers run for their lives. Only a young child seems not to react, strolling out of view of the camera as adults all around leap away in terror. Startled New Yorkers later looked up from their morning routines in the crowded business district to see people sprawled in the streets bleeding and a tarp covering a body in front of the tourist landmark. "I was on the bus, and people were yelling 'Get down! Get down!" accountant Marc Engel said. "I was thinking,
'You people are crazy. No one is shooting in the middle of midtown Manhattan at 9 o'clock in the morning.'" It was over in seconds, he said -- "a lot of pop, pop, pop, pop, one shot after the other." Afterward, he saw sidewalks littered with the wounded, including one man "dripping enough blood to leave a stream."
The officers who fired were part a detail regularly assigned to patrol landmarks such as the 1,454-foot-tall skyscraper since the Sept. 11 terror attacks, officials said. Kelly, the police commissioner, said the officers who confronted Johnson had "a gun right in their face" and "responded quickly, and they responded appropriately." "These officers, having looked at the tape myself, had absolutely no choice," he said. A witness had told police that Johnson fired at the officers, but authorities say ballistics evidence doesn't support that. Johnson's gun held seven rounds, they said. He fired five times at Ercolino, one round was still in the gun and one was ejected when officers secured it, authorities said. A loaded magazine was found in Johnson's briefcase. Johnson legally bought the gun in Sarasota, Fla., in 1991, but he didn't have a permit to possess it in New York City, authorities said. Mayor Michael Bloomberg said New York still is the safest big city in the country, on pace to have a record low number of murders this year. "But we are not immune to the national problem of gun violence," he said of the shooting, following mass shootings at a Colorado movie theater and a Sikh temple in Wisconsin. The nine people wounded outside the Empire State Building were all from New York City, except for a woman from Chapel Hill, N.C. They suffered graze wounds or other minor injuries.
Metal detectors and bag searchers have been standard at the Empire State Building since 1997, when a gunman opened fire on the 86th-floor observation deck, killing one tourist and wounding six others before fatally shooting himself. The skyscraper remained open Friday throughout the mayhem, although its workers became witnesses. "We were just working here and we just heard bang, bang, bang!" said Mohammed Bachchu, a worker at a nearby souvenir shop. He said he rushed from the building and saw seven people lying on the ground, covered in blood. Rebecca Fox said she saw people running down the street and initially thought it was a celebrity sighting, but then she saw a woman shot in the foot and a man dead on the ground. "I was scared and shocked and literally shaking," she said. "It was like
'CSI,' but it was real."
[Associated
Press;
Copyright 2012 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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