Lack of security footage hampers Ohio
nightclub shooting probe
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[March 28, 2017]
By Ian Simpson
(Reuters) - Ohio police have made no
arrests yet in a fatal weekend shooting in a Cincinnati nightclub, in
part because there was no security video footage available to
investigators despite a history of violence at the venue, authorities
said on Monday.
The shooting at the packed Cameo Nightlife early on Sunday left a
27-year-old man dead and 16 others wounded; the number of wounded had
initially been put at 15 people.
The gunfire, which sent hundreds of patrons fleeing and ducking for
cover, grew out of a dispute inside the club, where two shootings took
place in 2015, authorities said.
Unlike last year's massacre at a Florida nightclub, there was no
indication that the Cincinnati shooting was "terrorism-related,"
authorities said on Sunday. The rampage in Orlando last June was the
worst mass shooting in U.S. history, leaving 49 people dead.
Even though Cincinnati police lacked a video recording of the chaos,
Chief Eliot Isaac said on Monday the department was confident of finding
those responsible.
The best witnesses to the shooting were those who had been shot and were
still recovering, Isaac said at a televised hearing of the public safety
panel. In addition, some witnesses were reluctant to cooperate
immediately after the incident, police have said.
Isaac said the number of wounded rose to 16 after another person came
forward late on Sunday claiming to have been hit by gunfire. Two people
remained in critical condition at the University of Cincinnati Medical
Center.
Patrons managed to bring guns into Cameo Nightlife even though four
off-duty police officers were providing security in the parking lot.
Employees also used handheld metal detectors to check patrons for
firearms before they could enter the club.
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The parking lot of Cameo Nightlife club remains empty after police
removed barrier tape from the scene of a mass shooting in
Cincinnati, Ohio, U.S. March 26, 2017. REUTERS/Caleb Hughes
Even so, one customer told the Cincinnati Enquirer newspaper that
clubgoers in a "no-wait" line were not being screened.
Club owner Julian Rodgers issued a statement late on Sunday
expressing condolences to the victims. "We will do everything in our
power to cooperate and make sure the monsters that did this are
caught and brought to justice," he said.
A telephone call to the club was not answered and its Facebook page
was unavailable. However, late Monday Cincinnati City Manager Harry
Black said on Twitter that the club had voluntarily surrendered its
liquor license and that the facility would be closed until the
investigation is complete.
The shooting was the worst this year in the United States in terms
of the total number of dead and wounded, according to the nonprofit
Gun Violence Archive, which tracks U.S. shootings.
(Reporting by Ian Simpson in Washington; Additional reporting by
Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, California; Editing by Frank McGurty
and Leslie Adler)
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