Police hunt for two armed with assault rifle in fatal shooting in
Washington D.C.
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[September 20, 2019]
(Reuters) - Police hunted for two
suspects believed to be armed with an assault rifle on Friday after one
person was killed and five were wounded in a shooting on the streets of
Washington, D.C., about two miles (three km) from the White House.
The victims had been standing in an apartment building courtyard in
Washington's Columbia Heights neighborhood when the drive-by shooting
took place on Thursday night, Metropolitan Police commander Stuart
Emerman said.
One man was killed and two of the five wounded were in critical
condition, he said.
Two suspects were seen in a Nissan sedan and used an "AK style rifle",
police said in statement. The incident was now over, it added.
"Detectives are interviewing witnesses and looking for camera footage,"
Emerman said.
ABC affiliate WJLA-TV showed ambulances carrying victims from the scene
and said there had been a massive police response at the intersection of
14th Street and Columbia Road.
With mass shootings and gun violence a regular feature of American life,
controversy over the use of assault rifles has entered the 2020
presidential race, with candidate and former U.S. Representative Beto
O'Rourke declaring at a Democratic debate that he would confiscate such
rifles.
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Rescue vehicles are seen following a shooting in Washington, D.C.,
U.S. September 19, 2019, in this picture obtained from social media.
Mandatory credit CHRIS G COLLISON/via REUTERS
O'Rourke has made gun safety the centerpiece of his campaign since
late August, when his hometown of El Paso, Texas, was the site of a
racially motivated mass shooting that killed 22 people inside a
Walmart store.
But the gun debate has long been divisive in U.S. politics and many
Republicans and the powerful gun lobby the National Rifle
Association resist further restrictions on gun ownership.
Republican Vice President Mike Pence has decried the gun-control
stance and accused the Democrats as having a "radical agenda".
(Reporting by Rich McKay and Dan Whitcomb, Editing by Angus MacSwan)
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